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Over at The Trace, Mike Spies describes the defeat of Tennessee’s “MaKayla’s law,” penalizing gun owners who fail to store their firearms safely resulting in accidental death or injury. As you’d expect, the report proceeds from pathos to prohibition, highlighting the “evil” NRA’s successful efforts to quash the law.

desantis-blue-logo-no-back-4-smallI oppose any and all laws that infringe on Americans’ rights to keep and bear arms. Any arms. Any way they wish to keep them. Gun owners who want immediate access to a working firearm are well within their rights to store a loaded gun anywhere and anyhow they like, noting that there are already plenty of laws concerning negligence. Not to mention the fact that safe storage laws can lead to unannounced home inspections.

Do you support safe storage laws?

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148 COMMENTS

  1. Totally agree with you….lots of things around the house can be dangerous, but there aren’t a set of laws for how to store each one. Every house is a different environment and only the homeowner can decide how things should be properly stored. BTW, we’ve survived this long without these kinds of laws and while there are occasional tragedies (not just with guns), it’s nothing compared to what is going on in, say, Chicago streets on a daily basis.

    • Owner of the shotgun got off, 11 year old kid is in jail until 19, 8 year old dead. Law makes it a crime to “recklessly place, leave or store (a gun) in plain view and readily accessible to a child under 13 if the gun is left unattended,” not under the owner’s control, and either loaded or with ammunition nearby.

  2. No here. We do not have “safe storage laws” for matches, lighters, kitchen knives, power tools like say power jigsaws that could cut off a limb, household chemicals, etc…guns, like anything else, require some common sense. If children are around, then yeah, don’t just leave a loaded gun lying in easy reach. The same applies to all the other stuff mentioned. You don’t leave a lighter just lying about with little kids around and then act shocked if a fire starts.

    Such laws are based on the assumption that guns are somehow more dangerous than the other items, that because a gun is a tool for killing, that it has some special properties that make it ultra-super-extra dangerous. At the very least, the gun is no more dangerous than any of that other stuff. You adhere to proper safety procedures with it just like the other things. At best, guns may actually be argued to be MORE safe than the other things, because a gun can’t harm a person when they’re using it for its intended purpose (killing or simulating killing) unless they violate the laws of gun safety. On the other hand, things like power tools, kitchen knives, matches, etc…those can result in a variety of accidents because in spite of their being used for their intended purpose, accidents can happen where they can still harm a person (you drop a lit match, miscalculate chopping the carrots and cut a finger, etc…).

    • A gun is NOT “a tool for killing.” A gun is a tool designed to propel an object in a specific direction. Like many other tools, it CAN be used for killing, but more often it is used for self-defense, most of those times without ever needing to be fired.

      Please don’t let the anti-gun folks control the language.

      • I know not everyone agrees, but IMO that doesn’t change the fact that it is still ultimately a tool designed for killing. It is a device designed to fire a projectile for the purpose primarily of killing. It can be used for self-defense without killing anybody precisely because it has the ability to kill. Regarding the anti’s, I actually think it works more in our favor to say guns are tools for killing as it undermines their argument:

        Anti: “That type of gun is meant for killing people, it should be banned.”

        Gun rights person: “Of course it’s designed for killing a person. Possessing a tool designed to kill a human doesn’t mean you intend to kill a human, you have it so that you don’t have to use it. The right to keep and bear arms is about the right to possess at a minimum the same basic weapons that soldiers carry, basic weapons of war. It is a tool that can be used for self-defense very effectively because it is designed with killing people in mind.”

        IMO your opinion is kind of like saying, “Nuclear bombs are NOT designed for massive destruction, they are just devices that cause a nuclear blast.” Yeah, but they are designed to produce such a blast for destructive purposes.

        • I like to point out two things:

          First, that steak knives are, in fact, specifically designed to slice through flesh. As it turns out, the nature of that flesh and the circumstances under which it is cut make all the difference as to the moral implications of slicing flesh. You don’t get to lump cutting up your steak with skinning a human being alive and legend they’re the same thing, nor do you get to judge the reasonableness of owning steak knives by invoking a blanket term that bundles vicious crimes with prosaic activities.

          Second, that guns are designed to kill works against gun control, not for it. Imagine that one person gets burned by their stove and another gets burned by their Galaxy Note 7 – which of the two products do you think will get pulled off the market?

    • Owner of the shotgun got off, 11 year old kid is in jail until 19, 8 year old dead. Law makes it a crime to “recklessly place, leave or store (a gun) in plain view and readily accessible to a child under 13 if the gun is left unattended,” not under the owner’s control, and either loaded or with ammunition nearby.

  3. No. More children die from private pools than from firearms. You also have no right to own a pool, and there is precedent restricting where you can build a pool in building codes already. You can do any swimming at a public pool with a lifeguard.

    Also medication.

    • I would say you do have a right to own a pool. Remember, your rights are not restricted to what is listed in the Bill of Rights. The Bill of Rights were seen as redundant by the Federalists, only put there to satisfy the anti-Federalists who wouldn’t otherwise support ratification. As the Federalists saw it, a bill of rights was dangerous because it says the government cannot do things which the Constitution doesn’t grant it any authority to do in the first place, and thus by saying so, could give the impression that the government does have the authority to restrict such rights.

