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Tag: Florida guns

  • Florida House passes bill to allow teens to buy guns

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    The Florida House has again passed legislation (HB 133) dropping the minimum age to purchase rifles and other long guns from 21 to 18. The vote was 74-37, with five Republicans joining the majority of Democrats in opposing it and one Democrat (Jose Alvarez from Osceola County) supporting the measure.

    But for the fourth year in a row, the likelihood of the state repealing the law is doubtful, as a companion bill in the Senate has yet to be filed. A similar situation has played out during the past three legislative sessions, with the measure passing the House and dying in the Senate.

    Florida lawmakers raised the age to purchase a long gun from 18 to 21 as part of the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Act, in the immediate aftermath of the mass shooting in Parkland that resulted in the deaths of 17 people.

    The measure under debate also would allow a person 18 or older to purchase a handgun from a private seller, although a federal ban prohibits anyone under 21 from purchasing a handgun from a federal firearms licensee.

    Rep. Robin Bartleman, D-Weston, said lowering the legal age would contribute further to what she said is an erosion of gun safety in Florida.

    “We don’t require permits,” she said. “We don’t require training to own a gun. We don’t require safe gun storage, and now we allow everyone to open carry, so literally these 18 to 21 year olds who are not fully developed, who are not thinking rationally, who cannot think of consequences of the actions, actually can lawfully carry their AR-15 on their back and walk around. That’s a dangerous situation.”

    Rep. Dean Black, R-Jacksonville, went on an extended discussion about how the debate about gun violence wasn’t about guns at all. The crisis is “with us,” he argued, adding that mass shootings became a phenomenon only over the past three decades. Instead, he said, the House could be talking about the breakdown of the two-parent family and the loss of faith.

    “We could talk about things that really might get us somewhere, but we have this distraction, and history over centuries teaches us that that’s not the answer, because it didn’t happen back then, yet it happens today,” Black said. 

    Rep. Christine Hunschofsky, D-Parkland, was mayor of that city when the shooting happened in 2018. She said the bipartisan vote in the Legislature to raise the age was “because people decided then that the cost of doing nothing was too high and was something that they wouldn’t be able to live with.

    “I feel that going back on what was done then, the political courage that was done then, would be devastating and heartbreaking, because it’s so hard to find that kind of bipartisan political courage these days,” she said.

    The effort to raise the legal age has been supported by Gov. Ron DeSantis and gained momentum this spring when Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier announced he would not defend the law after a federal appeals court again upheld its constitutionality after it was challenged in federal court by the NRA.

    “If the NRA decides to seek further review at SCOTUS, I am directing my office not to defend this law,” Uthmeier said in March, not long after DeSantis appointed him to his office. “Men and women old enough to fight and die for our country should be able to purchase firearms to defend themselves and their families.”

    Twenty-one states have raised the age to purchase a long gun to 21 in America, according to Everytown for Gun Safety.

    The bill sponsor, Rep. Tyler Sirois, R-Merritt Island, said he was attempting to correct an inequity in Florida law.

    “This country has a problem with school shootings, but the answer to that is not to infringe upon the constitutional rights of law-abiding people,” he said.

    Among those watching the debate from the gallery was De’ja Charles, 20, a student at Florida A&M University and a member of Students Demand Action, a gun safety group. 

    “We know that 18 to 20 year-olds are three times more likely to commit gun homicides, as opposed to those over 21,” she said, citing statistics compiled by Everytown for Gun Safety.

    “We should be trying to make it safer in Florida for us to live our lives. There should be Parkland victims here today and it’s difficult to have the courage to express your views when you have representatives that are blatantly just going against it.”


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    It was out of school meal programs for more than a decade amid a broader push to curb childhood obesity

    But, the majority of Democratic voters surveyed are undecided at this point ahead of the 2026 Florida race for governor

    That’s down from a Mason-Dixon survey taken last March, when he was at 53%, and the lowest ranking taken by Mason-Dixon since July 2020



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  • Groups call on Ben Albritton to block bill lowering gun-buying age to 18

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    A dozen gun-violence prevention groups are calling upon Florida Senate President Ben Albritton to once again reject a proposal from the Florida House to lower the age to purchase a long gun from 21 to 18 years old.

