Posted on 02/01/2015 5:04:48 AM PST by marktwain
This bill:In 2011, constitutional carry, in the form of HB330, passed the house 244 to 109. Then the NRA representative started bad mouthing the bill. It was put on hold. The weaker NRA bill also was put on hold. Neither passed. From pgnh.org:
I. Increases the length of time for which a license to carry a pistol or revolver is valid.
II. Allows a person to carry a loaded, concealed pistol or revolver without a license unless such person is otherwise prohibited by New Hampshire statute.
III. Requires the director of the division of state police to negotiate and enter into agreements with other jurisdictions to recognize in those jurisdictions the validity of the license to carry issued in this state.
IV. Repeals the requirement to obtain a license to carry a concealed pistol or revolver.
John Hohenwarter, the NRA representative, worked hard to cause HB330 to be held. The main reason is he has a four page amendment (the different version) he does not want to debate in public. He has told Bob Clegg, the President of Pro-Gun New Hampshire (and former NH Senate Majority Leader), that NH is one of those states too stupid to deal with its own legislation, and has stated he will continue to interfere politically until NH accepts his amendment and does so without public hearings in the House or the Senate. Mr. Clegg intends on meeting him head on all year until the bill is released. As a life member of NRA he also intends on speaking out against NRA's spokesperson, because if NH caves in to this kind of treatment it won't be long before every representative of NRA is as anti-constitution-carry as John Hohenwarter.This is an excerpt of the defense of the actions in New Hampshire in 2011 by the NRA-ILA:
A search of NRA field representatives shows Brian Smith as the field rep for Maine, Vermont and New Hampshire at this time.
Unfortunately, H.B. 330, while well-intentioned, was poorly drafted. In its current form, the bill falls short of good firearms policy. Changes and clarifications are necessary to not only strengthen its provisions, but also to prevent serious, unintended legal consequences.
As passed in the New Hampshire House of Representatives, H.B. 330 would create legitimate concerns about the carrying of concealed loaded handguns in public by minors. While the bill would not protect the carrying of firearms by minors, it would not actually prohibit it either. This is a key distinction, as under current law, minors are essentially prohibited from carrying concealed loaded handguns in public by the licensing requirement, which would be repealed if H.B. 330 were enacted.
Even more problematic, H.B. 330 would preempt prosecution for the carrying of a firearm in any situation that is not specifically excluded in the bill itself. This includes such instances as:
> ... Repeals the requirement to obtain a license to carry a concealed pistol or revolver.
Excellent. There is no provision in the 2nd Amendment stating that you need a license or permit.
Fine with me, being a NH resident, I also carry a Utah non-resident CC Permit, and I need the ability to request a NH CC Permit if I want one in order to obtain/keep my Utah non-resident permit.
Jeb Bradley is a good State Senator, I just hope they have this provision in their bill for people like me.
The bill does not do away with the NH permit system, it simply removes the requirement to have a permit to carry concealed in NH, leaving the permit system in place for purposes of reciprocity.
Yea! Now to use the perverted 14th like the ‘new marriage’ cases and have it instituted across the board.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.