      There is nothing in the Constitution about the government restricting one from having a swimming pool. Unless it can be shown that pools cause a major public health hazard or something, but otherwise, it’s none of their business.

      • I would like to point out that you have the right to own a pool even if it’s expressly forbidden in the constitution. No one has – or could possibly have – the right to kidnap you and lock you in a cage for digging a hole on your property and filling it with water.

    • Pools and water in general kill an enormous number of people–people drowning, young & old, are constantly in the news–I propose registration, licensing, universal criminal background check, finger printing, mandatory safety course and a yearly registration fee to own a pool. Also announced surprise inspections to make sure your pool is locked up when not in use.

  4. Safe storage laws are constitutional so long as they except weapons “in use”, and “in use” includes arms deliberately placed to be accessible in case of an intruder by any member of the household.

    So if I had, say, sixty guns, and kept one by my bed, one in the kitchen, one in the basement, and one by the stairs to the second floor hidden but not locked, those and any I or other household members carried on our persons would be fine, but the rest would be required to be locked up securely. Of course this is only common sense; no gun not intended to be used by the owner or made accessible to others to use should not be available, any more than one ought to be pointed at something/someone not intended as a target. So of my sixty guns, fifty-five should be locked up. And that would be legitimate under Article I Sec 8 authority over discipline for the militia. But the moment they want to say that any weapon I have for defense of home or person is not allowed to be kept or borne as I deem suitably available for immediate legitimate use, they’ve crossed the line.

    (Of course this would cover any item judged to belong to the set of “arms”.)

    • You do realize that you’ve basically said they can enact safe storage on knives, bats, chains, gasoline, and literally dozens of other everday items? Every item in common use as a tool has been used on the battlefield. Eg warhammers, battle-axes, daggers, maces, flails, napalm, etc. I absolutely DON’T want to give these meddling douchebags more power over me than they already have. They don’t have the right to enter into my home and decide how I store my property. Go find the real criminals me jail them.

      • Just make sure that kids (the real not teenager type) can’t get a hold of you gun and you are good to go. As it is, no one is being charged (other than the other kids) when the kids end up dead.

  5. No federal, state, or local government has any authority to regulate firearms in any way. That’s what “shall not be infringed” means.

    • Not quite. The government has constitutional authority to regulate firearms for the purposes of military service in the Militia. For example they have the authority Article I, Section 8 poweres to require you to register your firearms with the State Adjudent general for purposes of logistics support. Congress also has the authority to require citizens to own a semiautomatic rifle and pistol chambered in standard military calibers. The original Miltia Act of 1792 did in fact make that a requirement.

      • Yeah, not so sure about that.

        Yes it’s true that the original defense of the land was to be through a militia, as a standing army is expressly unconstitutional (and if raised, the army must be disbanded within two years).

        But the 2nd Amendment does not say that the arms are to be used when serving in a militia. It says that a militia is necessary to the security of a free state, and then it says “the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.” Which is to say, people can keep and bear arms, whether they are serving in a militia or not. But it’s saying that it recognizes that a militia is necessary, and how could you have a militia if the people were prohibited from having arms?

        Nowhere in the amendment does it say that you can only use arms or have them when you are actively serving in a militia.

    • except for the fact that every natural right as espoused in the Bill of Rights can be infringed. Pretty much been constitutional law since the constitution….

      Sorry, you may think differently but that is the state of the law. Don’t kill the messenger, I don’t agree with it either.

    • ^^^…this.

      The city of San Jose, CA is ruminating over the installation of a “safe storage” ordinance whereby all firearms must be locked away unless “in use”.

      If cleaning falls under “in use”, then I guess mine will always be in a state of “being cleaned”!

    • This! So much this!

      I completely support any and all safe storage practices, equipment, and behaviors.

      Safe storage laws? Absolutely not! First, Shall not be infringed. Second, How can this idea of a law be enforced? Third, why do the anti-gunners keep suggesting laws do nothing but make more criminals?

    • Safe storage laws are like mandatory helmet laws. It is perhaps the height of being a stupidass to ride a motorcycle without a helmet on. But should it be legally required?

      It is perhaps the height of being a stupidass to leave loaded, ready-to-fire guns around where unsupervised kids could get their hands on them (trained or not). But should it be legally prohibited?

      There’s other ways to do it. Perhaps you could be charged as an “accessory to murder” if some kid gets your unsecured gun and uses it to kill themselves or someone else, but you’d be exempt if you had safely stored it. Just like with the motorcycle helmet situation, if they bring you to the E.R. and you weren’t wearing a helmet, and you don’t have insurance, they should be free to refuse treatment. And you should know that going in, so you can make an informed choice.

        • And judging by your endless stream of repetitive comments, you want the gun owner dead. Okay, we get it.

        • If it was your kid, what would you want. One of the major points of having a government is to prevent vigilantism by providing a way to justice without resorting to a feud In addition ,I’m a strong believer in parents being responsible for their kids. Why do you think the south and west sides of Chicago are so bad?