    A measure (HB 133) that would repeal the 2018 law that raised the legal age for such purchases to 21 has already passed two committees in the Florida House and is now up for a vote in the full House of Representatives when the Legislature kicks off the 2026 session next month.

    That regulation is part of a package of gun safety reforms enacted by the GOP-controlled Legislature and signed into law by then-Gov. Rick Scott in 2018. The bipartisan vote approving those measures came just weeks after a 19-year-old legally purchased an AR-15 and murdered 17 students and teachers at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland.

    The Florida House has passed similars measures over the past three legislative sessions, but each time they have died in the Florida Senate. And with four weeks left before the 2026 legislative session commences, no Senate companion measure has yet been filed.

    “President Albritton, we urge you to use your authority as Senate President to prevent HB 133 from becoming law,” reads a portion of the letter. “Remember the priorities made after our state’s darkest day. Remember those who buried their loved ones because a teenager could access a gun. Honor the bipartisan commitment lawmakers made in 2018: never again. Refuse to file a companion bill to HB 133, as you have done in previous years.”

    Among the groups signing the letter are March For Our Lives, Brady Florida, the League of Women Voters Florida, and the Campaign to Keep Guns Off Campus.

    “Young people in Florida deserve to grow up without wondering whether the teenager sitting next to them can legally buy a weapon of war,” said March for Our Lives executive director and Parkland survivor Jackie Corin in a statement. “We call on state leaders to block HB 133 and to honor the promises they made to our communities and to the lives already lost.”

    Although the Senate has shown no inclination in the past to approve the measure, gun-safety advocates are concerned right now that the Senate might swallow the idea in a tradeoff with the House that to curb the open carrying of firearms.

    A three-judge panel of the Florida First District Court of Appeal ruled in September that the state’s 1987 law banning open carry in Florida was unconstitutional. Attorney General James Uthmeier immediately declared that open carry was now the law in the state, but that change hasn’t been put into statute yet. Second Amendment groups have warned that the Legislature should not add any restrictive regulations on open carry when and if they enact a bill implementing the policy change.

    “Interesting question,” Albritton responded on Dec. 8 when asked by a reporter if there were negotiations between the House and Senate about such a trade-off. “Not that I’m aware of.”

    Albritton is an NRA member who has disclosed that he has a concealed-weapons licence, but he has also said that he has been “profoundly” affected by getting to know the parents of one of the teenage victims of the Parkland shooting massacre.

    Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Contact Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com. Follow Florida Phoenix on Facebook and Twitter.

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  • Florida House again moves to allow teens to purchase guns

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    The Florida House is again moving to pass a controversial bill that would lower the minimum age to purchase rifles and other long guns from 21 to 18, though the Senate has not given any public sign that it is on board.

    The Republican-controlled House Criminal Justice Subcommittee on Tuesday voted 11-5 along party lines to approve the bill (HB 133), which now only needs to clear the House Judiciary Committee before it could go to the full House during the 2026 legislative session.

    The bill would reverse a decision made by the Legislature and then-Gov. Rick Scott to increase the minimum gun-purchase age after the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland. Nikolas Cruz, then 19, used a semi-automatic rifle to kill 17 people at the school.

    The House passed bills in 2023, 2024 and 2025 to lower the minimum age to 18, but the Senate did not go along. A Senate bill on the issue has not been filed for the 2026 session, which will start Jan. 13.

    House Majority Leader Tyler Sirois, a Merritt Island Republican who is sponsoring the House bill, told subcommittee members that there is “still time for that conversation” with the Senate, where bills can be filed until the start of the session. Sirois declined to comment on the bill after the meeting.

    Senate President Ben Albritton, R-Wauchula, hasn’t publicly taken a stance on the issue. But such a bill would have to go through the Rules Committee, where Chairwoman Kathleen Passidomo, R-Naples, has said she isn’t going to repeal the 2018 legislation.

    The National Rifle Association has challenged the constitutionality of the higher gun-purchasing age. The group lost in federal district and appellate courts and has an appeal pending at the U.S. Supreme Court.

    Rep. Robin Bartleman, D-Weston, told lawmakers Tuesday that each time the bill is introduced it “reopens wounds” for Parkland survivors.

