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Buckeye Firearms Association in the News
Buckeye Firearms Association is the most active grassroots group in Ohio working to defend and advance your right to keep and bear arms. We not only cover firearm related news, we are constantly making the news through our prolific stream of articles, commentary, and political activism.
Below are just a few of the many instances where BFA has been mentioned in the media or where the media has turned to us for expert advice.
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May 2, 2008
NRANews.com
April 28, 2008
Gun Digest Magazine - Ohio's Concealed-Carry License Becoming More Popular With Citizens
In all, more than 109,000 Ohioans hold a carry license.
"Every day, the law-abiding citizens who carry a gun prove the anti-gun side wrong," a Buckeye Firearms Association press release noted. "None of their predictions have come true. No increase in accidents, or kids finding guns, or blood in the streets. The release of more data reinforces what gun owners and concealed-carry advocates have been saying for years: We are not the problem. And all the attention given to restricting our rights is energy that should be focused on stopping criminals."
April 23, 2008
WKHW/ WHKZ's "Call the Cops" radio program
April 17, 2008
NRANews.com
April 17, 2008
WCMH TV (NBC Columbus) - Debate Remains Regarding Shooting Intruders
"The Buckeye Firearms Association said that 20 states have a Castle Doctrine and said that just because the law changes, it doesn't turn honest people into bloodthirsty vigilantes."
April 9, 2008
WKHW/ WHKZ's "Call the Cops" radio program
April 7, 2008
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Hoping for a Return to the Wild West
April 6, 2008
Toledo Blade - Concealed carry: Debate endures 4 years later
Then, from 2005 to 2006, violent crime dropped, according to the most recent statistics available from the U.S. Department of Justice.
Jim Irvine, chairman of the Buckeye Firearms Association, said many factors play into crime rates, but he agreed the concealed-carry law isn't one of them.
"I'd love to be able to say it's reduced crime, but I don't think we can say that," he said.
Still, Mr. Irvine believes the law shouldn't be blamed on any spikes in crime.
Mr. Irvine said the people applying for the permits are law-abiding citizens who want to carry a gun to defend themselves and their families against criminals. Many people get guns to feel safer, Mr. Irvine said.
Even if the gun remains untouched in its holster, Mr. Irvine said the feeling of security is immeasurable.
"They can benefit from a security system mentally even if nobody ever breaks into their house," he said. "That feeling of safety - that's a great public good."
April 3, 2008
WCMH TV (NBC Columbus) - Shooting Intruders: Self Defense Or Excuse For Murder?
"You're in your home -- your castle -- and you feel forced to fire. Self defense or excuse for murder? Both sides of the castle doctrine debate weighed in on Senate Bill 184 at the Statehouse, NBC 4's Erin Tate reported.
The bill would apply to lawsuits against those who may shoot a felon, forcibly trespassing to rape, rob, assault of burglarize.
The Buckeye Firearms Association said 17 states have the castle doctrine, including states which neighbor Ohio -- Indiana, Pennsylvania and Kentucky.
Sen. Tim Grendell said there have not been any problems with Kentucky's law."
April 2, 2008
NRANews.com
April 2008
S.W.A.T. Magazine - Armed and Unarmed Combatives - Innovative Tactical Concepts' Advanced Pistol Fighting
April 2008
S.W.A.T. Magazine - Black Arts at BlackWater
March 25, 2008
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Exposed: Pulling Back the Curtain on the Gun Grabbers' Wizard of Toledo - PART 3
March 25, 2008
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Exposed: Pulling Back the Curtain on the Gun Grabbers' Wizard of Toledo - PART 2
March 14, 2008
Ohio Outdoor News - Ohio Gun Rights protectors join historic D.C. ban case
March 5, 2008
WorldNetDaily - Why you should carry every day
March 3, 2008
Gun Digest Magazine - Ohio Concealed-Carry Permit Renewals: Does a Big Logjam with Certificates Await?