  6. Give them nothing…period. 27 words are clear and NO regulation infringing should be considered. Its nothing more than additional paperwork. In CA we sign paper declaring we have a lockable safe, know how to load a weapon, how to operate a lock issued with a weapon, have to take a test on handgun safety. Yield once to gun safety nazi’s and your gun purchase becomes just one GODDAM sign sheet after another. All requiring storage at your gun store.

  7. Uh… No.

    Making a law requiring safe storage at home begs the question how it would be enforced. Is law enforcement going to make random checks in your home? If not, then there is no point in having the law. It would be better to word the law in such a way that if a child dies due to negligence then… Insert punishment here. Regardless, the accident itself is a great punishment to the grieving parents already, so I don’t really see any benefit anywhere in any case. Also. Priorities. We are talking less than 500 deaths a year here. There are so many others: drownings, poisonings, etc that would be better/sooner addressed than this one that take far more lives per year.

    Ultimately, this really isn’t something that can be prevented with legislation.

    • If it is a law, people are more likely to be taught it in firearm classes. And here is another example. Child protective services is called into a house and they see loaded guns laying around where kids can get to them, you think they should just say no harm, no foul?
      “It would be better to word the law in such a way that if a child dies due to negligence then… Insert punishment here” is beyond stupid, that’s like saying a cop can point their gun at your head with finger on the trigger while you are handcuffed and as long as you don’t die, no problem. We have manslaughter laws to take care of that if it happens.
      The only valid argument I see here is possible government abuse. The rest of the arguments sound like I get to run red lights as long as I don’t hit anyone.

      • FYI, “Child protective services” is a weaponized state organ used to destroy the nuclear family and intimidate those who dare to challenge today’s progressive “parenting” methods. Once upon a time it saved kids from legitimately abusive households, but now that refusing to buy your kids stuff counts as “abuse,” it has become a propaganda arm with fangs that needs to be gutted.

      • From your blatant strawman, your support of unenforceable government mandates over personal responsibility, and your tasteless low intellectual ad hominems based on your incommensurable strawman, I have put you in the “pre-crime pro-big government statist” boat.

        • And you think people will just be responsible without laws, well that’s not working. So do you think seat belt laws work? Because I remember the 70s and 80s and people use to disable the buzzers.

      • If it is a law, people are more likely to be taught it in firearm classes.

        Pure speculation. Not even good speculation. Do you think anyone attending a firearm class doesn’t know that guns are dangerous? Most parents would rather die than have their child die. Do you think a law is going to provide better incentive than that?

        And here is another example. Child protective services is called into a house and they see loaded guns laying around where kids can get to them, you think they should just say no harm, no foul?

        No. I think they’ll make shit up so they can take the kids away.

        “It would be better to word the law in such a way that if a child dies due to negligence then… Insert punishment here” is beyond stupid,

        This is called knocking down the strawman. You make an assertion mixed with a little ad hominem.

        that’s like saying a cop can point their gun at your head with finger on the trigger while you are handcuffed and as long as you don’t die, no problem. We have manslaughter laws to take care of that if it happens.

        This is the strawman. You build a strawman from my statement with the strawman looking similar to my statement. Then you knock it down – because it is easy to do so – it being made from the substance of straw instead of my statement.

        But I will address the theme as best possible. You are suggesting that a law be made that punishes the gun owner in the event that the law is broken. (This is what laws do – they don’t actually prevent anything). But how will you know that law is broken (other than your child services statement)? You would likely know when the ambulance shows up to pick up the child’s corpse. Do we must ask how really can it be enforced? And do we have any privacy in our home? And why stop there? Why not all the other hazards of your home that child services or the police could make a decision on based on their opinions?

        The only valid argument I see here is possible government abuse.

        At least we agree on something.

        The rest of the arguments sound like I get to run red lights as long as I don’t hit anyone.

        Are my children the state’s responsibility or my responsibility? Are the items in my home matters of the state? Do I have a right to privacy? Am I innocent until proven guilty? If I run a red light and nobody see’s it but me – does that mean that I get to run red lights? If you know it is impossible to hit someone at a particular red light that you are waiting at and you know you will not be seen – should you get to make the call if you run the red light or not? It’s a lot more complicated than simply a red or green light and the law.

        • What I’m trying to say here is that only the person at the light knows if the light is useful. When things are congested, the light helps coordinate. When nobody is at the light and you are waiting forever maybe you wish the light wasn’t there. The point is, the light removes your options and takes the decision away from you (the one best knowledgeable about the situation) and hands it to legislators that make the decision for you. Likewise with gun storage laws.

          You asked for a solution. The best solution – as it always is – is education. Rather than force people to do a thing, educate them in an honest way, how that thing should be done or the dangers of the subject matter, It leaves the decision with the person who best knows the situation to make the best call possible. Blanketing everyone with rules – simply doesn’t accomplish the same.

  8. I support safe storage itself. Who doesn’t? Safe storage laws, however, are just traps to ensnare gunowners.

    There are already plenty of laws addressing negligence and child neglect. If those laws and common sense aren’t enough to prompt people to behave responsibly, then heaping extra laws on them or others isn’t going to solve anything.