    “Every year, that wound is healing and you rip it off. And I don’t really understand why when you know there’s not a Senate companion (bill),” said Bartleman, who was on the Broward County School Board in 2018.

    “We were there the night of the shooting,” Bartleman added. “We went to the funerals. We dealt with the aftermath. But you continue to bring this up time and time again. And it just causes so much pain for these families.”

    Rep. Mike Gottlieb, D-Davie, described teens as “impulsive” and said requiring them to wait three years to buy a long gun “is not a huge constitutional violation.”

    “The rest of us have the right to be safe,” Gottlieb said.

    Federal law has long set the minimum age at 21 for handgun purchases.

    Rep. Jessica Baker, R-Jacksonville, said the state law created an “unfair situation.” While people under 21 cannot buy rifles or other long guns, they can receive them as gifts.

    “if we believe in equality, how is it that a young adult from a well-off family can get a long gun as a gift and protect their home and their families, but a young adult with no family support cannot?” Baker said. “We’re basically saying you can defend yourself, but only if you have parents who can afford to give you a long gun.”

    Luis Valdes, Florida State director at Gun Owners Of America, called the age-21 requirement “ludicrously hypocritical.”

    “It is horrible that we have a Republican supermajority that campaigns on being pro-gun, but some of our Republican lawmakers actually vote against this bill or don’t even bring it up in other chambers,” Valdes said.

    Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier, who took office in February, has declined to defend the law at the U.S. Supreme Court.

    “This bill is currently before the U.S. Supreme Court with the support of the Florida attorney general, because now we have one that actually can read a case decision,” Eric Friday, general counsel for the Second Amendment group Florida Carry, said.


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    The bill, if approved, would make it legal to use testing strips, and could help curb overdose deaths

    The controversial bill would lower the minimum age to purchase rifles and other long guns from 21 to 18



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  • Florida AG says judges can’t stop state attorneys, staff from bringing guns into court

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    Florida judges legally can’t bar state attorneys and their staff from carrying firearms into courtrooms, according to Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier.

    In an Oct. 20 letter posted to the attorney general’s website, Uthmeier told Sarasota’s Republican State Attorney, Ed Brodsky, that he and his staff should be allowed to bring their guns into courtrooms — even though the Chief Judge of the Twelfth Judicial Circuit decreed otherwise in a September order.

    “The Chief Judge’s Administrative Order clearly conflicts with and attempts to amend Florida law,” Uthmeier wrote in his advisory opinion, insisting that the circuit has “contravened” the law. These opinions are not binding, and while courts have to consider them in litigation, they don’t need to abide by them.

    “The Order cannot lawfully prohibit the State Attorney, assistant state attorneys, and their investigators from carrying firearms in the Twelfth Circuit’s courtrooms.”

    He argued that although Florida statute empowers judges to limit “any person” from bringing weapons into their courtrooms, state attorneys and their staff don’t count as “any person.”

    They count as law enforcement.

    “Law enforcement officers—including state attorneys, assistant state attorneys, and investigators—do not fall within the definition of ‘any person,’” he said.

    Uthmeier’s opinion tracks with his dogged pro-gun rights approach since Gov. Ron DeSantis appointed him to the chief legal position in February. He declined to defend a decades-old ban on open carry last month when the First District Court of Appeal struck it down as unconstitutional. He has since asked the legislature to clean up state statute to reflect the decision.

    The DCA’s ruling made statewide waves, prompting Florida Supreme Court Chief Justice Carlos Muñiz to issue a memorandum noting that the decision had no effect on the court’s weapons policy, which exclusively allows members of the Marshal’s Office to bear arms within the state Supreme Court.

    Uthmeier has also preemptively refused to defend a Parkland-era law that lowered the gun-buying age if it makes it to the Florida Supreme Court — unlike his predecessors. This  approach comes as House Republicans are set to consider (for the fourth year in a row) whether to return the gun-purchasing age to 21. DeSantis, meanwhile, has advocated for a repeal of Florida’s red flag laws, but the state Senate has largely avoided touching gun laws since the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in 2018.

    Why did Uthmeier write this opinion?

    The dispute arose after Judge Diana Moreland in September finalized new restrictions on where state attorneys can carry firearms: state attorneys and their staff could carry firearms into court facilities where their offices are, but not in courthouses without their offices or in any courtroom. Moreland oversees cases in Sarasota, Manatee, and DeSoto counties.

