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Thursday, September 18, 2008
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Ohio Supreme Court and CCW
The
Students for Concealed Carry on Campus
is a national organization that works primarily for CCW issues on College campuses. SCCC applaudes another victory for Ohio CCW permit holders that has come down from the Ohio Supreme Court:
Today’s ruling by the
Ohio Supreme Court
that strikes down a ban on legal concealed carry in public parks was “a proper decision that upholds the state’s concealed carry preemption statute,” the
Second Amendment Foundation
said.
Ohio’s current concealed carry statute, adopted by the State Legislature in 2006, prohibits
local governments
from adopting more stringent gun control regulations than the state. The City of Clyde passed an ordinance banning legal concealed carry in city parks. The law was challenged by
Ohioans for Concealed Carry
.
“Anti-gun municipalities across the country have been cooking up ways to challenge state preemption statutes,” noted SAF founder
Alan Gottlieb
, “as a means of harassing legally-armed, law-abiding citizens. Today’s ruling by the
Ohio
Supreme Court
struck a necessary blow in the Buckeye State for
civil rights
and the
rule of law
.”
The court ruled 4-3 against Clyde in a case that was being closely watched by both sides in the gun rights debate. It was a SAF-supported lawsuit against the City of Cincinnati that was the catalyst for concealed carry legislation in Ohio.
“The right of self-defense does not end on the sidewalk at the entrance of a public park,” Gottlieb observed. “The rights of law-abiding gun owners are not subject to the whims of anti-gun municipal governments that think they have the authority to ignore state statute. It’s because of city officials like those responsible for the Clyde ordinance that the State Legislature acted correctly two years ago and stripped them of the power to adopt such harassment laws.
“Ohio gun rights activists, and especially Ohioans for Concealed Carry, have every right to be proud,” Gottlieb concluded. “Ohio’s concealed carry statute is both sensible and responsible, and municipal governments have no business interfering with the lawful exercise of a constitutionally-protected civil right.”
Students
|
Chris
Thursday, September 18, 2008 7:28:26 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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