  9. We bought son his first rifle when he was fifteen. Yeah, a little late to the party. I found out there was a state law or City ordinance against him storing the unloaded rifle in his closet until he was sixteen years old, when he was seventeen. Oops.

  10. No for the following reasons in no particular order:

    1. We already have laws to hold adult responsible for a child that harms him or herself or another child. It’s generally in the reckless negligence area. Specifics vary by state and how serious the injury is.

    2. The new laws will be abused by government. Either the conditions will be so onerous to practically prevent one from having a loaded working firearm accessible at all, or it will be used to harass gun owners, or it will be used to justify a gun owners database and registration.

    3. It is legislating people’s behavior down to the lowest common denominator. If you want people to be better, you have to judge them, not try to save them with technology or processes. The individual won’t learn or aspire for better if technology or a process allows them to mentally check out.

      • That’s kind of the problem.

        Behavior for one person may not be appropriate for another based on that persons opinion. Kind of like your behavior towards the Democratic Party. How about they just legislate some rules that you don’t like huh?

    • “We already have laws to hold adult responsible for a child that harms him or herself or another child. It’s generally in the reckless negligence area. Specifics vary by state and how serious the injury is.”
      The 11 year old shot the 8 year old with his dad’s gun, no charges. So how exactly is the adult being held responsible? What is the 11 year old just threatened and pointed the shotgun at the kid. What about if he fired and missed?. The 8 year old was killed and no charges were filed against the dad (his kid is stuck in jail until he is 19)

  11. The imbecile clamoring for a law about an inanimate object probably would be the first person squealing about the ‘unfairness’ of holding the vile little $#17 responsible as an adult and locking him up for life. It’s always somebody or something else with these people. They cannot handle assigning blame and consequence to the perpetrator of the act. Meanwhile two deranged preteen girls lured a playmate into the woods and stabbed her nearly to death. Should we lock up our knives too?

    • How about a dad who leaves his shotgun out so his 11 year old kid kills a 8 year old. Think he should get off free and clear?

      • Binder, you obviously don’t think an 11 year old is old enough to be responsible. The child went to the shotgun on purpose. He pointed it at the 8 year old on purpose. He shot her on purpose.

        This was no accident. It was first degree murder. If the kid had been 17 should the dad have been responsible? How about 24? This was not an accident, and I see no reason to hold the dad responsible. The whole point of “Safe Storage Laws” [aka Further Impediments to Gun Ownership Laws] is reductions of accidents.

        What if the 11 YO had taken a can of gasoline from beside the lawnmower and poured it on the 8 YO and lit it? Dad responsible for that?

        My objection to SSL’s [FIGOL’s] is who decides what is safe? Some states (MA and IL come to mind) require you to be prescreened before being allowed to buy a gun. The sale can’t be completed without possession of that ID card. Is inspection of your “safe storage” going to be required to get the ID card? Is the minimum safe storage a $3000, 1200 lb. Liberty safe required to store your $400 Stevens shotgun?

        Just too much chance for abuse.

  12. Ralph beat me to the punch. Yes to safe storage but no to laws on the topic.

    The laws are too easy to abuse and they’re generally written by people who don’t actually know what they’re talking about. They therefore become onerously expensive for the folks who really need a gun but can only afford that Hi-Point. They also tend to restrict one’s ability to quickly access a firearm in an emergency that requires ranged perforation power of the handheld variety.

  13. OK, maybe there was a poison pill in the legislation, but read the newspaper article, and NOT TAG’s propaganda. The law punishes people who let kids get a hold of their firearms, IT IS NOT ABOUT SAFE STORAGE. It address the fact that a kid “was shot by her 11-year-old neighbor after he removed his father’s shotgun from a closet last October” the 11 year old is in jail until 19, but the father was never charged.
    The bill would have made it a crime for an adult to “recklessly place, leave or store (a gun) in plain view and readily accessible to a child under 13 if the gun is left unattended,” not under the owner’s control, and either loaded or with ammunition nearby
    Sure sounds like reckless endangerment to me.
    So what should be done, tar and feather the DA along with the 11 year old’s dad?

    • Here’s the problem this law, as you’ve presented it, basically says no kid under 13 can have access to a gun and ammo except under supervision otherwise the parent is in trouble. That’s overly broad.

      Look just leaving a loaded shotgun lying around where kids can get at it seems pretty irresponsible but that doesn’t mean that storage methods should be mandated for everyone. Some people have kids who are trained in the use of firearms.

      Wouldn’t it be equally tragic to have a kid who has knowledge of firearms be killed or kidnapped by a home invader because a safe storage law preventing the kid from having access to a defensive weapon when the unimaginable happened? Oh, well he was 12 so his 20 gauge, that he/she knows exactly how to handle had to be inaccessible to him/her.

      There is no blanket law that can cover every circumstance and no matter how you tailor the law inevitably some otherwise innocent people will somehow end up on the wrong end of it when they really did nothing wrong. You certainly can’t argue that the 12 year old who blasted the house-breaking cho-mo didn’t have ready access to the firearm and ammo because if they didn’t they couldn’t have used it defensively.

      • And if the 12 year old (in this case it was a 11 year old) kills the neighbors 8 year old, who should be charged? What if it is becoming a bigger problem?