    Brodsky disagreed, and wrote to Uthmeier to ask his legal opinion. Because this isn’t a court case, the attorney general as Florida’s chief legal officer can offer advisory opinions that often carry great weight in future litigation and serve as a guideline for state attorneys.

    Uthmeier referenced a 1988 opinion by Florida Attorney General Robert Butterworth in a letter to then-State Attorney Janet Reno, a Democrat serving Miami-Dade who went on to serve as U.S. Attorney General. Butterworth believed that assistant state attorneys are law enforcement, and therefore could carry weapons into court in their official capacity.

    “The Florida legislature has recognized the importance of the safety of prosecutors by giving them the right to arm themselves in the course of their official duties,” Uthmeier wrote.

    “While [statute] contemplates a Chief Judge’s ability to regulate the carrying of firearms in courthouses and courtrooms, the State Attorney, assistant state attorneys, and investigators plainly fall outside that statute’s permissible regulatory sweep.”

    Update: This story now includes reference to Chief Justice Carlos Muñiz’s September memo reminding Florida judges that new open carry guidance does not alter the Florida Supreme Court’s firearm policy.

    Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Contact Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com. Follow Florida Phoenix on Facebook and Twitter.


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    Florida statute says judges can limit ‘any person’ from bringing guns into court — Uthemeier says state attorneys don’t count as ‘any person’

    The Senate unanimously passed a similar bill during the 2025 session, but the House did not approve it

    Attorneys said the agency fired the biologist to ‘prevent foreseeable disruption, reputational harm and loss of public trust’



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  • Florida judge rejects under-21 concealed carry ban

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    Siding with a 19-year-old man who was spotted with a gun in his waistband, a Broward County circuit judge Friday ruled that a state law barring people under age 21 from carrying concealed weapons violates Second Amendment rights.

    Judge Frank Ledee issued a nine-page ruling that said Florida’s “prohibition on the concealed carry of firearms by eighteen-to-twenty year olds strips a class of legal adults of their ability to exercise the very right the Constitution guarantees.”

    Ledee cited U.S. Supreme Court rulings in recent years that required analyzing the “historical tradition” of firearm regulation when determining whether laws violate the Second Amendment.

    “The state has failed to identify Founding-era law that broadly prohibited the concealed carry of firearms by eighteen-to-twenty year olds,” Ledee wrote. “The state also failed to cite to any historical regulation imposing a burden or justification comparable to Florida’s concealed carry ban as applied to eighteen-to-twenty year olds.”

    The ruling had not been posted on the Broward County circuit court website Friday afternoon but was posted on the J.A.A.B. Blog, a site with local legal news, and was reported by the South Florida Sun Sentinel.

    Ledee ruled that the law was unconstitutional as applied to the specific case of Joel Walkes, who was arrested in March after a police officer saw a bulge in his waistband. Walkes was carrying a semi-automatic pistol, Ledee wrote. The judge dismissed a third-degree felony charge against Walkes.

    The ruling focused on an age limitation for carrying concealed weapons — which is separate from a more highly publicized state law that prevents people under age 21 from buying rifles and other long guns.

    The Legislature passed the ban on buying long guns after the 2018 mass shooting at Parkland’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that killed 17 people. Federal law has long barred people under 21 from buying handguns. While sales of firearms are prohibited, people under 21 may have guns, for example, if they receive them as gifts.

    Friday’s ruling came amid a flurry of legal battles in Florida and other states about gun rights. The National Rifle Association is challenging the 2018 Florida law barring people under 21 from buying long guns. Federal district and appeals courts have upheld the law, but an NRA appeal is pending at the U.S. Supreme Court.

    Meanwhile, a panel of the state’s 1st District Court of Appeal in September ruled that Florida’s longstanding ban on openly carrying guns is unconstitutional. Attorney General James Uthmeier embraced the panel’s decision as “the law of the state” and issued guidance for prosecutors, police and sheriffs warning them not to arrest or put on trial “law-abiding citizens carrying a firearm in a manner that is visible to others.”

    Uthmeier also has refused to defend the gun-buying age limit at the U.S. Supreme Court.


