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Two OH newsies buck media trend, call for close of Media Access Loophole
Submitted by cbaus on Thu, 03/24/2005 - 08:23.Lima News columnist Ronald Lederman Jr. and Cincinnati Enquirer columnist Peter Bronson aren’t likely to be very popular around their offices these days.
That’s because both men have written columns condemning abuse of the Media Access Loophole, which allows anti-gun-rights journalists to obtain the name, age, and county of residence of concealed handgun license-holders.
Click on the titles to read the complete columns.
Time to close a public record - by Ronald Lederman Jr., Lima News
- Lawmakers again are looking at Ohioans who carry concealed weapons. Legislators want either to restrict who can access the now-public lists of permit holders or close access to them altogether.
Closing the lists altogether makes sense. It’s not a popular opinion among newspaper people (the Ohio Newspaper Association, which this paper belongs to, opposes shutting off the lists).
Certainly, keeping public records open is important in a free society, but owning and carrying a gun isn’t sufficient reason to have your name and address kept on file for anyone to access.
Defining rights and privileges is important to this debate. You shouldn’t have to license yourself in order to exercise a freedom. It’s another thing if you look to take advantage of a privilege such as driving.
For example, as the "public" owns the airwaves, we have government regulators who monitor what is aired on television and radio. There’s no government restriction on what we can print in the newspaper, although the threats to call the FCC do amuse us. There is the threat of libel, but while we can be sued, there’s no license for government to yank.
This is also why the government isn’t supposed to place limits on what people say or how they worship.
Fixing Ohio's conceal carry law will require lawmakers to remember they are trying to license a right, not a privilege.
Keep concealed-carry list secret - by Peter Bronson, Cincinnati Enquirer
- My neighborhood is a liberal's nightmare. Four out of five driveways have gas-gulping SUVs. Kerry-Edwards yard signs were harder to find than a lawn without mole tracks. And according to the Ohio attorney general, I live in Colt County - the state capital of concealed carry.
Some people think that's scary. Not me. I look at Clermont County leading the state with 2,285 concealed-carry permits - and I sleep peacefully.
That's because guns discourage crime even better than traps discourage moles. This should be obvious to anyone who has ever noticed a holster on a cop's belt. But apparently, it's big news to lots of folks in Ohio.
Before Ohio's concealed-carry law took effect a year ago, liberals made panicked predictions that we'd have Dodge City shootouts in the plumbing aisle at Home Depot.
Instead, 45,500 licenses have been issued without a single gunfight at the OK Corral. About one-fourth of 1 percent of permits were suspended or revoked. If drivers' licenses were as safe, we could drive with our eyes closed.
National studies show that murder rates drop about 2 percent in states with concealed carry. If meth junkies don't know where Smith & Wesson live, the theory goes, they think twice.
Unless newspapers publish the permit records.
According to Ohioans for Concealed Carry, that's happened several times. The Ohio Newspaper Association lobbied for public access to permit records, promising to treat them with care to make sure permits were not handed out to the wrong people.
But now it looks like permit records were handed out to the wrong people.
Ohioans for Concealed Carry reported: "The Sidney Daily News in Shelby County made headlines last June by not only publishing the names of 87 applicants who applied in the opening weeks of the new law, but also published their home addresses, an act prohibited by law and punishable as a felony."
That's like publishing a shopping list for felons.
OFCC has evidence that many news organizations have obtained these "shopping lists for felons". Some have published them, and at least one is holding them hostage against legislative attempts to close the loophole.
Click on the "Read More…" link below for Ashland Times-Gazette Editor Ted Daniels' response to one letter-writer who complained about his threat to publish the names of license-holders if the legislature doesn't bend to his will.
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Inmate flees ''no-guns'' hospital after ''nearly taking life'' of officer
Submitted by cbaus on Thu, 03/24/2005 - 08:06.Date: Wed, 23 Mar 2005
From: OFCC Supporter
Subject: Security...
As most know, St. Vincent Mercy Medical Center in Toledo is a "No Guns" hospital. I'm sure you also know that there have been three or four attacks in the parking garage in the recent months. To that effect, they have built more fences and posted more -unarmed- security guards in the parking lots for employee protection.
St. V's also provided free training to female employees on self defense, I suppose in order protect themselves from -armed- criminals in the parking garages and lots.
Last night, a incarcerated three months pregnant woman was at St. V's for a checkup and overpowered a security guard and was able to escape from the hospital.
I'm not sure what bothers me more, the fact that I cannot defend myself and my family at the hospital, or the fact that the security at the hospital is laughable.
