Posted on 05/08/2019 12:53:24 AM PDT by imardmd1
Senate Executive 4/10/19
Awaiting consideration in Committee
4/10/19
Sen. McDowell
Rep. Chukwuocha
Sen. Sokola, Sturgeon
Reps. Baumbach, Bentz, Bolden, Heffernan, K. Johnson, Kowalko
AN ACT TO AMEND THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO DEADLY WEAPONS.
This Act prohibits the manufacture, sale, offer to sell, transfer, purchase, receipt, possession, or transport of assault weapons in Delaware, subject to certain exceptions. One exception relevant to individuals is that the Act does not prohibit the possession and transport of firearms that were lawfully possessed or fully applied for before the effective date of this Act; although for these firearms there are certain restrictions relating to their possession and transport after the effective date of this Act. This Act creates a voluntary certificate of possession, to enable persons who lawfully possess an assault weapon before the effective date of this Act to be able to prove ownership after the effective date of this Act. This Act is based on the Firearm Safety Act of 2013 (FSA) passed in Maryland in the wake of the tragic slaughtering of children on December 14, 2012, at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. The FSAs assault weapons ban was upheld as constitutional on February 21, 2017, by the full membership of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, in the case of Kolbe v. Hogan, 849 F.3d 114 (4th Cir. 2017). The names Newtown, Aurora, San Bernardino, Orlando, Las Vegas, and Parkland, among others, have become synonymous with tragic killing of innocent, unsuspecting Americans of all ages and backgrounds, amidst a framework of federal and state laws that have permitted the purchase of weapons designed for the battlefield not for our schools, our theaters, our places of worship, or our homes. Safety both for the general public, as well as members of Delaware's law-enforcement community is the objective of this Act, as it was for the FSA. And, as with the FSA, a primary goal of this Act is to reduce the availability of assault weapons so that when a criminal acts, he or she does so with a less dangerous weapon and less severe consequences. Relying on United States Supreme Court precedent from District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570 (2008), as well as the holdings of its sister circuits, the full Fourth Circuit concluded that the assault weapons banned by the FSA are not protected by the Second Amendment. The Fourth Circuit was convinced that the banned assault weapons are among those arms that are like M-16 rifles weapons that are most useful in military service which the Heller Court singled out as being beyond the Second Amendments reach. The Fourth Circuit concluded that Maryland had presented extensive uncontroverted evidence demonstrating that the assault weapons outlawed by the FSA are exceptionally lethal weapons of war. The Fourth Circuit also concluded that the evidence showed the difference between the fully automatic and semiautomatic versions of military-style weapons is slight. Further evidence considered by the Fourth Circuit that motivates this Act is as follows: (1) Like their fully automatic counterparts, the banned assault weapons are firearms designed for the battlefield, for the soldier to be able to shoot a large number of rounds across a battlefield at a high rate of speed, and that their design results in a capability for lethality more wounds, more serious, in more victims far beyond that of other firearms in general, including other semiautomatic guns. (2) The banned assault weapons have been used disproportionately to their ownership in mass shootings and the murders of law-enforcement officers. (3) The banned assault weapons further pose a heightened risk to civilians in that rounds from assault weapons have the ability to easily penetrate most materials used in standard home construction, car doors, and similar materials, and that criminals armed with the banned assault weapons possess a military-style advantage in firefights with law-enforcement officers, as such weapons allow criminals to effectively engage law-enforcement officers from great distances and their rounds easily pass through the soft body armor worn by most law-enforcement officers. (4) Although self-defense is a conceivable use of the banned assault weapons, most individuals choose to keep other firearms for that purpose. (5) Prohibitions against assault weapons will promote public safety by reducing the availability of those armaments to mass shooters and other criminals, by diminishing their especial threat to law-enforcement officers, and by hindering their unintentional misuse by civilians. (6) In many situations, the semiautomatic fire of an assault weapon is more accurate and lethal than the automatic fire. Finding this evidence and these conclusions by the Fourth Circuit to be strongly persuasive of the applicable framework of constitutional rights, and firmly believing that promoting the safety of the Delaware public and Delaware law-enforcement is a paramount function of the Delaware General Assembly, Delaware legislators file this Act in the name of public safety and with adherence to core constitutional principles.
N/A
F/N (Incomplete)
Takes effect upon being signed into law
The full Bill can be downloaded as PDF or HTML on this linked page. Two other Bills, SB 70 to ban "large capacity magazines" for any firearm, and SB 82 to institute the requirement essentially for a state license to purchase, own, manufacture, or sell a firearm.
All these are draconian. Please consider how you might impact this legislation.
Well if I were to be handed the bill I’d highlight every bit of it then delete it.
That would make an impact.
==========
Senate Executive 4/10/19
Awaiting consideration in Committee
4/10/19
Sen. McDowell
Rep. Chukwuocha
Sen. Sokola, Sturgeon
Reps. Baumbach, Bentz, Bolden, Heffernan, K. Johnson, Kowalko
AN ACT TO AMEND THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO DEADLY WEAPONS.
This Act prohibits the manufacture, sale, offer to sell, transfer, purchase, receipt, possession, or transport of assault weapons in Delaware, subject to certain exceptions. One exception relevant to individuals is that the Act does not prohibit the possession and transport of firearms that were lawfully possessed or fully applied for before the effective date of this Act; although for these firearms there are certain restrictions relating to their possession and transport after the effective date of this Act.
This Act creates a voluntary certificate of possession, to enable persons who lawfully possess an assault weapon before the effective date of this Act to be able to prove ownership after the effective date of this Act.