As Baus wrote on the BFA website, the carry permits of more than 45,000 Ohioans will expire between April and December 2008. Permit holders must go through their county sheriffs for renewals. The critical piece of paper applicants need is their "competency certificate", issued by a certified concealed handgun license instructor. Will permit holders have a copy of that certificate? Probably not.
"One sheriff has already confirmed to me that in the early days of the law, his office was accepting originals of applicants competency certificates, but were not yet advising applicants of the importance of making a copy, as they now are," Baus wrote. "And because state law requires sheriffs to destroy documents submitted at the time of application once the licensing process is completed, every one of the 45,497+ competency certificates submitted to the sheriffs in 2004 were destroyed under statute."
If their instructor did not keep a copy, Baus warned, such people will probably have to retake their carry class.
March 1, 2008
WXIX TV (FOX Cincinnati) - Concealed Carry on Campus
February 20, 2008
The Washington D.C. Examiner - D.C. gun case attracts gun lovers from Ohio
The document names two interest groups: first, the Buckeye Firearms Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to defending “the rights of Ohio citizens to use firearms for all legal activities.” Second, the National Council for Investigations and Security Services, a trade group for private security agencies.
Their argument is simple: Because the Metropolitan Police Department has failed to protect residents, the city has no right to ban handguns.
February 15, 2008
NRANews.com
February 15, 2008
WCMH TV (NBC Columbus) - Concealed Carry on Campus
February 11, 2008
NRANews.com
February 11, 2008
NationalJournal.com - Another Way To Look At The D.C. Handguns Case
"The District is consistently a national leader in various crime categories while simultaneously demonstrating inability to adapt or change under the crippling bureaucracy endemic to the District. Compounding this deadly combination of high crime and inflexibility are constant examples of corruption, incompetence and outright misfeasance in the operation of the department," the brief argues.
..."Within the context of a police department failing in the most basic duty owed to the citizens, to protect and serve, and courts declining to hold police departments accountable for even the most egregious of these failures, the Second Amendment must be interpreted as an individual right to keep and bear firearms for defense of self and others," the brief continues.
This argument could allow the Supremes to decide D.C. v. Heller using factors other than a Second Amendment interpretation. For example, it's clear that the gun ban has done little to reduce gun violence in the District. That doesn't make it unconstitutional, but it's not a great argument for upholding the ban, either.
The amicus should also serve as a wake-up call to Fenty's administration. It has a lot riding on this case, which will be one of the highest profile of the court's term. But citizens may already suspect, as the Buckeye Firearms Foundation does, that the regulation of firearms is just one of the District's many problems when it comes to reducing violence.
February 10, 2008
The Volokh Conspiracy (Dave Kopel) - The "Failed State" Brief in DC v. Heller
February 8, 2008
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Exposed: Pulling Back the Curtain on the Gun Grabbers' Wizard of Toledo - PART 1
February 8, 2008
ArmsandtheLaw.com (David Hardy) - Heller update
February 2, 2008
(New York State) North Country Gazette - Post-Star, Pistol Permits And Public Safety
In what was labeled as a grossly irresponsible move by many, the Register published the names, ages and home counties of the nearly 2,700 concealed carry permit holders in its circulation area.
...In Ohio, gun laws restrict public access to concealed carry records but the media is allowed to access them, but not for the purposes of making such lists public by publication.
After the Register’s action, a spokesman for the Buckeye Firearms Association said that “The general public may now know who owns and may or may not carry a gun. Additionally, the general public now knows who is not carrying a gun in their day to day activities.”
...Ken Hanson, legislative chair of the Buckeye Firearms Association and author of The Ohio Guide to Firearm Laws says that by publishing lists of persons who have obtained concealed handgun licenses, newspapers such as the Sandusky Register have taken private, non-public record information and made it public.