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    The judge ruled that a state law barring people under age 21 from carrying concealed weapons violates Second Amendment rights

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  • Bill that would allow teens to buy guns in Florida filed once again

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    A Florida House Republican has again filed legislation that would reduce the minimum to buy a firearm in the state from 21 to 18 years of age.

    The proposal (HB 133), sponsored by Rep. Tyler Sirois, a Brevard County Republican, has passed in the Florida House during the past three legislative sessions, but failed to advance in the Florida Senate. The existing law exempts law enforcement officers, correctional officers, or service members younger than 21.

    The Florida Legislature and then-Gov. Rick Scott raised the age for purchasing a firearm in 2018 as part of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas Public High School Safety Act, just weeks after the school shootings in Parkland that killed 17 people.

    The effort to restore the legal age for purchasing a firearm to 18 has been supported by Gov. Ron DeSantis and gained momentum this spring when Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier announced that he would not defend the law after a federal appeals court again upheld its constitutionality after it was challenged in federal court by the NRA.

    “If the NRA decides to seek further review at SCOTUS, I am directing my office not to defend this law,” Uthmeier said in March, not long after DeSantis appointed him to his office. “Men and women old enough to fight and die for our country should be able to purchase firearms to defend themselves and their families.”

    The NRA has subsequently asked the U.S. Supreme Court to hear its challenge to Florida’s law.

    Meanwhile, another federal appeals court — the Fifth Circuit — ruled in January that the federal law banning federal firearms licensees from selling handguns to individuals aged 18 to 20 is unconstitutional under the Second Amendment.

    Rejected in Florida Senate

    Again, the state Senate has consistently thwarted repeal — in 2023 and 2024 by then-President Kathleen Passidomo and earlier this year by sitting Senate President Ben Albritton.

    Second Amendment groups have been critical of those efforts, and they are speaking out now with concerns about what Albritton might do when it comes to an implementing bill that would make the open carrying of firearms legal in Florida statute.

    The state’s First District Court of Appeals ruled last month that the 1987 law banning open carry in Florida was unconstitutional, and Uthmeier declared five days later that, in light of that ruling, he was declaring that open carry is now the law of the state.

    However, speaking during a press conference at the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office two weeks later, Uthmeier acknowledged that changing the law based on the court’s ruling was “not the cleanest situation and there’s likely cleanup that’s going to be needed by the Legislature.”

    In Tallahassee this week, Albritton told reporters “there are some questions” about the new policy, and that he was seeking advice from Florida sheriffs, whose political organization, the Florida Sheriffs Association, historically had opposed open carry.

    ‘Questions’ about open carry

    “There are some questions about the Capitol, specifically, about how well guns play in or would not play in, so the attorney general has given some guidance on this, so we’re contemplating all of that, and wanting to do what’s right for all Floridians. So, we’ll just continue to think it through. We’re again seeking input from various folks who have the expertise to help us understand and we’ll see how it goes,” he said.

    Luis Valdes, Florida state director for Gun Owners of America (GOA), told the Phoenix that the right to open carry has come from the judicial system, “not the Republican supermajority in the Legislature.”

    “GOA will fight tooth and nail to see this repeal passed,” Valdes said Friday. “But with the same leadership still in place, the battle against the RINOs in Tallahassee continues. We will continue with our simple message of NO COMPROMISE. We will fight to make sure all Floridians, 18 and up, can freely exercise their Second Amendment rights.”

    The issue of open carry in Florida made headlines this week when Publix, the largest supermarket chain in the state, declared that the company would comply with state law.

    “Treating customers with dignity and respect is a founding belief at Publix,” it said. “In any instance where a customer creates a threatening, erratic or dangerous shopping experience, whether they are openly carrying a firearm or not, we will engage local law enforcement to protect our customers and associates.”

    The new law also came into play on Thursday night in Tampa, when a former candidate for Tampa city council allegedly brandished a gun after getting into an argument with another person following a candidate forum for an election taking place later this month. No charges were filed in that incident.

    With additional reporting from Liv Caputo.


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    The Rev. Jack Martin insists politics won’t interfere with his volunteer school service

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  • These Florida sheriffs are no longer enforcing open-carry ban

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    Following Wednesday’s decision by the Florida First District Court of Appeal striking the state’s ban on openly carrying firearms, Brevard County Sheriff Wayne Ivey says his deputies will no longer enforce the ban – even though the law hasn’t changed yet.