        • The trigger puller gets a charge for sure. As for the rest of it you would have to examine it on a case by case basis. Not every case is going to involve gross negligence and a blanket law on storage can’t take every possible set of circumstances into consideration. People who were in circumstances unforeseen by the legislature will inevitably get caught up in this.

          Consider two situations where the 12 year old shoots the eight year old. In the first, the gun is simply stored loaded in a closet and the child has no firearms training. That’s fairly negligent IMHO. In a second case the shotgun is out for cleaning and the gun safe is open, which is where the shells are kept. There’s a house fire across the street and dad rushes out to help get people out of the house, leaving the shotgun out and the safe unlocked. The same shooting occurs.

          In case one, I’d say you have a negligence case that could be made. In the second case dad was distracted by another situation and arguably did nothing wrong. His focus was on saving the lives of his neighbors and that distracted him from properly storing the shotgun. I’d call that extenuating circumstances and I’d argue his actions not to be negligent because he went after the bigger problem that was statistically a bigger threat to more lives. In the case of a blanket safe storage law however, he’d potentially be liable for the shooting unless he wasted precious time storing the shotgun back in the safe (he can’t know if Jr. stole a shell while he wasn’t looking so he’s gotta lock up the gun). So what does he do? Worry about the gun and the low statistical chance of this shooting and let someone burn alive or does he attack the higher risk while relegating the lower risk to the back burner but opening himself up to potential legal action? That’s a shitty situation to put the guy in.

          As for it being a bigger problem, first I’d have to see the stats on the problem getting worse and second those stats would have to outweigh everything else, which in this case I know for a fact that they don’t.

  14. Absolutely not. Anyone who thinks, in these times, that a national “safe storage” bill with flowery language wouldn’t be used to persecute gun owners for political points, including those engaged in legit DGU’s, has his head in the sand.

    The lack of common sense PARENTING in this country is what perpetuates the frequency of these and other fatal accidents. When I was eight years old I showed an interest in power tools. My father came home with a juicy T bone steak from the grocery store and brought me down to his workshop. He put the steak under his miter saw, said “Pretend this is your arm” and chopped it in half. My face turned white, but I got the message, don’t ever play games with power tools. Never touched them without his permission after that. And yes, we cooked the steak later.

    Friends’ dads taught the same lesson with guns by shooting cantaloupes, rabbits, stuff that really shows ballistic power in ways tin cans and paper targets can’t. Nobody I know who was given such a demo as a kid has ever had a negligent discharge or acted cavalier around guns.

    TL;DR, Fvck safe storage laws.

    • But as it stands the dad left his shotgun out. 11 year old kills 8 year old, dad not charged and kid in jail until 19. Solution please?
      And read the actual law.
      FYI in Tennessee since January 2015, there have been 30 incidents of a child finding a loaded gun and firing it, resulting in 18 injuries and 12 deaths.

      • But as it stands the dad left his shotgun out. 11 year old kills 8 year old, dad not charged and kid in jail until 19. Solution please?

        Why are extant laws regarding negligence insufficient?

        • Negligence/civil liability is a whole different kettle of fish than potential criminal liability. And in many cases, there is not enough insurance–if any–to cover the loss.

        • Criminal negligence is no longer a thing?

          I said nothing about civil liability. I’m talking about negligent-act (i.e. involuntary) manslaughter.

        • In this case the current laws we not sufficient as the father of the 11 year old got off. Or do you think his dad was not responsible in this case. Do you think anyone is not responsible when they leave gun out that pre-teens can use unsupervised. How about when someone is killed?

        • Ex hoc ergo propter hoc

          That the authorities decided not to charge the father is not evidence that extant laws were insufficient to charge the father.

          And where have I said or implied that one is not responsible in those circumstances? I have not. To the contrary, I have stated that such a person is criminally negligent.

  15. No.

    (Does more need to be said? I think everyone above has covered it.)

    Rhetorical question: why aren’t all of these people concerned with the welfare of children arguing for safe-storage laws for drugs, which cause far more accidental deaths than firearms?

      • Safety caps go back, what, 20-30 years, at least? And they’re demonstrably ineffective, given the number of accidental deaths due to prescription drug overdose – which, again, far outnumber the number of accidental deaths due to firearms.

        So, where are the calls for safe drug-storage laws?

        • Give me the stats for kids under 13. Also “almost all (91%) of unintentional poisoning deaths are a result of drug overdose – especially from opioid pain medications such as methadone, hydrocodone or oxycodone”. Sound like you want to add up the junkies with the kids. You sound like a gun grabber who lumps in the 17 year old gang banger with the kids killed when dad leaves out the shotgun.

        • Speaking of cherry-picking and conflating statistics:

          Give me the stats for kids under 13.

          Since when are safe-storage laws intended only to impact kids under 13? Regardless, from 2005-2012, there were 110 unintentional firearm deaths among children 0-14, per NIH estimates. According to CDC, the number for 2013 was 69.

          According to that same CDC report, in the same year, 65 children aged 0-14 died due to accidental poisoning.

