Hartford Courant

Cops tense up as gun laws loosened

Permitless carry, others feared by police still favored

- By Lindsay Whitehurst

SALT LAKE CITY — The latest push to loosen gun laws in states across the U.S. has put police officers at odds with Republican lawmakers who usually trumpet support for law enforcemen­t.

In states like Texas, Tennessee and Louisiana, police opposed pushes to drop requiremen­ts for people to get background checks and training before carrying handguns in public, plans that came as gun sales continued to shatter records during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“We feel it was just another opportunit­y to get our officers hurt,” said Fabian Blache Jr., executive director of the Louisiana Chiefs of Police Associatio­n.

There, a last-ditch public plea by dozens of Louisiana law enforcemen­t officers helped narrowly avert a push to override the Democratic governor’s veto of legislatio­n dropping concealed-carry permit requiremen­ts. But he expects the proposal to come back next year, and in several other conservati­ve-leaning states police opposition didn’t stop laws dropping permit requiremen­ts.

Gun violence is on the rise across the country and law enforcemen­t agencies are struggling with how to manage the spikes, especially in cities. The federal government has stepped in with strike forces and other measures to help stop the sale of illegal weapons. Cops are already working at a disadvanta­ge in many cities over forces winnowed by retirement­s and difficulty attracting new officers, and many see looser gun laws as one more challenge.

Not knowing who might be carrying a gun heightens the potential danger in any encounter, and less required training means more people who don’t know how to properly handle a weapon, Blanche said.

“Police officers are trained around the country, and they make mistakes,” he said. “So why are we going to give opportunit­y to people who are not trained to be able to carry a firearm and use it at will?”

In Tennessee this year, warnings from police chiefs and sheriffs didn’t stop a push to drop permit requiremen­ts in the Gop-controlled state Legislatur­e. That law passed months after another measure cracking down on protesters camping out for police reform, a vote that was framed as a support for law enforcemen­t.

Though several polls have found public support for gun permits, arguments that they undermine Second Amendment rights have gained favor in conservati­ve-leaning state government­s in recent years.

“There is something of a disjunctio­n between repeating the political slogan of ‘back the blue’ versus supporting policies that rank-and-file police and leaders of police organizati­ons actually support,” said Robert Spitzer, a professor at The State University of New York-cortland and author of “The Politics of Gun Control.”

Police opposition hasn’t stopped a push to drop permitting requiremen­ts that’s passed in about 20 states, Spitzer said. While their positions carry authority, they don’t have the ad campaigns and lobbyists that overtly political interests often do.

And permitless carry has supporters in law enforcemen­t, including sheriffs, many of whom are in elected positions and oversee more rural areas. In Utah and Iowa, police groups were more divided generally and stayed out of the debate this year.

Discussion­s about police reform dominated the conversati­on in Iowa, as well as how to stem the rise in violent crime, said Sam Hargadine, the Iowa Police Chiefs Associatio­n executive director. He doesn’t see the permit question as a big piece of the violent-crime discussion, especially since chiefs already couldn’t deny people permits.

“I think there’s extremes on both sides. But there’s got to be some compromise­s made because we’re having far too many shootings,” he said.

Not all police oppose the legislatio­n, and gun-rights advocates don’t see a conflict between combating crime and making it easier for people to carry firearms. They argue that people generally don’t get permits for guns used in violent crimes, so the change will make it easier for those who do follow the law to get a gun and many measures also toughen penalties for some gun crimes.

For Texas Republican James White, his party’s differing with the chiefs of the state’s largest cities on permit-less carry was part of the give-and-take of the legislativ­e process.

“There were some things this session ... where we were consistent with where law enforcemen­t would want to be, and there were sometimes that we just had to tell them we have to look a different direction,” said White, an outgoing state lawmaker now running for agricultur­e commission­er.

He also touted the stronger penalties contained in the law for felons who carry guns illegally. “It was a very strong on crime, tough on crime deal,” he said.

Alan Gottlieb with the Second Amendment Foundation argued that policing is already inherently dangerous and dropping permits won’t make a big dent but will enhance gun rights. “I shouldn’t need a permit to exercise my constituti­onal rights,” he said.

Police opposition had helped keep the idea from gaining traction even in firearm-friendly Texas, but with a change in legislativ­e leadership support swelled over the span of a few weeks this year. It passed over objections from survivors of the mass shooting that killed 23 people two years ago.

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS/AP ?? A handgun from a collection of illegal guns is reviewed during a gun buyback event in Brooklyn, N.Y. As gun violence rises, some law enforcemen­t agencies, which see loosened gun laws favored in some conservati­ve circles as a bad thing, are pushing back against a usual ally.
BEBETO MATTHEWS/AP A handgun from a collection of illegal guns is reviewed during a gun buyback event in Brooklyn, N.Y. As gun violence rises, some law enforcemen­t agencies, which see loosened gun laws favored in some conservati­ve circles as a bad thing, are pushing back against a usual ally.

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