Article Archive

Announcing the First Annual OFCC/TDI Fun 'n Gun!

Ohioans For Concealed Carry would like to invite you to join
senior OFCC staff at the First Annual OFCC/TDI Fun 'n Gun!

This fun event will be hosted by the Tactical Defense Institute, Ohio's premier tactical training facility. This event will be a combination of basic tactical training and IDPA type scenario shoots. Geared for both beginning and advanced shooters, it promises to be a day of fun for all.


When:
Sunday, April 3rd
9am-5pm

Where:
Tactical Defense Institute
2174 Bethany Ridge
West Union, OH 45693

100% of the proceeds from this event will go to the OFCC PAC to help fight to get representatives elected to the Ohio legislature who will represent YOUR rights!

Join instructors from both TDI and OFCC as we kick off spring with a bang!

Tale of Two Countries: "Batterings more likely for Britons"; Crime falls in US

The (UK) Sun is reporting that the rate of armed attacks against British citizens continues to soar out of control.

In the news story, Chief Inspector of Constabulary Sir Keith Povey blasted the rise in violence recorded by police as “unprecedented”.

He stressed: “The public, police and the Government are rightly concerned about the level of violence routinely displayed on our streets.

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“There has been a troubling increase in the use of firearms." (emphasis added)

This is an extraordinary statement, given that Britain has already banned just about every type of weapon that a criminal might want to use. Handguns were made illegal in 1997, and nearly every other firearm (even BB guns) is now subject to a complex regulatory regime.

In the Sun story, Povey also highlighted the terrifying knife culture spreading across the country. His warning, says the Sun, came within hours of a man going on a stabbing rampage in North London, leaving one dead and five seriously injured.

The Sun reports incidents of violence against individuals soared nearly 15 per cent to 955,800 in 2003/04 — up from 834,900 the previous year. Burglaries of homes and businesses fell to 818,600 in 2003/04 from 888,800.

    Sir Keith urged new Home Secretary Charles Clarke and police chiefs to crack down on the soaring violence, particularly the explosion in gun and knife use.

    He stressed that less than one in four crimes leads to a conviction. The Tories seized on the official report to blast Labour’s failure to tackle
    violent crime.

    Shadow Home Secretary David Davis fumed: “After seven years of this Government, violent crime has spiralled out of control.

    “This report demonstrates why people think it is not safe to walk the streets for fear of being attacked."

Meanwhile, in a country where civilian ownership of firearms, and the practice of carrying them concealed for self-defense purposes, is at an all-time high, another news report says crime in Ohio cities is following a trend experienced by the rest of the nation: DOWN.

    Crime fell in Mansfield during '04

    "For the second year since 2000, unless there is a massive spike in crimes until the new year, violent crime will be down by 11 percent and overall crime down by 4 percent," police Chief Phil Messer said.

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    Columbus murder rate drops big in '04

    Columbus, the state's largest city, saw a dramatic 20 percent drop: 89 homicides in 2004 through Friday afternoon, compared with 111 in 2003.

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    Cincinnati homicides decrease 12% in 2004

    After five straight years of increasing killings, Cincinnati finished 2004 with a 12 percent decrease in homicides.

    Sixty-six people died from homicidal violence in the city last year, compared with 75 victims in 2003. The 2004 total is slightly skewed because it includes two victims who died from injuries sustained years ago, most recently a 69-year-old man beaten in 1991.

    The pace of killings slowed dramatically in the second half of 2004, when 26 people were slain - compared with 39 during the same time period in 2003. The 75 victims in 2003 marked a 26-year high.

Lesson, Americans? GUN CONTROL DOESN'T WORK to reduce crime or enhance safety. It is a failed social experiment, and should NEVER be tried here.

Related Stories:
Op-Ed: Add Gun Control To Litany Of Misbegotten Gov't Plans

National Post (Canada) - More gun control isn't the answer

Gun Control Failure: British Residents Trained to Treat Gunshot Wounds

Op-Ed: Whither Gun Control?

Paper: Sheriff reduces staff, felons to be released

On Christmas Eve, the Cincinnati Enquirer reported that the Brown County Sheriff's office would be down to just one cruiser starting at the beginning of the year.

The Brown County News Democrat has published a more detailed story, which reveals that the sheriff's office is preparing to release felons because they do not have the funding to keep them incarcerated.

    While residents learned of staff reductions and budget shortfalls in the Sheriff's office on Monday, Brown County Common Pleas Court Judge R. Alan Corbin and Prosecutor Tom Grennan had to begin preparing to release convicted felons from jail.

    It was not something Judge Corbin was prepared to do.

    "I think that it's imperative that we be able to put felons in jail or prison if and when necessary," said Corbin. "I have an interest in seeing that our felons are incarcerated."

    Corbin said that if he is forced to make decisions of who will be released, it will be a difficult one that he and Prosecutor Tom Grennan will have to look at together.

    "We shouldn't have to allow felons to be freed like this," said Corbin.

According to the story, the Brown Co. Commissioners office approved the 2005 budget on Dec. 17. The Commissioners cut $730,000 from the previous budget.

Cuts were necessary, the paper says, because the county's revenue has declined slightly and the cost of doing the county's business continues to increase.

The Sheriff's office took the hardest hit because it has the largest part of the county's expenses. The office uses around 40 percent out of the general fund. Brown County Sheriff Dwayne Wenninger said that he has more operations money than all other departments put together.

Click on the "Read More..." link below for more.

Another good Samaritan beaten, robbed in ''setup''

Two days after a Greene Co. couple was shot at and assaulted after stopping to help a woman who was flagging them down on a roadside, another violent attack on a would-be good Samaritan in Akron highlights the need to be prepared to defend your life in ANY situation.

The Akron Beacon Journal is reporting that a 59-year-old good Samaritan was jumped and beaten after he stopped to help a woman change a flat tire at West Market Street and Grand Avenue.

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According to the newspaper, Joseph Kish III told officers that he pulled over at 7 a.m. Wednesday when he saw the woman in trouble. As he walked up to her, three men attacked him and hit him numerous times. One of the blows struck Kish in his right eye, leaving it swollen shut and badly bruised.

Police told the Beacon Journal they believe the Norton man was set up and that the woman didn't have a flat tire.

Police say Kish was robbed of $25, his driver's license, a credit card and other cards.

After the assault, Kish experienced chest pains, and was taken to Akron City Hospital. The newspaper says he told officers that he had open heart surgery in late October.

The Beacon Journal reports the woman whom Kish tried to help was in a four-door '90s Buick. One of the attackers was described as black, in his 30s, 6 feet 5 inches tall and 300 pounds, but descriptions of the other men weren't as detailed.

Op-Ed: Shooting Blanks

December 29, 2004
New York Post

by Dr. John Lott Jr.

This month the National Academy of Sciences issued a 328-page report on gun-control laws. The big news is that the academy's panel couldn't identify any benefits of decades-long effort to reduce crime and injury by restricting gun ownership. The only conclusion it could draw was: Let's study the question some more (presumably, until we find the results we want).

The academy, however, should believe its own findings. Based on 253 journal articles, 99 books, 43 government publications, a survey that covered 80 different gun-control measures and some of its own empirical work, the panel couldn't identify a single gun-control regulation that reduced violent crime, suicide or accidents.

From the assault-weapons ban to the Brady Act to one-gun-a-month restrictions to gun locks, nothing worked.

The study was not the work of gun-control opponents: The panel was set up during the Clinton administration, and all but one of its members (whose views on guns were publicly known before their appointments) favored gun control.

Click on the "Read More..." link below for more.