          That sounds awfully close – which is, I suspect, why you limited your query to those aged 0-14. Because if you look at the overall, accidental fatalities among all ages due to poisoning (38,851), the number dwarfs that of accidental fatalities due to firearms (505).

          Oh, but wait: there is a separate category for “drug-induced deaths”. That category accounts for 106 children aged 0-14, and 46,471 overall.

          I’m sure that includes self-inflicted drug-overdoses. The point is: safe storage of drugs is an overwhelmingly worse problem than safe storage of firearms.

  16. The sequence seems to be:
    1. a child grabbed a parent’s loaded firearm,
    2. Killed themselves or another,
    3. the NRA opposes and perhaps partially assists in overturning ‘commonsense’ regulation to protect innocent children / people (in this case storage law).
    4. Pro-gun forums push back on any storage regulations.

    I wonder about this. We should all agree that the loaded and ready firearm should be in our protection (not accessible to others). What do we do with the 12-gauge or for home 9mm when we go to work? Leave them in the closet or dresser drawer? Both are scenarios that occurred – the former the shooting related in the blog and the other several shootings.

    IMO Leaving a loaded and ready firearm where it can be accessed by another in any circumstance is negligence at the least. When such an event occurs should not this be something that the NRA and that we should condemn in and though major media?. This can be done in such a way as to not address a specific incident but, would it not be ‘helping the cause’ to at least react in the public forum?

    • In response to your comment, I refer you back to Ralph’s comment, above: support for safe storage is not equivalent to support for safe-storage laws.

      And safe-storage laws will do absolutely nothing to change safe-storage behavior, or to reduce accidental deaths related to firearms.

      • Agree and that is my point. We as a group (hopefully) are very good about self-regulating. I don’t think we do a good job about messaging beyond our ‘walls’. The perception being that we are ‘for’ leaving a loaded and ready firearm where someone we don’t intend can take it.

      • Well, it certainly *could* do something about safe storage behavior! If you tell people it’s “the law” that they must lock up their guns, you’ll probably find a higher percentage of people locking up their guns. Not everybody’s as responsible or as intelligent as you and, as the 2A absolutists often repeat, the “shall not be infringed” means that absolutely everyone, regardless of intellectual capacity, has that right to keep and bear that arm. But some of ’em gotta be told, and have to understand that they should comply. If it’s a law, that will get more folks to pay attention to it.

        Enough to make a difference? Enough to warrant the negative effect of implementing the law? Those are both debatable. But it seems eminently reasonable to assume that law-abiding citizens will follow the law, where — if it wasn’t a law, they may not have understood or done the responsible thing.

        Hell, we’ve got enough folks in the “gun community” who advocate never locking your doors because “a locked door is a sign to a thief that there’s something valuable inside”… you can’t ever account for the sheer amount of stupid that’s out there. But just because someone’s stupid, doesn’t make them a lawbreaker, so a good share of those folks might lock their doors (or their gun safe) if they knew it was a law.

        Again — just because something’s unconstitutional, doesn’t mean it wouldn’t work. Stop ‘n’ Frisk is unconstitutional as hell — but it was effective. The question is does the end JUSTIFY the means?

        • In this instance, the end doesn’t even justity the end. Democrats will hang gun owners over laws like this one. Your gun proficient teenager with access to your firearm would be your downfall regardless of intent or abilities. I wouldn’t entertain this law for a second for this reason alone.

          And I’m going to be really blunt here. Binder’s dead children should not affect how I store my guns in my home, or my judgment of the abilities of my children vs their availability of firearms – which I would know more than anyone else.

        • OK, then you are responsible if something happens. The problem is people are not being held responsible. The damn feelings keep getting in the way. If your 11 year old killed my 8 year old because you kid was a killer and you left out the 12 gauge, I would probably want to blow your head off. However, I know where that leads to. So what do you recommend, just suck it up? Because the attitude of whatever, I don’t care, it is my right is a really good way to lose them.
          Having kids under 13 shot themselves and others is also a good way to lose your right to bear arms.

        • Truth: Further Impediment to Gun Ownership Laws masquerading as Safe Storage Laws.

          Binder: What if the kid was fully checked out on the shotgun? What if he could out score dad shooting skeet? Is the storage unsafe because dad didn’t know his little snowflake was a homicidal maniac?

    • But governments will always abuse these laws way beyond common sense.

      Massachusetts law says that gun storage must be “securely locked,” but leaves it entirely open to the state’s interpretation what “securely” means. It’s obvious to any cynic that the state will argue that the theft of a gun from any locked area proves a priori that the area wasn’t “securely” locked, and therefore the theft is always the fault of the gun-owner victim.

      See COMMONWEALTH vs. STEPHEN PARZICK.

  17. So, The Trace, not great with stats…

    Young children shoot themselves, other kids and adults with stunning frequency in America. Between September 1, 2014, and September 1, 2016, a child under the age of 13 was the perpetrator in at least 300 acts of gun violence, resulting in 102 deaths and 198 injuries, according to data provided by the Gun Violence Archive, a nonprofit.

    That’s 51 deaths a year nationwide, for a death rate of 0.016 per hundred thousand. As tragic as any one case may be, this is not a something that needs a legislative solution.

