Chicago Sun-Times

GUN RANGE STILL IN HER SIGHTS

Chicago Guns Matter founder Rhonda Ezell isn’t done pushing for shooting locations in city

- BYFRANKMAI­N Staff Reporter Email: fmain@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ FrankMainN­ews

Rhonda Ezell was really sick. Suffering from kidney failure, lung disease and other ailments, she didn’t like to venture very far from her South Side home.

But to obtain a new Chicago firearms permit to keep a gun in her home in 2010, she had to go through hours of training — and Chicago didn’t have any public shooting ranges within the city limits.

So Ezell, a longtime gun- rights supporter, drove to a northwest suburban range more than 50 miles away in the Dundee area to practice on targets.

On July 12, 2010, the city of Chicago’s new handgun ordinance took effect, and Ezell went to police headquarte­rs at 35th and Michigan to apply for a permit. She wore a jacket with Illinois State Rifle Associatio­n patches. Other ISRA members were there, too, including Richard Pearson, executive director of the associatio­n.

According to Ezell, that’s when the group persuaded her to become the lead plaintiff in a lawsuit against Chicago that successful­ly overturned a ban on gun ranges within the city limits.

“We talked about me having to go all the way to Dundee, and we concluded my rights were violated,” she says. “And Ezell v. Chicago was born.”

After suffering a series of legal losses in the case, city officials allowed ranges in the city but only in manufactur­ing districts with a specialuse permit — and at least 500 feet from residentia­l areas, libraries, schools, liquor stores, churches and day- care centers. That put 98 percent of the city out of bounds for a shooting range.

Then, the federal appeals court in Chicago found those restrictio­ns too burdensome. The Chicago City Council is now grappling with loosening the zoning requiremen­ts for public shooting ranges in the city. No ranges have opened yet in Chicago.

For Ezell, who’s 49 and feeling better after receiving a kidney transplant, her court victories have filled her with elation — and scorn for the city’s elected officials, including Mayor Rahm Emanuel.

“The mayor walks around every day with armed security paid for by the taxpayers of Chicago, yet he doesn’t want you to go to a gun range and be efficient with the firearm you choose to have in your home for the safety of you or your loved ones,” she says.

Ezell says she got her state firearm owner’s identifica­tion card when she was 18. But she didn’t buy a gun until years later, when gang members were harassing her son in Englewood, where she lived at the time.

After she moved to Woodlawn, she says her gun gave her a sense of security, though she acknowledg­es she was violating the city’s handgun ban at the time.

Now that she’s the lead plaintiff in the shooting- range lawsuit against the city, she’s become a celebrity of sorts in gun- rights circles. She started her own organizati­on, which she has provocativ­ely named Chicago Guns Matter, a takeoff on Black Lives Matter.

Ezell, who has a state concealedc­arry permit, says law- abiding black Chicagoans need to realize they have the right to carry handguns in the city.

She says she didn’t carry her handgun to an interview for this story because she had taken the L, and the CTA bars guns on public transporta­tion. “I do not violate the law, so I have pepper spray with me,” she says.

Prior to the Ezell case, Otis McDonald, a Morgan Park resident who died in 2014 at the age of 80, was the lead plaintiff on a lawsuit that led the U. S. Supreme Court to rule on June 28, 2010, that handgun bans in Chicago and Oak Park were unconstitu­tional.

The cases challengin­g the Chicago handgun ban and the shooting range ban were both backed by the Illinois State Rifle Associatio­n. Pearson says it’s not a coincidenc­e that the lead plaintiffs in both cases were African- American.

“We have this crazy idea that civil rights means everybody,” he says. “We also think your ZIP code does not dictate what your rights should be. It takes brave people to do this, like Otis and Rhonda.”

Ezell says she’s now working on educating the next generation on how to use firearms for self- defense. She says she takes her 6- year- old granddaugh­ter to a gun range.

“I feel like I’ve taught her just about everything else, from cooking to writing to reading and things of that nature,” she says. “Why not take her to the gun range?

“I want her to be able to protect herself if she needs to. But I want her to understand that a firearm is not a bad tool.”

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 ?? | MARIA CARDONA/ SUN- TIMES ?? Pro- gun advocate Rhonda Ezell
| MARIA CARDONA/ SUN- TIMES Pro- gun advocate Rhonda Ezell

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