ReportWire

Tag: Florida open carry

  • How Florida’s open carry rules differ from other states

    [ad_1]

    A man shows his Sig Sauer P365 that he always carries in a holster in Atlanta, Georgia, on November 4, 2024. (Photo by Yasuyoshi CHIBA / AFP) (Photo by YASUYOSHI CHIBA/AFP via Getty Images)

    After Florida’s open carry ban was struck down, there is nothing in state law requiring a license to carry a gun openly.

    AFP via Getty Images

    For the first time in nearly four decades, Floridians can openly carry firearms.

    How that looks in public may play out a little differently than in other states where it is allowed. Each state has its own rules.

    A Florida court decision led to the new gun access; the state had largely banned open carry since the 1980s.

    Attorney General James Uthmeier, who applauded the court’s decision to strike down that statute, acknowledged that there now may be “cleanup” needed for the state’s gun laws.

    Florida’s legislative leaders have so far been coy about what, if any, legislation they plan to bring forward to regulate how and where guns can be carried in public.

    Reinstating another broad ban doesn’t seem possible — the Florida appeals court that struck down the state ban said ordinary, law-abiding citizens can’t be forbidden from openly carrying a firearm.

    But the court noted that open carry is not “immune from reasonable regulation.”

    Here are some of the laws in other states and how they may differ from what Florida now allows.

    Requiring permits

    Some states, like Hawaii and Minnesota, only allow people to openly carry weapons if they have a government-issued permit.

    But the majority of states don’t require a carry permit.

    After Florida’s open carry ban was struck down, there is nothing in state law requiring a license to carry a gun openly. (The state in 2023 passed a law that dropped training requirements and licensure for most people wanting to carry a concealed weapon.)

    Holsters

    In Texas, people can openly carry firearms without a permit, but the state penal code requires the weapons to be in holsters.

    Spencer Myers, a state and local policy attorney at the gun safety group Giffords, said Texas’ laws are the most explicit about how people can physically carry firearms.

    But Myers noted that most states have laws that prohibit using or carrying a gun in a reckless or threatening manner — meaning a person likely wouldn’t be able to walk around with their gun drawn without being stopped by law enforcement.

    Florida has a prohibition on carelessly carrying a gun.

    Local rule

    Other states that allow open carry leave it up to local government to regulate.

    In Colorado, for example, the city of Denver has a rule in its municipal code that broadly bans carrying firearms.

    The city’s rule carves out a few people who can carry firearms openly, including law enforcement officers, members of the United States Armed Forces, people on their own property, people with “valid authorization” from the city and people transporting a weapon in their car to go hunting.

    Missouri also leaves wiggle room for cities to set their own firearm laws. In St. Louis, a 2024 ordinance bans people from openly carrying a firearm without a concealed carry permit. The city also recently banned open carry for people under the age of 19.

    And in Pennsylvania, most residents don’t need a permit to openly carry. But state law treats the largest city, Philadelphia, differently. Residents there must get a permit in order to openly carry a firearm.

    That law is being challenged as a violation of the Second Amendment and is headed to the state Supreme Court.

    Where to carry

    Florida, like many other states, restricts where people can carry a weapon — whether openly or concealed.

    Florida law prohibits guns in places like police stations, schools, bars, courthouses and polling places.

    But since the open carry ruling, some Florida lawmakers and observers have been concerned about a perceived loophole.

    The law says no person can “openly carry a handgun or carry a concealed weapon” into any of the listed sensitive spaces.

    Myers said it would be “crucial” for Florida to make clear that long guns, like rifles, are also prohibited in those spaces. He noted that the U.S. Supreme Court has pointed to restrictions on guns in sensitive spaces as appropriate under the Second Amendment.

    Rep. Christine Hunschofsky, D-Parkland, and Sen. Tina Polsky, D-Boca Raton, have filed a bill to change that language and prohibit the carrying of any gun in sensitive spaces.

    [ad_2]

    Romy Ellenbogen

    Source link

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

    [ad_1]

    Credit: Shutterstock

    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.


    Subscribe to Orlando Weekly newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple News | Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook Bluesky | Or sign up for our RSS Feed


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

    Artists will transform 49 parking spaces into colorful art installations

    The Honey House concept, however, will live on at Orange Tree Antiques Mall



    [ad_2]

    Mitch Perry, Florida Phoenix
    Source link
  • Florida court rules open carry ban is unconstitutional

    [ad_1]

    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.



    [ad_2]

    Sara-James Ranta, Fresh Take Florida
    Source link