Jump to content

Police say the repeal of Indiana's handgun permit law means someone openly carrying a gun can be on a sidewalk eyeing a school but cops can't legally ask them what they're doing


Recommended Posts

Police say the repeal of Indiana's handgun permit law means someone openly carrying a gun can be on a sidewalk eyeing a school but cops can't legally ask them what they're doing

 

Hannah Getahun
Sat, July 2, 2022 at 8:35 PM
 
 
Blue Handgun on Blue background
 
Getty Images
  • The Indiana State Legislature's repeal of gun permit requirements went into effect Friday.

  • The repeal makes it harder to screen for dangerous individuals with weapons, police say.

  • The law's exceptions include individuals with felonies or restraining orders against them.

Indiana repealed a law requiring handgun owners to carry a permit — and police say it will make their job more difficult by removing checks against individuals who commit crimes with weapons.

House Bill 1077 was passed in March by the state legislature, took effect on Friday, and allows those over 18 to carry a handgun without a permit. The law's exceptions include individuals with felonies, restraining orders against them, or a mental illness that makes them dangerous, the Associated Press reported.

 

Police advocates told the AP that permits helped to screen for dangerous individuals with weapons.

"We have to go through another step or two in order to be able to run a criminal check," state police spokesperson Capt. Ron Galaviz told the AP. "We won't necessarily be able to do it there on the side of the road."

Scott County Sheriff Jerry Goodin told WDRB the law would make people fearful in public.

"A guy can stand out there — or a girl or whoever with a rifle, an AR-15 or a handgun — and stand there on a sidewalk looking at the school,"  Goodin told WDRB. "The difference is this: We can't even stop and ask them what they're doing because of this law."

Across the country, conservatives have renewed attention to laws that protect the right to carry guns. Some of the laws, like Louisiana's and Ohio's bills to allow teachers to carry weapons, were proposed and passed in the wake of the Robb Elementary school and TOPS grocery store shootings in May.

Conversely, the shootings galvanized legislators in Congress to pass more federal gun restrictions. The restrictions include an end to the "boyfriend loophole," red flag laws that allow authorities to take guns from individuals deemed a threat to the public, and enhanced background checks for those under 21 looking to purchase a gun.

Meanwhile, the Supreme Court ruled on Thursday that the US Constitution protected the right to carry guns outside of the home. The law struck down a New York state law that required individuals who registered to carry guns outside of their homes to provide a proper cause for doing so.

Indiana State Police did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.

Read the original article on Business Insider

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites





Greater inequality, more guns, more unwanted children.  What could go wrong.

We have more than 20% of the worlds prison population while, less than 4% of the worlds total population.

We aren't bad people.  We have a corrupt system.  Capitalism and democracy have been destroyed.  We are speeding towards an authoritarian, fascist government.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Saw and I believe I posted on a topic in this forum a news article not long ago where a guy was legally walking around town with body armor and an assault rifle and were sending terrified people running out of businesses and calling 911 to report him, but because of the GOP lax gun laws in the state the police said he wasn't doing anything illegal.....except for the fact he has brass knuckles and a handgun on his that was a slightly higher caliber than was legally allowed so he was arrested for those minor crimes. 

 

I'm sure he'll be back in the streets terrorizing the community with his "2nd amendment freedoms" in no time. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

maybe i never did but i just do not understand my country anymore.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 hours ago, aubiefifty said:

maybe i never did but i just do not understand my country anymore.

I understand it yet,,, just do not understand how people who once prided themselves on basic decency, fairness and, common sense have gotten to this place.

Did we learn nothing from the Shay's Rebellion, Civil War, the Depression, the Financial Crisis?  We were taught the history, we just didn't get any of the context.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...