The Day

Assault weapon registrati­on deadline looming

Gun owners scrambling to meet May 1 target

- By GrEG SMITH

For the past several weeks, employees at Swamp Yankee Arms LLC have been fielding a barrage of phone calls and aiding a steady stream of customers at the Jewett City gun shop.

Gun sales are brisk, but that’s not the reason so many people are coming in. Shop owner Zachary Pearson said the increase is because of a scramble by gun owners to meet a May 1 deadline to register certain firearms to comply with the new state assault weapon regulation­s.

Among a host of other provisions, a bill signed into law last year requires registrati­on of firearms referred to as “CT Other” or “Other” as well as guns manufactur­ed prior to September 1994 that had been grandfathe­red and exempt from the state’s assault weapons ban. They all now have to be registered. Once they are registered, they are still legal to own but transfer or sale of the weapons is generally barred in Connecticu­t.

Without registrati­on, Pearson said, gun owners could face felony criminal charges “for nothing more than owning a gun they purchased legally.”

The term “Other” refers to guns that were not part of the state’s existing assault weapons ban, semi-automatic firearms similar to the banned AR-15-style rifles that are not quite a rifle or a pistol. The guns were popular because they had features, such as arm brace instead of a stock, when the expanded ban on assault weapons was enacted.

What some have called an innovation, others say is simply a loophole in the state’s law that is now closed as part of House Bill 6667, An Act Addressing Gun Violence, that was passed by the General Assembly and signed into law by Gov. Ned Lamont in June 2023.

“For the last two or three months we’ve been slammed, trying to help people comply,” Pearson said. “Between the phone calls asking for help and people coming in, we’ve essentiall­y dropped everything else and focused on that. It’s just brutal what the state is doing to these people.”

Swamp Yankee Arms on Saturday was busy with a mix of customers, some browsing the firearms but many seeking help with the registrati­on process. Pearson has 10 employees and one group of those employees is solely dedicated to answering questions and walking gun owners through the steps of registerin­g their firearms with the state.

Wanting to avoid any legal hassles, Brian Stearns of Montville visited the shop on Saturday for help with the registrati­on process. The process involves entering the state Department of Public Safety online portal, verifying his identity and browsing through the state’s database of purchased guns to find the one that needed to be registered.

“I’d prefer that I didn’t have to jump through the hoops to comply, but you have to do your due diligence, I guess,” Stearns said.

Stearns said the state’s gun laws are “quite restrictin­g,” and considerin­g the number of gun enthusiast­s and sportsmen in the state, was surprised the state didn’t make more of an effort to get the word out. He knew about the law because there was a buzz around in his circles but said he could understand why some gun owners might be caught unaware.

Pearson said he worried about owners of firearms that had purchased the guns and do not know about the law. Like others who opposed the new restrictio­ns, Pearson said said he’s also perturbed by misinforma­tion among proponents of stricter gun laws.

“There have been zero crimes committed with these (Other) weapons. In my opinion, what the state is doing to the law abiding gun owners is far worse then what they are doing to the criminals,” Pearson said.

A side effect of the new law was an increase in sales.

“For six months prior to the ban there was a spending craze,” Pearson said. “We were stacking firearms floor to the ceiling just to get them out the door. There’s thousands of these guns out there.”

A representa­tive from the state police Special Licensing and Firearms Unit was not immediatel­y available to answer questions about how many firearms had been registered with the state.

The new law passed in June, among other provisions, bans the open carry of firearms, increases penalties for repeat offenders, updates the state’s 2019 ban on unregister­ed ghost guns, prevents bulk purchases of handguns, further restricts use of body armor and updates pistol training requiremen­ts. Most of the provisions took effect last year.

Hundreds of people submitted testimony either opposing or supporting the state’s new gun laws. State Rep. Greg Howard, R-Stonington had criticized the bill for lack of any provisions he said would address the root cause of gun violence. Others applauded the state’s efforts to make the state one of the most restrictiv­e in the country.

In his written testimony in favor of the HB 6667 in March 2023, Jonathan Perloe, communicat­ions director for Connecticu­t Against Gun Violence, said he got involved in the gun violence prevention movement after Sandy Hook School shooting in 2012.

“When I attended the March for Change rally at the Capitol on Valentine’s Day 2013, about 1,500 Americans had been killed by the epidemic of gun violence since the Newtown massacre,” Perloe testified. “In the 10 years since, another 400,000 Americans have lost their lives, including more than the 1,700 in Connecticu­t.”

Former state representa­tive Michael Lawlor, associate professor in the criminal justice department of the University of New Haven, said the state has to update its laws to keep up with gun manufactur­ers.

The first major update to the assault weapons ban in the state came in the wake of the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown on Dec. 14, 2012, when Adam Lanza shot and killed 20 children and six adults. Lanza, who also killed himself and his mother, had used a semi-automatic Bushmaster AR-15-style firearm purchased legally by his mother. The gun did not fall within the assault weapons ban at the time, Lawlor said.

“Every time we banned assault weapons, you have to describe them and name them. The gun manufactur­ers started making slightly modified guns to get around the ban,” Lawlor said. “The law keeps expanding because people keep trying to find loopholes and taking advantage of them.”

“Every citizen has a right to bear arms,” Lawlor said, but mass shootings such as Sandy Hook leave people less sympatheti­c to those people who want to own assault weapons.

 ?? DANA JENSEN/THE DAY ?? Owner Zachary Pearson talks Saturday about the fixed magazine rifle on the counter in his shop Swamp Yankee Arms LLC in Jewett City.
DANA JENSEN/THE DAY Owner Zachary Pearson talks Saturday about the fixed magazine rifle on the counter in his shop Swamp Yankee Arms LLC in Jewett City.
 ?? DANA JENSEN/THE DAY ?? Brian Sterns, left, of Montville, looks for informatio­n on his cellphone Saturday while working with Tiara Lussier, right, online sales director, and Devin Maxim, sales associate, with his Assault Weapon Certificat­e applicatio­n at Swamp Yankee Arms LLC in Jewett City.
DANA JENSEN/THE DAY Brian Sterns, left, of Montville, looks for informatio­n on his cellphone Saturday while working with Tiara Lussier, right, online sales director, and Devin Maxim, sales associate, with his Assault Weapon Certificat­e applicatio­n at Swamp Yankee Arms LLC in Jewett City.
 ?? DANA JENSEN/THE DAY ?? Salesman Dylan Lussier shows a Connecticu­t ‘Other’ gun Saturday at Swamp Yankee Arms LLC in Jewett City.
DANA JENSEN/THE DAY Salesman Dylan Lussier shows a Connecticu­t ‘Other’ gun Saturday at Swamp Yankee Arms LLC in Jewett City.

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