“Beyond the fact that The Register has now made public that which statutorily was not to be public, what harm can come from this?” Hanson asks. “Buckeye Firearms Association previously brought you the story of a prison guard who was tracked down by a former inmate by using a concealed carry list published in a local paper. However, beyond this explicit example, the general public remains largely unaware of just how much harm can come from this.
January 31, 2008
FOX 8 News (WJW Cleveland) - Castle Doctrine Debate
January 23, 2008
NRANews.com
January 10, 2008
NRANews.com
January 4, 2008
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - God Bless the Warrior
December 13, 2007
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Ohio's ban on defending lives in places of worship: How did it get this bad?
December 10, 2007
Gun List Magazine - Ohio Gun Group Receives Award From CCRKBA at Gun Conference
December 6, 2007
NRANews.com
November 21, 2007
Toledo Blade - Dann backs limits on Ohio gun-permit data
"They've published the names of people who are hiding from people trying to kill them, the names of prison guards who are trying to protect themselves from ex-convicts hunting them down, the names of women who have restraining orders out against people trying to kill them," he said. "How does that do any good?"
November 20, 2007
The Hannah Report - Ohio Group to Join Washington, D.C. Case in U.S. Supreme Court
The Court limited the case to the following issue:
"Whether the following provisions, D.C. Code 7-2502.02(a), 22-4505(a), and 7-2507.02, violate the Second Amendment rights of individuals who are not affiliated with any state-regulated militia, but who wish to keep handguns and other firearms for private use in their homes?"
The justices will review a decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit which ruled in March that Washington can't ban all handgun possession in the home. While the appeals court decision pertained to Washington, D.C., the final opinion may have nationwide impact.
The Ohio association will be filing a brief in support of Mr. Heller, one of the D.C. residents who originally filed the case. The Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence chose not to join the city in asking the Court to hear the case. Also, the National Rifle Association didn't take a position on whether the Court should get involved.
November 20, 2007
WLWT (NBC Cincinnati) - Tri-State Gun Show Loophole Still Open
"I'm not saying the background check should be done away with. I'm saying it's proven to be ineffective," [Buckeye Firearms Association's] Tim Inwood said. "Expanding it makes no sense whatsoever."
November 19, 2007
WKSU 89.7 Cleveland - Court, lawmakers debate Ohioans' access to public records
November 19, 2007
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Who is to blame when children hurt themselves with guns?
November 15, 2007
NRANews.com
November 11, 2007
Columbus Dispatch - Gun bill casts wide net - Hunting proponents see age limit as threat to sport
November 9, 2007
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - A Perfect Fighting 1911 - That You Can Afford
November 7, 2007
WBNS 10TV (CBS Columbus) - Group Tries Drum Up Support For Concealed Carry
...Mark Noble, who is associated with the Buckeye Firearms Association, said achieving that goal would start with changing state law, 10TV's Kevin Landers reported.
"In Ohio we would have to get the state law changed," Noble said. "Ohio is one of the few states that outright prohibits concealed carry on campus."
Despite that challenge, Noble said the right to carry a weapon should not stop at the campus border.
"Why should we prohibit people from exercising their rights, except for this imaginary line?" he said.
October 31, 2007
NRANews.com
October 25, 2007
FOX News - National Collegiate Student Empty Holster
October 23, 2007
Columbus Dispatch - Protesters want guns on campus
"Thieves know that if you are a student, then you are not allowed to carry a weapon and so they'll target you," said Noble, 31, who graduated in June...
"But if they changed the law, then thieves wouldn't know who is armed and they would move on to other targets."
October 18, 2007
NRANews.com
October 17, 2007
WBNS 10TV (CBS Columbus) - Bill To Keep Guns From Those Under 21 Not Likely
Critics of the proposal argue that probable cause already allows police to stop people suspected of illegally carrying a gun.
"The conduct they are talking about is already illegal under existing laws," said Ken Hanson with the Buckeye Firearms Association.
What concerns gun supporters like Hanson the most is that the legislation could leave some responsible gun owners defenseless, Landers reported.