    • According to trivia columnist L. M. Boyd, over 100 people in the US — twice as many — choke themselves to death on ballpoint pens every year. I like this statistic because it especially useful in putting the issue into sudden perspective.

  18. The safekeeping of your firearms is yet another of the responsibilities you incur when you own firearms, just like observing the rules for the safe handling of them. Other than my “wallhangers” every firearm I own is under “lock and/or key”. If you fear that you may need one quickly in an emergency situation, invest in a quick-access gun safe or two – or as I have, three. I can access a loaded pistol in a matter of a few seconds at most and I don’t have to worry about my grandson finding a loaded firearm and killing/wounding himself or others. Nor do I have to concern myself that I have contributed to a mishap which will inevitably result in stringent laws which infringe on my or anyone else’s liberties.

    • Or, my preferred solution — keep at least a pocket pistol on you. Ain’t nothing ever gonna be faster (or safer) than the pistol that’s on your body, under your control at all times.

    • Good job. I’m sure many agree, but none of that bears any relevance to whether or not legally mandating any of those ideas is acceptable. For myself, it certainly isn’t.

  19. We have ridiculous storage laws in Canada. Don’t let any law makers pass any safe storage laws. Unless I’m cleaning my gun it has to be stored, pistols have trigger lock and have to be locked in cabinet. How does anyone propose that’s reasonable for stopping an intruder.
    Too nanny state for my liking. The police have to make an appt with minimum 24 hr notice to inspect storage .

  20. Safe storage laws are only fair if you get to beat half to death with a wet flip-flop, all those who demanded you lock your firearm and you were not able to access it to protect you, your kids, your home, your friends, your car, your goods, your neighborhood, your boat, your. . .

    If such persons cannot withstand enough of a beating [i.e., cannot withstand much of a beating before being beaten half to death] then you go after their family.

  21. Q: Should “The Trace”, and Mike Spies individually, be held directly responsible for any malfeasance that may come upon you because you had the means to stop it, but your access was handicapped so that Mike and The Trace could claim that they are somehow protecting others (on the individual level [an impossibility]) by forcing you to potentially abdicate your role in your own safety?

    If The Trace, and Mike Spies was successful in their attempts to regulate your storage of firearms, wouldn’t that telegraph to all bad guys what your response time would be?

    And ALL CRIME IS BASED UPON RESPONSE TIME.

  22. “When such an event occurs should not this be something that the NRA and that we should condemn in and though major media?. This can be done in such a way as to not address a specific incident but, would it not be ‘helping the cause’ to at least react in the public forum?”

    /The Point
    The NRA, a membership organization for peaceful, responsible gun owners, does, and always has promoted “gun safety.” That’s why they develop and supply education, training and certifications, for example, for individuals, and for “range safety officers” where people practice shooting together. Indeed, the training they offer starts with the four rules.

    How else? Who is most likely to be harmed by unsafe gun handling? The people who have them. Peaceful, responsible citizens looking to own guns want the knowledge and skills to do so safely.

    There is the crux. As with predators, thugs, crazies and terrorists, casual, irresponsible gun handlers aren’t prone to practicing safety, and aren’t much bound by laws anyway. Really, if 1/10 the effort put into knee-jerk restrictions on people who haven’t done anything harmful — “Something, must be done!” — were put into programs like gun safety education, we’d all be further along.

    We look forward to groups like Bloomie’s turf-Mothers Spun up About Only Some Violence joining us in promoting and providing these effective, low-cost ways to allow people to do what they like, and protect themselves, without undue risk. Indeed, we’ve found that peaceful, responsible gun owners eagerly seek out information and training like this. Join us. We’ll be over-booked.

    / If you must…
    Really, responsible gun owners and their organizations like the NRA (among others), don’t like waving bloody shirts after a tragedy. And that’s what dead kids are: a tragedy.

    That said, what might have been avoided, had the children involved had a reasonable grasp of gun safety? Or any other kind of safe behavior? Messing with devices you don’t understand is dangerous. We are fans of teaching children rules and tools to take care of themselves, as, as this tragedy demonstrates, adults won’t always be there. Children drown in pools, because they don’t know and follow the safety rules. Children and others crash cars for the same reason.

    Just as you can’t put a police officer in everybody’s hip pocket, 24×7, you can’t bubble-wrap the world.

    We’d rather put our efforts into empowering people — adults and children alike — with education and practice, so they can live more safely in the world. A law that will be applied only as much as it is enforced is far less effective than awareness, judgment, and skills, not to mention the many consequences and side-effects that come with this particular law.

    Do you really want to make someone purchasing a gun into a license for on-demand inspection of their home? A tool for additional “pile on” charges should they come to law enforcement attention? Another “reasonable suspicion” justifying police harassment? Another administrative charge usable for revenue collection under guise of law enforcement and public safety?

    It this is about safety, teach people. If it’s about something else, well, say that.

    When we have riots in multiple cities for months, grounded in the perception of inconsistent rights and privileges, arbitrary enforcement, harassment, and lack of protection, what will a “dig through you business” law help?

