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Are CCW Laws a good idea? Just ask Texas. PDF Print E-mail
Written by Daniel White   
Tuesday, 10 January 2006

Texas' CHL law is ten years old. Jerry Patterson, the 27th Texas land commissioner, was author of SB 60, the Concealed Handgun Law, when he was a state senator from Pasadena.

Now, ten years later, he talks about his reasons for writing the bill and the results of ten years of legal ccw in Texas.
When the Texas Concealed Handgun Law took effect in 1996, pundits and naysayers predicted anarchy. Any minute, there surely would be mass violence as armed Texas citizens began roving the streets, settling arguments with gunfire. Certainly, several proclaimed, within a year there would be blood in the streets as Texas returned to the days of the Wild West.

Ten years later the facts paint a different picture. Texas under the Concealed Handgun Law isn't the Wild West, but the Mild West. No recurrent shootouts at four-way stops, no blood in the streets.

Quite the contrary, Texans are safer than before.

(Click 'READ MORE' to continue...)

With Ohio's CHL law two years old now, we have experienced what Texas has known for years; that legal CHL holders are not the problem.
In 2000, on the fifth anniversary of the Concealed Handgun Law, the National Center for Policy Analysis issued a report that indicated Texans with concealed carry permits are far less likely to commit a serious crime than the average citizen.

According to the report, the more than 200,000 Texans licensed to carry a concealed firearm are much more law-abiding than the average person.

The report illustrated that Texans who exercise their right to carry firearms are 5.7 times less likely to be arrested for a violent offense. They are 14 times less likely to be arrested for a non-violent offense. And they are 1.4 times less likely to be arrested for murder.

And what about the effect on the overall crime rate? Most pundits predicted that crimes would skyrocket as trigger-happy gun nuts took to the streets to wreak vigilante justice on the masses.
Since the passage of the Concealed Handgun Law, the FBI Uniform Crime Report shows an 18-percent drop in handgun murders, down from 838 in 1995 to 688 in 2004; and a 13-percent drop in handgun murders per 100,000 population, down from 4.5 murders per 100,000 Texans in 1995 to 3.95 per 100,000 in 2004.

Ohio CHL holders are just as responsible and safe as our Texas counterparts. And the State of Ohio is already experiencing falling rates of violent crime. The success of the program has lead the HB 12s original sponsor to introduce a reform bill to further improve the law.

Keep watching this space for the report of Ohioans For Concealed Carry president Jeff Garvas, who testified at today's proponent testimony hearing (along with a crowd of OFCC members).

Click here to read the full article.
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