Last year an 18-year-old clerk at a Columbus carryout shot and killed one of two people who tried to rob his family's store. Opponents claim that under the proposed bill, the clerk would have broken the law..
October 12, 2007
WKRC 550AM Cleveland
October 11, 2007
Cleveland Plain Dealer - Where did Cleveland teen get the guns?
"We know that teachers and school officials who have the knowledge, skills, and tools to stop the killing of our innocent children are by law not permitted to bring the only tool (a gun) which can stop an active shooter onto school premises. Too many lives have been lost. For the sake of our children, it's time to revise this well-intentioned, but disastrous policy."
He said that, except for underage students, everyone from cafeteria workers to school janitors should be able to pack "with proper training."
October 3, 2007
Columbus Dispatch - Cities fight for gun laws
Jim Irvine, chairman of the Buckeye Firearms Association, said a favorable Supreme Court ruling in the Clyde case would stamp out Cleveland's challenge.
"It should establish that statewide preemption is legal," Irvine said.
September 26, 2007
WKHW/ WHKZ's "Call the Cops" radio program
September 25, 2007
FOX News - Gun law conflict
September 21, 2007
Cleveland Plain Dealer - Police chiefs urge ending gun-show exception to background checks
The recommendations came in a report released Thursday by the International Association of Chiefs of Police.
The report was generated after a gun violence summit held in Chicago this spring.
One local gun-rights advocate called the report a political attack on gun owners.
"It's vehemently anti-gun and has nothing to do with fighting crime," said Jim Irvine of the Buckeye Firearms Association.
...The report also calls for expanding a nationwide police database for ballistic evidence that matches a gun to its unique marking on fired bullets and cartridge cases.
Irvine said that a pinpoint match of a gun to a crime is unrealistic and that such a database would overwhelm investigators.
September 14, 2007
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Small Town Security, or Head-In-Sand-ity?
September 10, 2007
NRANews.com
August 31, 2007
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Sex and Guns"
August 27, 2007
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Book Review: Dr John R. Lott's "Freedomnomics"
August 20, 2007
Gun Digest Magazine - Sandusky, Ohio, Newspaper Publishes Concealed-Carry Names List on its Website
BFA has called for a reader boycott of Sandusky Register advertisers, to protest the newspaper's actions.
August 17 -20, 2007
Ohio Public Television's The State of Ohio
August 16, 2007
WKBN 27 First News (CBS Youngstown)
August 10, 2007
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Failure to Inform: CHL Holders Taking a Big Risk on Some States' Roadways
August 10, 2007
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - The Katrina Effect
August 6, 2007
NRANews.com & Townhall.com
August 1, 2007
NRANews.com
July 27, 2007
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Another GOP Presidential Wanna-Be Flip-Flops on Guns
July 24, 2007
The (Ravenna, OH) Record-Publisher - Gun law change draws fire - Proposal would ease self-defense rules in Ohio
"Something like this comes up every year," Viguicci said. "But usually they don't seek this broad of coverage. I'd have to research it more, but it seems like too much."
Members of the Buckeye Firearms Association disagree with his preliminary assessment. The group has worked closely with legislators to push for the so-called right-to-shoot bill, although the organization's chairman, Jim Irvine, said the law has little to do with firearms.
"This isn't about guns, it's about self-defense," Irvine said. "If someone attacks you and brutally tries to kill you or rape your wife, do you not have the right to defend your family? If you do defend your life, should you be treated differently than someone else who suffers some other crime?
"In school, we all learned that you are innocent until proven guilty. This bill makes that a reality."
...Regardless of whether the bill clears committee, it seems gun advocates and anti-violence groups will never see eye-to-eye on the issue.
"People like Toby Hoover think you shouldn't defend yourself - that if you're attacked, you should just die," Irvine said. "Plain and simple, they are against self-defense."
July 17, 2007
RushLimbaugh.com - The Insidious Advance of Liberalism
Read the Background Material...
