Posted on 11/08/2003 5:58:46 AM PST by TroutStalker
Round One of the court fight over concealed weapons went to gun opponents Friday when a St. Louis judge ruled that the law violated the Missouri Constitution. Circuit Judge Steven Ohmer ruled that a 10-word phrase in the state constitution's Bill of Rights banned the carrying of concealed weapons. The section at issue says that people have the right to bear arms but this shall not justify the wearing of concealed weapons. This is a direct limitation on the inherent power of the legislature to regulate the manner, time and place of the citizens' right to bear arms, Ohmer wrote. To read the constitutional provision and to find otherwise would make (those words) a nullity. Clearly, that was not the intent of the framers nor of the (public) adopting the Constitution. Ohmer's ruling renders invalid Missouri's new law allowing residents to obtain permits to carry concealed guns and sets the stage for an ultimate ruling by the Missouri Supreme Court. Missouri Attorney General Jay Nixon, whose office defends the legality of state laws, filed an appeal to the Supreme Court and asked for an expedited hearing. Gov. Bob Holden, who vetoed the bill and then saw lawmakers override his action, said the ruling would protect the public from an ill-conceived law. Richard Miller, a Kansas City lawyer representing several public officials who sued to block the law, said the people who wrote the constitution in 1875 intended to ban concealed weapons. He said the current constitution, adopted in 1945, strengthened the ban. Public sentiment has not changed, Miller said, citing the 1999 statewide referendum in which voters rejected a proposal to legalize concealed weapons. Missouri gun-rights advocates, who have been working to legalize concealed guns since 1991, said they were not surprised by Oh-mer's ruling. Rep. Larry Crawford, a Centertown Republican who shepherded the bill through the House this year, said he knew gun rights would lose in a St. Louis court. But Crawford said he was pleased that the judge rejected other arguments that opponents had raised. The section that Ohmer used to overrule the law, Crawford said, simply gives the General Assembly the power to regulate concealed weapons. It has never previously been considered a ban. If there was any issue to go to the Supreme Court on, this is the one I would want, Crawford said. This puts us in the best position to win. Kevin Jamison, a Gladstone lawyer who is president of the Western Missouri Shooters Alliance, said the ruling made little sense. Hunters, for example, can carry concealed weapons while openly carrying other weapons, Jamison said. The law also allows judges, probation officers, people who serve legal papers and certain private security guards to carry concealed guns, he said. If the judge is correct, police officers can no longer carry concealed weapons, Jamison said. That is a mind-numbing, silly argument. It would mean that everything the legislature has done regarding concealed weapons in the last 125 years has been wrong and no one can carry a concealed weapon. Undercover police officers would have to carry openly. Ohmer based his decision largely on the intent of the framers of the 1875 constitution. He cited comments during the constitutional debate from Thomas Gantt, a St. Louis judge. The wearing of concealed weapons, Gantt said, meets with the general reprobation of all thinking men. It is a practice which cannot be too severely condemned. It is a practice which is fraught with the most incalculable evil. Ohmer cited Gantt's concern over an 1822 ruling by a Kentucky court. In that case, the Kentucky Constitution guaranteed the right to bear arms, using language similar to the wording proposed in Missouri. The Kentucky legislature later enacted a law to ban concealed weapons. But a court overruled the law because the state's constitution put no limits on bearing arms. So Gantt urged the convention to include in Missouri's constitution the phrase that the right to bear arms did not justify concealed weapons. Ohmer rejected all other arguments that the law was unconstitutional. He said the law did not require sheriffs to process concealed weapons permits without compensation, because the $100 application fee would more than cover the sheriffs' costs. He also ruled that the law did not exceed the legislature's power to ensure the peace and safety of the people. Ohmer also rejected arguments that the 1999 referendum prohibited the legislature from enacting the new law. By electing legislators, the public was included in this year's debate, he ruled. To reach Kit Wagar, Jefferson City correspondent, call (816) 234-4440 or send e-mail
This ruling should now open the flood gates of suits against law enforcement types carrying and using concealed wepons. This judge is a idiot!
The section at issue says that people have the right to bear arms but this shall not justify the wearing of concealed weapons.
The Constitution just says it doesn't justify the use of Concealed Weapons. It doesn't say they are prohibited, outlawed or banned. The originators knew the definitions of those words. If they wanted concealed guns banned, they would have said so. It just says they aren't Right protected.
If the state Supreme Court does uphold the ruling, however, then I doubt that the U.S. Supreme Court will overturn the decision.
Good point. Since the exception for law-enforcement is created by statute rather than the constitution, if the licensee exception isn't constitutional I can't see how the law-enforcement exception would be either.
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