    In a video message posted on X Wednesday night, Sheriff Ivey, a longtime advocate for the Legislature to pass an open-carry law, said that he had informed his deputies of the policy shift. The statute at issue (790.053) makes it “unlawful for any person to openly carry on or about his or her person any firearm or electric weapon or device.”

    “While the opinion at this point is not yet final as the court allows for time for the filing of a motion for rehearing or reconsideration, there’s no reason to expect that the court will reverse its decision,” Ivey said.

    He’s not the only sheriff making that move.

    The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office, the Santa Rosa County Sheriff’s Office, and the Pensacola Police Department will no longer enforce the state’s open carry law either, according to the Pensacola News Journal.

    The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office announced on Wednesday that it has informed officers that they cannot detain or arrest solely based on openly carrying a firearm.

    The ruling isn’t final until the 15-day window for a rehearing has run out, but the state likely won’t appeal the decision. Ron DeSantis advocated as recently as Monday for the Legislature to change the ban on open carry, and Attorney General James Uthmeier’s said on Wednesday that the court’s ruling was “a big win for the Second Amendment rights of Floridians.”

    The ruling is only applicable to the First District, which encompasses most of the counties in North Florida. Brevard County is not within that jurisdiction.

    Ivey said he had consulted with Wayne Scheiner, the state attorney in Florida’s 18th Judicial Circuit, as well as the attorney representing the Florida Sheriffs Association. He said he had informed all of the police departments in the county that they no longer needed to enforce the ban.

    A spokesperson for the police department in Palm Bay, the largest city in Brevard County, confirmed that it is following suit. “At the direction of the State Attorneys’s Office and Florida Police Chiefs Association, we will not be enforcing that statute as it pertains to open carry,” said Lt. Virginia Kilmer.

    Not all law enforcement agencies are dropping enforcement — at least not yet.

    “We have not changed our policy,” said Cpl. Jamie Miller with the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Department.

    “We have not issued a change in policy yet on this matter but it is anticipated soon,” said Javonni Hampton with the Leon County Sheriff’s Department.

    Several other sheriffs departments did not respond to a request for comment. Neither did the Florida Sheriffs Association, nor the attorney general’s office.

    In its ruling, the First District noted that the Florida Supreme Court had upheld the ban on open carry in its 2017 ruling of Norman v. State. However, Judge Stephanie Ray wrote that the court felt bound instead to apply a 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision in a case called New York State Rifle & Association v. Bruen, which struck down New York’s concealed carry restrictions.

    Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com. Follow Florida Phoenix on Facebook and Twitter.


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    The threat from Florida’s top education official comes after allegations of “despicable” comments being made online by teachers.

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  • Florida court rules open carry ban is unconstitutional

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    Jeff Meling shoots a 9mm Sig Sauer hand gun at Shoot GTR, located at 1610 NW 65th Pl., in Gainesville, Fla. A Florida appeals court on Wednesday threw out as unconstitutional Florida’s law against openly carrying a gun in public. Credit: via Augustus Hoff/Fresh Take Florida

    In a landmark decision, a Florida appeals court on Wednesday threw out as unconstitutional Florida’s law against openly carrying a gun in public, a decades-old statute that had made Florida one of only a handful of such states that banned gun owners from carrying a pistol on their hip or slinging a rifle over their shoulder in public.

    The unanimous decision by a three-judge panel for the 1st District Court of Appeals concluded that the 2nd Amendment and what it called the nation’s “historical tradition of gun regulation” made Florida’s gun law unconstitutional. The court’s jurisdiction stretches from the college town of Gainesville through the Panhandle.

    “History confirms that the right to bear arms in public necessarily includes the right to do so openly,” the court ruled. “That is not to say that open carry is absolute or immune from reasonable regulation. But what the state may not do is extinguish the right altogether for ordinary, law-abiding, adult citizens.”

    It wasn’t clear whether the case would be further appealed to Florida’s Supreme Court or when it might become common for people in Florida to begin openly carrying guns.