Proposed "Safety" Regulations Would Dry Up Ammunition Sales
Gun owners score pair of victories against Bloomberg and OSHA
July 15, 2007
Gun Week Magazine - OH Gun Activists Declare War on Newspaper Editor
Matt Westerhold, managing editor of The Sandusky Register, put himself in the crosshairs of the BFA and Ohioans for Concealed Carry (OFCC) when he published the names of concealed handgun license (CHL) holders. Rage turned to righteous indignation seasoned with a little revenge when BFA pubilshed information about Westerhold's alleged encounter with the Ohio State Highway Patrol last Sept. 1. He was stopped for speeding and cited for failure to wear his seatbelt, the BFA reported.
But the group went further, publishing what apparently is his home address in Amherst along with a photograph of the dwelling. An SUV parked at the home in the photo, which was obtained from public records, apparently belongs to Westerhold.
Westerhold did not respond to Gun Week's request for an interview.
...BFA's website recalled that this was not the first time Westerhold was apparently involved in publishing the names of CHL-holders. In an earlier job at The Elyria Chronicle-Telegram, Westerhold allegedly also ordered publication of names of law-abiding armed citizens there as well.
In a joint article written by BFA activists Chad Baus and John Salyers, they asserted that state lawmakers, county sheriffs and even the governor all tried to talk Westerhold out of publishing the names, more than 2,600 in all. They promised to provide more information on the newspaper's managing editor, and BFA website readers did not have long to wait.
Westerhold has written in the newspaper that that the issue is about the public right to know. Gun activists don't believe that, and they have launched an effort to have him removed.
...This battle has even gotten the attention of syndicated columnist Michelle Malkin, who criticized the decision to publish the names.
July 12, 2007
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Self-Defense Bill of Rights
July 10, 2007
Boortz.com - Nealz Nuze - Reading Assignments
July 6, 2007
RushLimbaugh.com - "Big Issue" in Sandusky, OH
You know, journalists give out people's privacy and so forth - and these are not public people. These are just 2700 people with concealed carry permits. These are not public people. Some of them might be, I don't know, but most of them are just average citizens. So here comes every bit of information on them, their names and so forth and so on, and you go tell the journalist, "How would you feel if everything about you was exposed?"
"Well, I'm just a journalist! I just convey the news. I'm an innocent bystander."
"No, you're not."
They can't handle it. When they come under the same scrutiny that they scrutinize everybody else with, that does cause the fur to fly.
July 5, 2007
Cybercast News Service - Ohio Newspaper Under Fire for Outing Gun Owners
BFA Legislative Chair Ken Hanson wrote that because of the newspaper's actions, "The general public may now know who owns and may or may not carry a gun. Additionally, the general public now knows who is not carrying a gun in their day to day activities."
In retaliation - and to illustrate the ease of finding personal information when given a name - the BFA began printing personal information about Sandusky Register Managing Editor Matt Westerhold. The information, while personal, is available through public records searches.
On its website, the group has printed Westerhold's phone numbers, automobile records, traffic ticket record, the address of a home he owns and information about the mortgage on the property. It has also printed redacted information on his birth date and Social Security number.
Cybercast News Service has independently verified most of the information through online public records searches, including his birth date, partial Social Security number, property holdings, and mortgage information.
The group defends its actions by saying that Westerhold, by approving the publication of the names and information about gun owners, is putting them at risk for the same kind of "this type of stalking/abuse."
June 29, 2007
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Which Came First: The Gun Violence or the Gun Control?
June 27, 2007
NRANews.com
June 27, 2007
NRANews.com
June 26, 2007
MichelleMalkin.com - The MSM's war on gun owners
BFA reports a citizen revolt and backlash against the paper's actions.
