Las Vegas Review-Journal

City agrees to time frame for firearm licenses

- By Jennifer Sinco Kelleher

HONOLULU — Honolulu has agreed to grant or deny applicatio­ns to carry guns in public within four months of submission in response to a lawsuit by residents who complained of delays of up to a year, according to a stipulatio­n signed by a federal judge Friday.

The March lawsuit alleged that the long delays were the city’s way of keeping the permitting process as restrictiv­e as it was before a 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision in a case, New York State Rifle & Pistol Associatio­n v. Bruen, that upended gun laws nationwide. That included Hawaii, which has had some of the nation’s strictest gun laws.

Before the Bruen decision, which held that people have a right to carry for self-defense, Hawaii’s county police chiefs rarely issued licenses for either open or concealed carry.

When chiefs “began to issue a trickle of concealed carry permits” after Bruen, the lawsuit said, Honolulu “merely switched gears from almost never issuing any concealed carry permits so that there was no one with a permit, to issuing permits so slowly that it has essentiall­y kept the permitting system the same as it was prior to Bruen — completely discretion­ary.”

“The excessive delays that my clients experience­d in obtaining their concealed carry licenses is indicative of a lack of commitment on the part of the government in allowing citizens to exercise their Second Amendment rights,” said Alan Beck, one of the lawyers for the three residents and the Hawaii Firearms Coalition, which was also a plaintiff in the case.

In addition to granting or denying applicatio­ns within 120 days of submission, the city agreed to make reasonable efforts to procure and implement an online applicatio­n system by March 8, 2026.

“The United States Supreme Court ruled that the exercise of the Second Amendment and the right to carry for self-defense cannot be infringed by bureaucrat­ic sloth,” said Kevin O’grady, another lawyer representi­ng the plaintiffs. “This is one small step toward ensuring that the people have their God-given rights to protect themselves.”

A similar lawsuit is underway in Los Angeles, over permitting delays of more than a year.

Beck said Honolulu isn’t facing the same volume of applicatio­ns as Los Angeles.

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