Feb 11
Saturday
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2012 Fun 'n Gun! Ohioans For Concealed Carry would like to invite our members
to join OFCC leadership at the Eighth Annual OFCC Fun 'n Gun!   This fun event will be hosted this year by the Tactical Defense Institute! Join instructors from both OFCC and TDI as we kick off spring with a bang!
OFCC Sues City of Cleveland Heights, Ohio The sign you see here is posted in Cleveland Heights Parks implying possession of a firearm is a crime. On Friday August 12th, 2011 Ohioans For Concealed Carry Filed a lawsuit against the City the City of Cleveland Heights. The litigation comes after many attempts to resolve concerns over laws that Cleveland Heights not only allowed to remain on their books, but also posted signs at their parks that continue to imply it is illegal to be armed. The City of Cleveland Heights has chosen to ignore our attempts at civil discourse. When individuals have contacted them representing themselves as residents of the City of Cleveland Heights their concerns apparently fell on deaf ears. When representatives of the organization have formally contacted the city's legal representation they've been laughed at and hung up on by the Law Director. It is this arrogance and refusal to work with Ohioans For Concealed Carry that has forced us to seek a remedy through the courts.
Our press release follows.
Canton PD Event Leads to New OFCC Legislation When officer Harless of the Canton, Ohio police department came upon a vehicle stopped in the roadway most of us were focused on getting restaurant carry legislation signed into law. What took place that evening has become an international viral video, calls for the resignation of the City Council president, and criminal charges against a man who is clearly heard trying to state that he has a license. Ohioans For Concealed Carry has not just raised thousands of dollars in a legal defense fund, but we've written legislation to resolve this matter that Representative Danny Bubp has stated he's going to introduce this fall

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Upcoming Events


Utah Concealed Carry Training
When: January 28th 2pm
Details Here

When: Sunday, April 1st
Where: Tactical Defense Institute
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Defining Firearms PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jeff Knox   
Thursday, 30 July 2009 13:06

The Knox Update
From the Firearms Coalition


(July 30, 2009) When a New York City police officer caught a .32 caliber slug in his ribs last week, Mayor Mike Bloomberg was quick to question how the career criminal and convicted felon was able to obtain the gun. I’m afraid that the question is going to lead to attempts at broader restrictions on more items in New York and elsewhere because it’s possible that the gun involved in the shooting might not be a firearm.

That might not make much sense, but firearms laws generally don’t.

Depending on when the gun was made and/or whether the cartridges is considered “obsolete,” a .32 caliber revolver might not be legally considered a firearm and might not be illegal for a felon to purchase or possess. On the other end of the spectrum, a plastic bottle cap can be a firearm as can a shoestring.

Under federal law, a firearm is either a device which expels a projectile by means of a controlled explosion (with certain exceptions,) or it is a full-auto, a silencer, or certain parts thereof. Antique guns, muzzle loaders, and guns chambered for “obsolete” cartridges are not considered “firearms” by the feds or most states. Such guns can be legally purchased and possessed by convicted felons in most places. Whether the “really old” gun involved in the recent wounding of the NY officer turns out to be a firearm under federal and NY law or not, Bloomberg is probably going to go ballistic when his lawyers start explaining the possibility of it not being one.

The lid of that can of worms has already been partially removed in the case of a New York collector who purchased a replica flint-lock. He is now being pushed to register the gun with police even though it is clearly exempt from all NY registration requirements. With both of these cases happening close together, expect to see calls for closing the “old gun loophole” any day now.

It should be noted that even though antique and obsolete guns are not legally firearms in most jurisdictions, they can still be considered weapons and therefore fall under prohibitions against the carry of concealed weapons – by convicted felons or anyone else.

The National Firearms Act (NFA) defines a “firearms” as a full-auto or any part which makes a gun into a full-auto. This includes obvious things such as a drop-in “auto sear” for an AR-15 or the selective fire mechanism of an M14, but it also includes not so obvious things such as a shoestring. Wrapped around a trigger, trigger guard, and bolt handle of a semi-auto in just the right way, a string, when pulled, will trip the trigger, release it as the bolt moves rearward and then reengage it as the bolt returns to battery. To legally use a shoestring for such a purpose you must first file manufacturing paperwork, go through a background investigation, and pay a $200 tax and the string must be permanently marked with a serial number and manufacturer name and location.

Under NFA a silencer is also a “firearm” and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) has ruled that, since attaching a 2-liter, plastic soda bottle to a firearm would reduce the sound of the gun by 1db or more, drilling a hole in a plastic bottle cap so that it can be attached to the muzzle of a firearm, makes the bottle cap a silencer and therefore a firearm.

So a plastic bottle cap with a hole in it is a firearm as is a short piece of string, while a .32 revolver or even a “Broomhandle” Mauser semi-auto pistol might not be. Of course the only way the hoplophobes could imagine to fix this stupidity will be to add more restrictions. In the masterpiece Atlas Shrugged, one of Ayn Rand’s characters provides an excellent explanation for this:

“There’s no way to rule innocent men. The only power any government has is the power to crack down on criminals. Well, when there aren’t enough criminals one makes them. One declares so many things to be a crime that it becomes impossible for men to live without breaking laws.”


That’s what’s been happening with gun laws for decades. It’s well past time for these bizarre affronts to logic, reason, and human rights to be wiped from the books, but instead we are probably going to see serious attempts at complicating them even more.

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Neal Knox – The Gun Rights War now available for immediate delivery! Visit www.NealKnox.com to order your copy today!



Permission to reprint or post this article in its entirety for non-commercial purposes is hereby granted provided this credit is included. Text is available at www.FirearmsCoalition.org. To receive The Firearms Coalition’s bi-monthly newsletter, The Hard Corps Report, write to PO Box 3313, Manassas, VA 20108. ©Copyright 2009 Neal Knox Associates