June 20, 2007
Cleveland Plain Dealer - Seniors feel safer when they carry gun
June 15, 2007
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Pro-gun Democrats Should Look West to Find Hope in the Presidential Primary
June 14, 2007
WBNS Ch. 10 CBS Columbus
June 14, 2007
WJW Ch. 8 FOX Cleveland
June 14, 2007
Toledo Blade: 'Castle Doctrine' self-defense right proposed
But Jim Irvine, chairman of the Buckeye Firearms Association, said those who act in self-defense sometimes plead to a lesser charge and shouldn't have to face the time, expense, and effort to defend themselves.
"It's common sense," he said. "Are you going to side with the rapist criminal or the victim? Right now the law is upside down."
June 13, 2007
Associated Press: Lawmakers propose NRA-driven changes to Ohio's self-defense law
In a case "where a guy purely, clearly has the right to use self defense, we've had judges say, 'No, the guy with a broken leg should have jumped out the second-story window,'" said Jim Irvine, chairman of the Buckeye Firearms Association.
June 6, 2007
Cleveland Free Times - The Way Of The Gun
"Somehow or another, we have to stop that supply to those people," she says.
Her opposition in Ohio is led by Jim Irvine, chairman of the Buckeye Firearms Association, an organization that named Hoover the number four threat to gun rights in 2007. Irvine's group won a victory in March when legislation it championed changed gun laws in the state. The new law made firearms regulations uniform across Ohio, but stripped local municipalities of their ability to tighten rules.
There are no licensing requirements for gun ownership in Ohio, and that's the way it should be, Irvine says.
"It's a constitutional right," he says. "You don't need to get training or a license to say "President Bush is an idiot' or "President Clinton is an idiot.' If you're criticizing an elected official, you don't need to go get a permit.
"Second of all, it's a piece of property. It doesn't make any more sense to say you need a license to go get a knife, or duct tape or anything else criminals use to commit crimes."
...As for requiring gun licenses, "I think that you should have to do that, and you should have to qualify for some kind of safety training," Hoover says.
But Irvine doesn't like laws that require training or licenses. "I'm a huge advocate of training," he says. "I don't think you can have enough training." Still, he favors rolling back the Ohio requirement of 12 hours of training before earning a concealed carry permit. He says people who can't afford the training are in danger because they can't get a permit.
"Concealed-carry is the best dollar-for-dollar return for society because it is paid for entirely by people who go to get a concealed-carry license," he says.
"I know close to a dozen people who have defended their lives with a firearm," he continues.
May 15, 2007
Boortz.com - Nealz Nuze - Reading Assignments
May 2007
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Might There be a Pro-Gun GOP Presidential Contender After All?
May 1, 2007
Cleveland Plain Dealer: Gun advocates: Statistics are inadequate
Jim Irvine, chairman of the Buckeye Firearms Association, said most examples are anecdotal accounts, undocumented by police investigations.
"Ninety-five percent of the time no shots are fired," Irvine said. "So there would be no police reports. The gun owner either draws the weapon or pulls his jacket back to show the gun and all of a sudden the criminal's gone."
The Buckeye Web site has a number of testimonials about gun owners defending themselves and others from attackers. But most of the cases involve store owners battling robbers. Those cases don't pertain to concealed weapons because a store owner is not required to have a concealed-weapon permit to keep a gun in a store.
April 27, 2007
Cleveland Plain Dealer - AG says mentally ill obtained ccw permits
April 27, 2007
Toledo Blade: Dann reveals state not conducting mental health checks before issuing some gun permits
"It's very difficult to weed out the few people who are a problem and not catch very good people who are not a problem," he said. "We're not good at the mental illness game. There are so many fuzzy borders, so many diseases, but treated, people live normal lives."
April 25, 2007
Associated Press - Concealed-carry permit holder fatally shoots teen
"The law works. It allows the victims of violent crimes to survive them," Irvine said.
April 24, 2007
Cleveland Plain Dealer - A boy dies, and gun debate is reignited
Irvine said it was "great that a potential victim is able to continue his life instead of having a criminal take it."
