The Denver Post

NRA affiliate is suing Boulder

- By John Bear

BOULDER» The Colorado affiliate of the National Rifle Associatio­n sued Boulder on Thursday to prevent the city from enforcing its assault weapons ban that took effect Friday.

Attorneys for the Colorado State Shooting Associatio­n, Boulder-based Gunsport of Colorado and two private citizens — James Michael Jones and Robert Lynn Chambers — argue the Boulder ordinance is invalid because sections of it conflict with state law.

The complaint specifical­ly cites three sections of the ordinance that clash with state statutes.

Those are the requiremen­t that owners of banned weapons receive a certificat­e from the city proving ownership, the prohibitio­n of the sale and possession of weapons by people under 21 and the prohibitio­n on the open carry of rifles and shotguns.

Denver Attorney Richard Westfall, who is representi­ng the plaintiffs, confirmed via email that the lawsuit was filed Thursday.

A Boulder spokesman didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Gunsport and Jones couldn’t immediatel­y be reached for comment, and Chambers declined to comment.

The NRA voiced support for the lawsuit in a news release. The release did not expressly state that the Colorado associatio­n is an official affiliate of the NRA but included a comment from Anthony Fabian, the state associatio­n’s executive director.

“We will not stand by and allow the misguided gun control extremists on the city council to strip us of our rights,” he said. “We are grateful for the NRA’S support of our lawsuit and look forward to restoring the rights of Boulder’s lawabiding citizens.”

The lawsuit comes about a month after another was filed in federal court less than 24 hours after the Boulder City Council unanimousl­y passed the ordinance.

The federal lawsuit claims the ordinance violates the plaintiffs’ constituti­onal rights.

City Council member Jill Adler Grano first suggested the ordinance in February after the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., which left 17 people dead.

Opponents of the ordinance have organized several pro-gun rallies in Boulder and other cities along the Front Range, during which many participan­ts have openly carried weapons that would have become illegal in Boulder on Friday.

At a demonstrat­ion two weeks ago, police passed out pamphlets detailing an existing Boulder ordinance that prohibits the open carry of firearms that aren’t in holsters or some other kind of case but issued no citations.

A violation of the new ordinance could result in sentences of up to 90 days in jail and fines of up to $1,000 — although Boulder officials have acknowledg­ed that it will be difficult to enforce. It bans certain pistols and semi-automatic rifles with pistol grips, a folding or telescopin­g stock or any protruding grip that allows a weapon to be stabilized with the non-trigger hand.

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