At what point do we stand up to all of this?
Even though we are licensed, we still cannot carry to defend ourselves in what seems to be some of the most dangerous areas.
Click here to read the Toledo Blade's account of yet another dangerous criminal prowling about in a place where guns are banned.
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AAA Ohio Motorist Association loses 20-year member
Submitted by cbaus on Thu, 03/24/2005 - 08:02.Submitted by: David P.
After 20 years of being a member of AAA's Ohio Motorist Association, I will not be renewing my membership. When asked what their policy towards concealed carry was after seeing the “no-guns” sign on their doors, their answer was as follows:
"We believe this is the safest policy for members and employees alike. Placing signs on our doors gives a level of comfort to our associates and to a large majority of our customers. We realize that all of our members do not agree with posting these signs, but the majority do."
The person to contact is Brian Newbacher, director of public affairs for the Ohio Motorist Association.
David P.
Brian Newbacher can be contacted at:
AAA Ohio Motorists Association
5700 Brecksville Road
Independence, Ohio 44131
216-606-6213
216-606-6371 FAX
bnewbacher@aaaoma.com
Contact information for many AAA stores and other dangerous locations is available on OFCC's Do Not Patronize While Armed database.
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Dear Mr. Mayor: WHY PHILADELPHIANS WANT TO CARRY GUNS
Submitted by cbaus on Thu, 03/24/2005 - 07:50.March 22, 2005
Philadelphia Daily News
By Stu Bykofsky
DEAR Mayor Street:
You wondered aloud last week why Philadelphians feel a need to carry guns - legal guns, using a city-issued "carry permit."
"For what?" you asked. "Why are they carrying? They're not hunters."
No, Mr. Mayor, but some of us feel like the hunted.
Following a single weekend that rang up 11 homicides you asked, "For what?"
The reason some of us want to carry legal guns is because some neighborhoods are swarming with criminals packing illegal guns.
We carry guns for self-defense because police can't protect us from a homicidal maniac on the street or a rapist breaking in through a bedroom window. Police respond only after a crime's reported, mostly arriving in time to draw a chalk outline around the body.
"I've always been very reluctant personally about carrying a weapon," you said. "Part of it is that I'm fortunate to have the common sense to understand that if you have a gun you might use a gun."
If you "might use a gun" to save your own life or the life of a loved one, what's wrong with that? That's why police carry guns. If you were packing, Mr. Mayor, I would not feel less safe. It's not the gun, it's whose hands the gun is in.
Of course, you don't need to carry because you are surrounded by a Mayoral Protection Detail of 12 armed officers. Assign them to protect me day and night and I'll turn in my carry permit.
Click here to read the entire op-ed in the Philadelphia Daily News.
Are YOU protecting yourself, or are you among Ohio’s hunted? The predators are out there. Click on the "Read More…" link below for examples.
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Security in the courthouse? Cincy judges tell COPS to stay out too.
Submitted by cbaus on Thu, 03/24/2005 - 07:46.The Cincinnati Post is reporting that, while the rest of the country is examining how to beef up security in courthouses, several judges and the court administrator are reminding police they can't bring personal guns into the building.
From the story:
- "I have concerns that police officers are bringing weapons into court on non-course-of-employment cases," Court Administrator Mike Walton said Tuesday.
"If you're a police officer or a fireman or whatever and you're down here on your own private, non-law enforcement matter, you're precluded from bringing a gun in."
Those concerns were raised after Stephen Roach -- a Cincinnati police officer when he shot an unarmed black man in 2001 in Over-the-Rhine, sparking Cincinnati's race riots -- was in court last week as a defendant in a civil case. During a trip to the restroom, he lost the gun he carries while off-duty.
Roach, now an Evendale officer, reported the lost gun three hours later to the Hamilton County Sheriff's Department, which is in charge of courthouse security. The gun hasn't been found.
The court's local rule notes that no weapons are allowed in the courthouse except for the "official side arm" used by law enforcement officers within the scope of their employment. That right doesn't apply to officers in court for reasons "outside the scope of their employment."
"If they're a party or a witness in a civil action, they're not allowed to bring a private sidearm in," Common Pleas Court Judge Mark Schweikert told the newspaper. "It does suggest that maybe (Roach) did not consider that and maybe we need to reiterate that if police are bringing in private firearms, they should consider that."
Roach’s punishment for carelessly losing his firearm? Evendale Police Chief Gary Foust placed a letter of reprimand in his file.
Related Stories:
Off-duty officer's gun lost/ stolen from Hamilton Co. courthouse
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