April 24, 2007
WTAM 1100 AM
April 19, 2007
Toledo Blade - Massacre rekindles debate about assault-weapons ban
"It really doesn't make a difference," said Jim Irvine, spokesman for the Buckeye Firearms Association.
"There are 45,000 to 50,000 people in car crashes every year. You can reduce the size of the gas tank to 10 gallons, but you wouldn't see fewer crashes. You'd just stop to fill up more often. Changing the magazine capacity has nothing to do with saving lives."
April 13, 2007
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Gun Owners of the World Unite!
April 10, 2007
WorldNetDaily - Will you be Mitt Romney's cheap date?
March 22, 2007
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Guns are Back on the Table
March 13, 2007
Columbus Dispatch: Hunters' concealed-carry a hot topic
"A hunter should be able to carry a gun for self-defense," said Gerard Valentino, central Ohio chairman of the Buckeye Firearms Association and a Pickerington resident.
March 11, 2007
Columbus Dispatch - Wildlife division sees benefits of being able to tote a second gun
But a long, unarmed walk back to the SUV, where "someone might be up to no good," seemed unnecessarily risky, Valentino said.
"A person might find himself in a position to not be able to fight back," he said.
March 8, 2006
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - Not the Same Old Doctors and Guns Article
December 15, 2006
Dayton Daily News - Senate bill bars copying names on gun permits
December 14, 2006
Akron Beacon Journal - Overriding the governor's veto, telling cities: We know better
December 13, 2006
Cincinnati Enquirer - Anti-gun mayors contemplate legal challenge to Preemption Law
That was the argument of backers including the Buckeye Firearms Association, Ohioans for Concealed Carry and the National Rifle Association, which defended the clause as bringing uniformity to a confusing array of local gun laws.
December 13, 2006
Canton Repository - Anti-gun mayors contemplate legal challenge to Preemption Law
Hanson also said he expects more gun control legislation to be addressed when a new Legislature and administration takes over next month.
December 13, 2006
Cybercast News Service - Ohio Lawmakers Override Governor's Gun Bill Veto
However, [Buckeye Firearms Association legislative chairman Ken] Hanson -- who describes himself as "an attorney who litigates firearms and has represented municipalities" -- warned that "taxpayers are not going to be happy if their elected representatives have to pay $50,000 in attorney fees over futile attempts to continue enforcing worthless local ordinances."
"The fact that so many voted for this bill and obtained the first veto override in nearly three decades demonstrates just how out of touch the governor and a few big city mayors really are," said the association's chairman, James Irvine.
"The cold, hard conclusion to be drawn is that Ohioans recognize gun control as the failure it is and understand that there is nothing to fear from trained, law-abiding citizens being armed," Irvine added.
December 13, 2006
Gongwer News Service - House and Senate Override Governor's Veto
December 7, 2006
Cincinnati Enquirer - Taft veto may face override
Hanson said his organization worked with state legislators to remove all of law enforcement's objections. He was surprised by the last-minute Taft opposition to the bill's impact on local ordinances.
December 7, 2006
Associated Press - Taft vetoes preemption bill; House overrides
"Certainly, gun owners want to be able to travel throughout the state," he said. "Driving down here today, I passed through six municipalities. If I'd happened to have a firearm in my car, I have no idea as I drive along unless I look up those codes whether I'm legal or illegal."
Hanson said Ohio law is already robust enough to handle the vast majority of assault weapons cases without the local bans, noting there have been only two convictions under Toledo's assault weapons ban, one under Cincinnati's, and none under the one in Columbus.
"These objections on home-rule grounds are red herrings," he said.
December 7, 2006
Dayton Daily News - House votes to override Taft gun bill veto
December 7, 2006
Toledo Blade - Taft vetos bill loosening restrictions concealed handguns
"This is an area of home-rule where local government is absolute and cannot be infringed, unlike firearm laws," said Ken Hanson, the organization's legislative chairman. "State-level public records laws are a clear infringement on home-rule authority delegated to municipalities to the extent the state dictates to municipalities how to meet, what paper to keep, and who they must give it to."
