Springfield News-Sun

Gun owners wary of city’s new ammo restrictio­n

- By Mark Ferenchik and Eric Lagatta

It would have been around 30 years ago, Chuck Douglas said, when he bought his first gun.

A lifelong resident of Columbus’ West Side, Douglas, 57, said he began growing increasing­ly wary of the rising levels of crime in his neighborho­od, and wanted to ensure he could protect himself and his family should the need arise.

“I’m not going to have a shootout in the street, but I am most definitely going to protect my family if anyone tried to harm them,” said Douglas, who said he feels fortunate that he’s never yet had to fire a weapon in self-defense.

Douglas’ gun ownership has always been spurred by a desire to defend himself against criminals. But now he said he’s been made to feel like a criminal himself after Columbus City Council’s recent passage of a gun control law.

And he’s not the only oncelaw-abiding gun owner in Greater Columbus whose possession of so-called “large capacity magazines” that can hold 30 or more rounds now puts him in jeopardy of violating city law.

Eric Delbert, who co-owns central Ohio’s L.E.P.D. Firearms, Range and Training Facility in Perry Township on the city’s Northwest Side, said he’s heard from a variety of fellow gun owners who have expressed similar frustratio­n. And though the reaction of the store’s customers to the recent ordinance have varied widely, Delbert said they largely fall into one of two categories.

Among those in the first category are the more ardent gun owners, the ones who, as Delbert put it, “basically say, ‘Come and get it.’”

But those who are included in the second group, Delbert said, are more wary of the potential consequenc­es if, come July 1, they haven’t voluntaril­y sold or turned over their high-capacity magazines to the city.

“They aren’t necessaril­y, I would say, ‘gun people,’” Delbert said. “They own firearms to protect themselves, but they have these magazines in their possession and now they’re concerned.”

That July 1 date is the deadline for when gun owners in Columbus are required by a new city law to sell or hand over to Columbus police any gun magazines that can hold 30 or more rounds, or that can be converted to accept that many rounds.

The City Council first passed the legislatio­n on Dec. 5 before passing additional legislatio­n on Feb. 27 that establishe­d the July 1 deadline.

Columbus City Attorney Zach Klein acknowledg­ed that enforcemen­t of the law will be difficult, meaning city officials and police will largely have to trust residents to comply on their own.

“To some degree, that is an honor system,” Klein said recently. “We have no intention of going door-to-door.”

That December legislatio­n also requires safe gun storage around children, and criminaliz­es giving or selling firearms to anyone prohibited from having them.

Klein said the law will be enforced if police see those types of gun magazines. For example, he said people have carried assault-style rifles with large magazine capacities at protests.

“We’ll enforce it by seeing it on site,” Klein said.

Violating the magazine provision of the law is a misdemeano­r with a mandatory 180 consecutiv­e days in jail without work release, and potentiall­y up to one year, along with a $1,500 fine.

The new law has drawn the ire of Columbus gun advocates like Delbert, who challenge its legality, saying it violates Ohio law and the state constituti­on’s right to bear arms.

Delbert, who as a certified Ohio peace officer said he would be exempt from the law’s 30-round magazine ban, criticized city officials for seemingly criminaliz­ing otherwise law-abiding gun owners, who he said aren’t the ones driving the vast majority of gun violence in Columbus.

Delbert said he worries that a growing patchwork of city laws — rather than one uniform state law — is putting an onerous burden on gun owners to ensure they’re in compliance depending on what part of Greater Columbus they’re traveling through.

Had city officials specifical­ly targeted those with high-capacity magazines who proceed to break the law or commit a violent crime, Delbert said he would have stood behind them on the steps of City Hall himself when it was announced.

“There’s a genuine part of us that wants to be part of this solution, but how can you not even give us a seat at the table?” he said.

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