The Commercial Appeal

Officials wary of new gun rules

- Micaela A Watts

Despite significant pushback from Memphis law enforcemen­t and other agencies across Tennessee, permitless carry, or constituti­onal carry, was signed into state law Thursday. This means if you have no existing conviction­s that would bar you from owning a gun, and you are 21 or older, you will be able to carry a firearm openly or concealed — no training or permit required.

Gov. Bill Lee signed the bill into law Thursday and thanked Tennessee lawmakers and the National Rifle Associatio­n for helping him get the task done. Eighteen other states, including Mississipp­i and Arizona, have enacted permitless carry.

The law goes into effect on July 1. It does not apply to long guns. In addition to removing misdemeano­r

charges once associated with carrying a gun without a permit, the new law also introduces harsher sentencing measures for some gun crimes.

A theft of a firearm that would have been a misdemeano­r charge is now a felony, those convicted of firearm theft will serve six months in prison at a minimum, up from the current 30-day sentence. The law also bars felons convicted of possessing a firearm from early release.

Since Lee first publicly floated permitless carry, heads of law enforcemen­t in Memphis and Shelby County have stated their opposition, some did so repeatedly.

After Lee signed the bill Thursday afternoon, Shelby County’s top prosecutor, Amy Weirich, who had criticized the state’s permitless carry intentions in the past, said she hoped gun owners would still choose to receive safety training.

“Despite this bill, those individual­s who are prohibited from carrying still are prohibited from carrying. Despite this bill, I would hope responsibl­e citizens still would learn to properly handle and store a gun before leaving home with it and endangerin­g innocent people,” Weirich said.

Weirich was among the first to publicly push back against permitless carry since 2020, pointing to the passage of a 2013 law that allowed gun owners to leave their firearms in their vehicles as a major driver of gun crime in Shelby County.

Permitless carry, she said, would only increase the steady parade of gun charges her office is tasked with prosecutin­g.

“It makes no sense,” Weirich said in 2020. “Is it really asking too much for someone to get a permit to carry a deadly weapon on our streets? First it was guns in cars. Now it is guns in hands.”

Memphis Police Director Michael

Rallings was out of the office Thursday when Lee signed the bill and could not comment, but has spoken out against permitless carry on several occasions.

“I predict that if this is passed, you will see an increase in gun violence across the state,” Rallings said in February 2020, before the onslaught of the COVID-19 pandemic helped catalyze a record-shattering rash of homicides for the year — 332 total, out of more than 1,200 shootings and more than 100 homicides higher than the previous record of 228 in 2016.

Shelby County Sheriff Floyd Bonner said the current permit system, among other features, educates gun owners about the correct and law-abiding instances in Tennessee where the use of a firearm is acceptable. He expressed concern about the consequenc­es of striking the minimum education requiremen­ts for carrying a firearm.

“The Tennessee Sheriff ’s Associatio­n and Sheriff Bonner do not support the current plan as proposed for permitless carry and believe there are not enough precaution­s in the proposed law,” Bonner said. “As we know, there is a requiremen­t to obtain a license to drive an automobile, which ensures your ability to safely operate the vehicle and the testing of your knowledge about traffic laws. There should be similar, common-sense requiremen­ts before citizens can start carrying firearms in public.”

Both Bonner and Rallings have said the Memphis area is already besieged by a higher level of gun violence that can be directly linked to the passage of the 2013 law that allowed gun owners to leave their firearms in vehicles. And both are worried that this is one more law that will endanger not only residents, but law enforcemen­t officers.

“Since the TN law was changed to allow law-abiding citizens to have firearms in their vehicles for personal protection, too many citizens have left unsecured firearms in their vehicles, which were then stolen and could become a possible danger to others in the hands of criminals,” Bonner said.

The 2013 law was heavily supported by Republican lawmakers in the state and touted as pro-2nd amendment. But since the law’s passage, the number of firearms stolen out of vehicles increased from 358 in 2013 to more than 1,200 in 2017.

“I would hope responsibl­e citizens still would learn to properly handle and store a gun before leaving home with it and endangerin­g innocent people.” Shelby County District Attorney Amy Weirich

 ?? ARIEL COBBERT/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Seized firearms are displayed as Memphis
Police Director Michael Rallings speaks during a press conference on March 23.
ARIEL COBBERT/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Seized firearms are displayed as Memphis Police Director Michael Rallings speaks during a press conference on March 23.
 ?? COMMERCIAL APPEAL JUSTIN FORD/FOR THE ?? Shelby County District Attorney Amy Weirich on Feb. 27.
COMMERCIAL APPEAL JUSTIN FORD/FOR THE Shelby County District Attorney Amy Weirich on Feb. 27.

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