This Act is based on the Firearm Safety Act of 2013 (FSA) passed in Maryland in the wake of the tragic slaughtering of children on December 14, 2012, at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. The FSAs assault weapons ban was upheld as constitutional on February 21, 2017, by the full membership of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, in the case of Kolbe v. Hogan, 849 F.3d 114 (4th Cir. 2017). The names Newtown, Aurora, San Bernardino, Orlando, Las Vegas, and Parkland, among others, have become synonymous with tragic killing of innocent, unsuspecting Americans of all ages and backgrounds, amidst a framework of federal and state laws that have permitted the purchase of weapons designed for the battlefield not for our schools, our theaters, our places of worship, or our homes. Safety both for the general public, as well as members of Delaware's law-enforcement community is the objective of this Act, as it was for the FSA. And, as with the FSA, a primary goal of this Act is to reduce the availability of assault weapons so that when a criminal acts, he or she does so with a less dangerous weapon and less severe consequences.
Relying on United States Supreme Court precedent from District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570 (2008), as well as the holdings of its sister circuits, the full Fourth Circuit concluded that the assault weapons banned by the FSA are not protected by the Second Amendment. The Fourth Circuit was convinced that the banned assault weapons are among those arms that are like M-16 rifles weapons that are most useful in military service which the Heller Court singled out as being beyond the Second Amendments reach.
The Fourth Circuit concluded that Maryland had presented extensive uncontroverted evidence demonstrating that the assault weapons outlawed by the FSA are exceptionally lethal weapons of war. The Fourth Circuit also concluded that the evidence showed the difference between the fully automatic and semiautomatic versions of military-style weapons is slight. Further evidence considered by the Fourth Circuit that motivates this Act is as follows:
(1) Like their fully automatic counterparts, the banned assault weapons are firearms designed for the battlefield, for the soldier to be able to shoot a large number of rounds across a battlefield at a high rate of speed, and that their design results in a capability for lethality more wounds, more serious, in more victims far beyond that of other firearms in general, including other semiautomatic guns.
(2) The banned assault weapons have been used disproportionately to their ownership in mass shootings and the murders of law-enforcement officers.
(3) The banned assault weapons further pose a heightened risk to civilians in that rounds from assault weapons have the ability to easily penetrate most materials used in standard home construction, car doors, and similar materials, and that criminals armed with the banned assault weapons possess a military-style advantage in firefights with law-enforcement officers, as such weapons allow criminals to effectively engage law-enforcement officers from great distances and their rounds easily pass through the soft body armor worn by most law-enforcement officers.
(4) Although self-defense is a conceivable use of the banned assault weapons, most individuals choose to keep other firearms for that purpose.
(5) Prohibitions against assault weapons will promote public safety by reducing the availability of those armaments to mass shooters and other criminals, by diminishing their especial threat to law-enforcement officers, and by hindering their unintentional misuse by civilians. (6) In many situations, the semiautomatic fire of an assault weapon is more accurate and lethal than the automatic fire. Finding this evidence and these conclusions by the Fourth Circuit to be strongly persuasive of the applicable framework of constitutional rights, and firmly believing that promoting the safety of the Delaware public and Delaware law-enforcement is a paramount function of the Delaware General Assembly, Delaware legislators file this Act in the name of public safety and with adherence to core constitutional principles.
N/A
F/N (Incomplete)
Takes effect upon being signed into law
What’s this Constitution crap all about? The law is what they say it is and they’ll change it or ignore it any time they want.
I’m intrigued by the word “like” followed by M-16. Does that mean the M-1 Garland is to be prohibited? Or a 1911? How about an AR-15 chambered in .22LR?
There really needs to be an intelligence test and a pysch exam required for candidates.
...and voters.
Sounds like whwn this gets tossed in SCOTUS it will take out Mass FSA at rhecsame time.
M1 Garland? Is that a little vegetable necklace you put on grandad’s Garand?
“Hard to imagine this surviving SCOTUS review”
Or even the 3rd circuit that Trump recently flipped with newly appointed judges.
THIS is supposed to make schools safer - how exactly again?
By punishing lawful gun owners and lawful gun-owning citizens?
Gee, that’s smart ... props for having “insight” into human nature, Delaware.
Oh, OK then.
Sooo, they go on to explain how very dangerous these weapons are, but still think it's OK for thousands of residents to have them?
That doesn't make sense. Unless....
Damn spell check.
If they should take it, you'll never see it again.
. . . unless, of course, this is only a way-station on path to confiscating them all.
I went to that hearing Wednesday afternoon, and the audience speakers in two minutes each (about 25 of them) were mostly able to deconstruct the shaky rationalizations that were permitted to get these bills out of committee.
The meeting chamber, balcony, and halls around were stuffed with people wishing to utilize the few minutes allowed for addressing the Senate body.
That would make them exactly what the second amendment protects, as an honest reading of the Miller SCOTUS case says.
An AR-15 is just a club without the mags
email address = Anthony.Delcollo@delaware.gov
(I should have put this up long ago.)
I am making the point that if:
(1) the states that have introduced "shall-issue" regulations allowing any upstanding adult citizen to carry a concealed deadly weapon has uniformly and sharply reduced violent crime;
(2) since purchase of any semiautomatic long gun or pistol in Delaware without further hindrance than satisfying the NICS check has long been customary; and
(3) Delaware has been free of mass shootings up to this point;
then WHY does it make sense to introduce the preventative preemptory banning of "military-looking" semiautomatic firearms and their associated common "large-capacity magazines," when the consequences are more likely to empower the criminal than suppress the violent use of firearms, according to the available statistics?
(If it ain't broke, don't fix it.)
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