    Gov. Ron DeSantis, who in 2023 signed a law that no longer required a government permit to carry a concealed weapon in Florida, applauded the ruling.

    “This decision aligns state policy with my long-held position and with the vast majority of states throughout the union,” DeSantis wrote on social media. “Ultimately, the court correctly ruled that the text of the Second Amendment – ‘to keep and bear arms’ – says what it means and means what it says.”

    The state’s new attorney general, James Uthmeier, would decide whether to appeal the decision and is a gun rights advocate. He said on social media his office also supports the ruling. He called it “a big win for the Second Amendment rights of Floridians.”

    “Our God-given right to self-defense is indispensable,” Uthmeier said.

    The ruling involved a case in Pensacola against Stanley Victor McDaniels, 42, who deliberately flouted the law on the afternoon of the Fourth of July in 2022 waving his hand at cars near a busy intersection with a loaded Beretta pistol tucked visibly in his waistband and holding a copy of the U.S. Constitution. McDaniels at the time held a valid Florida concealed weapons permit.

    “McDaniels was cooperative. He explained that he wanted to take this case to the Supreme Court,” the appeals judges wrote.

    McDaniels, who ran as a write-in candidate for Congress earlier this year, could not be reached immediately for comment. He remained in the Escambia County Jail on the same day the court issued its ruling, convicted of violating a domestic violence injunction involving his estranged wife. He was expected to be released from jail in the misdemeanor case on Jan. 10.

    County officials there declined Wednesday to make McDaniels available for a phone interview.

    The court’s decision throws out the misdemeanor case against McDaniels, who had been convicted by a jury of openly carrying a weapon. The judge had sentenced McDaniels to six months of probation and 50 hours of community service. He was also banned from owning any guns and had to give up his Beretta pistol. The appeals ruling overturned his conviction and reversed his sentence.

    Gun control advocates quickly criticized the ruling.

    “In case you don’t die from polio, Florida man has you covered with his AR-15 at Disney,” wrote Shannon Watts of Moms Demand Action. She was referring to the governor’s earlier announcement that Florida also was working to eliminate all vaccine mandates.

    DeSantis, who earlier this week lifted sales taxes on purchases of guns and ammunition in Florida through the end of the year, said as recently as Monday he would sign any open carry bill the GOP-controlled Legislature passed. The appeals ruling renders moot efforts by lawmakers, who for years have failed to approve such a measure over concerns from law enforcement agencies worried about gun safety.

    “I’ve said for years that would be something that I would sign,” DeSantis said.

    The court’s ruling did not immediately appear to affect other state and federal limits on carrying guns, such as on school or college campuses, courthouses or federal buildings. Private businesses also may limit who can carry guns in their stores or on their property. Disney World, for example, already bans guns or ammunition anywhere in its parks, hotels and even parking lots. Florida previously allowed openly carrying guns when someone was fishing or hunting.

    McDaniels had been convicted in 2000 on a felony drug charge of possessing LSD that he intended to sell, according to court records. A felony conviction typically would preclude someone in Florida from owning or buying a gun, but the circuit judge in that case agreed to withhold adjudication – effectively throwing out the case – if McDaniels complied with terms of his 12 months of probation, including substance abuse therapy and submitting to random drug testing.

    In the years after his intentional arrest at the Pensacola intersection, McDaniels also faced misdemeanor charges of domestic violence and violating an injunction involving his estranged wife. She told sheriff’s deputies he parked his motorcycle last year outside the preschool where she worked and later followed her driving on his motorcycle, despite a court order to stay away. A judge sentenced him last week to roughly three months in jail after he wrote her an email discussing their relationship.

    A domestic violence conviction or active injunction can also be grounds in Florida to prevent a person from buying or possessing a gun.

    McDaniels’ estranged wife did not immediately return a voice mail or message left with her attorney.

    The three district judges in the case were Stephanie W. Ray, appointed by Republican Gov. Rick Scott; Lori S. Rowe, appointed by then-Republican Gov. Charlie Crist; and M. Kemmerly Thomas, also appointed by Scott.

    ___

    This story was produced by Fresh Take Florida, a news service of the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications. The reporter can be reached at s.ranta@freshtakeflorida.com. You can donate to support our students here.



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    Sara-James Ranta, Fresh Take Florida
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