December 6, 2006
Columbus Dispatch - A New Generation of Hunters
"There are a lot of inexperienced young hunters out there that don't understand how far that bullet can fly," Valentino said. "It's like anything else. You can teach it in a book, but until you physically do it, you don't really know what you're doing."
November 30, 2006
Associated Press - Taft vows to veto bill ending local laws on concealed weapons
"Think of a driver's license or all of the things that the state issues a license for," Irvine said. "The license has to be valid wherever you go. Same thing with a [CHL]."
November 30, 2006
Toledo Blade - Legislation opposed by Taft would kill Toledo measures
"Any state-owned building is prohibited for a license-holder to carry, like the Statehouse building or rest areas, but they can't do it for property," he said. "Buildings can be posted. Property cannot be posted."
"What we have found since passage of concealed carry is that the number of instances where a gun was used successfully to defend one's self or used carelessly has been minimal," said Toledo police Chief Mike Navarre. "There isn't enough data for anyone to reach any objective opinion as to whether the law has been successful or not.
October 10, 2006
Cybercast News Service - Is anti-gun Brady Campaign's DeWine endorsement MEANT to help him lose?
September 22, 2006
Cybercast News Service - Personal Protection, a Personal Responsibility
September 14, 2006
The Other Paper - State lawmakers hope to pass a "shoot first" bill
"We have to manage the public relations, so the anti's don't get to run away with every single incident," said Ken Hanson, legislative chair of the Buckeye Firearms Association. "The anti's are never squeamish about dancing in a pool of blood."
August 9, 2006
Cybercast News Service - Saving the Children
August 2, 2006
U.S. Concealed Carry Magazine - How to help in the fight for our Second Amendment rights
July 18, 2006
Cybercast News Service - Democrat Courting Gun Owners in Ohio
May 31, 2006
Cybercast News Service - Saving Your Soul - and Your Life
May 19, 2006
Cybercast News Service - Taft's Last Chance to Help the Party He's Hurting
May 10, 2006
Cybercast News Service - Absurd is as Absurd Does
April 28, 2006
Cybercast News Service - One Silly Summit
May 1, 2006
Townhall.com - One Silly Summit
April 13, 2006
WEWA Ch. 5 Cleveland
March 17, 2006
Cybercast News Service - Ohio Pro-Gun Republican, Where Art Thou?
March 13, 2006
Cybercast News Service - Life, Liberty and Disarmament
March 9, 2006
Cleveland Plain Dealer - Ohio House passes bill allowing drivers to hide guns in vehicle
..."There have been a couple of cases where officers didn't understand this plain sight thing and have threatened arrest and confiscation of the firearm," said Jim Irvine, chairman of the Buckeye Firearms Association.
"The current law simply just hasn't worked well," he said.
February 23, 2006
Cybercast News Service - Sex and Guns
February 14, 2006
Cybercast News Service - The Katrina Effect: Hood introduces HB508
February 8, 2006
Cybercast News Service - The Gun Vote
January 20, 2006
Cybercast News Service - Let Me Live
January 9, 2006
Cybercast News Service - Not the Same Old Doctors and Guns Article
December 6, 2005
Cybercast News Service - Hear the Quiet?
October 12, 2005
Gun Week - HB347 to be out of committee this year
Almost immediately, the Buckeye Firearms Association (BFA) endorsed the legislation, filed as House Bill 347 (HB-347). Aslanides already has 47 co-sponsors out of a 99-member House of Representatives, and he insisted that other lawmakers will support the measure. He hopes to have it out of committee by the year's end.
BFA's Jim Irvine told Gun Week that he expects bitter opposition from Ohio anti-gunners, who contended that the current concealed carry law would lead to bloody shootouts in the streets and taverns. None of their dire predictions has come true, he noted.
He said there are tenets of the bill "that should make everybody happy."
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