    The reasons for the knee-jerk daemonization of peaceful, responsible people for something they had nothing to do with are my speculation. The NRA doesn’t go there. I do. The advocates of this knee-jerk law that will be ineffective and abused are worse than confused. They are deliberately exploiting a tragedy, when we could be doing things that will help. They are horrible, evil people.

    The next kid that gets killed from mishandling a gun will be on neither the gun, nor peaceful, responsible gun owners … it will be on them.

  23. So can anyone here state that if I leave a loaded firearm accessible to a child under the 13 that I should not be criminal responsible for any injuries or death that result? And if your kid was killed in this situation, honestly what would you do. Remember, in this case it was the neighbors kid with his dad’s gun that just killed your 8 year old over a being able to see a puppy

    • Straw man. No one here has said that.

      Why is another law needed, when laws already on the books should suffice (regardless of the decision not to press charges in this instance)? Especially when said new law would accomplish nothing but place further and unneeded burdens on the law-abiding?

      • So if your kid was killed because your neighbor left out his shotgun for his murdering 11 year old, you would be good with that?

      • Making you responsible for keeping kids out of your loaded firearms is a burden. What next, you want to run over kids who are jaywalking

        • Yes, imposing arbitrary legal restrictions on the manner the law-abiding choose in exercising the right to keep and bear arms is inherently and by definition a burden. I didn’t think that point really needed to be spelled out.

        • I was looking threw the comments, ” I have stated that such a person is criminally negligent.” But the Law makes it a crime to “recklessly place, leave or store (a gun) in plain view and readily accessible to a child under 13 if the gun is left unattended,” not under the owner’s control, and either loaded or with ammunition nearby. OK, so why exactly did you not like it? Remember the “recklessly place” is in there for the “I had to run out a save the neighbors in the burning house” argument. There is some possible argument for a responsible 12 year old, but just how many home invasions are stopped for the number of kids killed?

        • “OK, so why exactly did you not like it? Remember the “recklessly place” is in there for the “I had to run out a save the neighbors in the burning house” argument.”

          Massachusetts police ORDERED people out of their homes (without warrants) while searching neighborhoods for the Marathon bomber… then charged a number of them with “leaving unsecured firearms unattended.” These were homes with no minors, and the firearms were unattended only because the police ordered the residents outside at gunpoint.

          Why you would even want to enable this sort of oppression boggles me.

      • Here is the real reason we need the law. Our rights are under attack. If we want to keep them we need to change the attitude of individuals and for a lot of people that takes a law. It’s stupid, but it is the truth. Kids killing kids is not going to help our cause. In addition the state failed the 8 year old when they only prosecuted the kid, but i think we agree on that.

        • Translation: the free exercise of our rights is under attack; therefore, we must pass more laws that further burden the free exercise of our rights.

          Laws do not cause people to be more responsible. Laws do not cause people to be more law-abiding. Laws that burden the free exercise of rights do not promote the free exercise of those same rights.

        • My rights don’t depend on your attitude. I retain my rights despite your attitude. That’s what rights mean. Rights protect unpopular stances, because popular stances don’t need protection.

  24. There are two entirely separate issues being discussed here, with a lot of overlap without making the distinction.
    1. There are safe storage laws, such as are now in effect in San Francisco, L.A., and soon San Jose, which require all firearms to be unloaded and secured anytime they are not physically on your person.
    2. There are negligent storage laws, laws which do not mandate any form of storage, but impose criminal penalties if a minor obtains possession of a firearm and causes injury or death to another. It is basically stating that if it is your gun, you are responsible for injuries caused by misuse by a minor in your house.

    The safe storage laws are overbroad, as they apply to people who have no other persons, or more importantly no children in their homes. And they are silly because thdere is no way that they can be enforced, even if (as the Ninth Circus held in Jackson v. San Francisco) they are constitutionally permissible. And yes, they are stupid because it restricts an owener usually to a single loaded firearm in the event of a home invasion. These should always be opposed.

    But criminal penalties for misuse of your weapons by a minor, which you as owner had the ability to prevent by practicing sensible safe storage, are a completely different fish. There is no mandated storage requirements, no state sponsored inspections, no storage requirements. Only a requirement that you keep the kids, unless supervised, out of your guns. And it is not uncommon for a tort (negligent infliction of injury) to carry both civil and criminal consequences, for example drunk driving can get you both sued for injuries inflicted and jailed for violating the criminal statute. These types of laws, if properly worded, are not inherently offensive to the Second Amendment, any more than a criminal penalty being imposed when you, without just cause, threaten, injure, or kill another person.

    • The mere act of leaving a firearm somewhere is not a per se tort. It is risky in some situations, and can lead to tort, but it is not itself a tort.

      Criminalize the tort.

      I contend that existing laws are generally sufficient to do so.

    • “There is no mandated storage requirements, no state sponsored inspections, no storage requirements.”

      Not in the first version, anyway. But just wait.

      Seems to me that you should prosecute incidents of de facto negligence under common negligence law, which all states have. If you can’t “get” this guy under general negligence law, but you can “get” him under a super-special firearms negligence law, then either your general negligence law is a joke or your firearms negligence law is a targeted oppression.

  25. DeSantis Holsters Question of the Day: Safe Storage Laws. Yes or No?

    No. It is an affront to basic liberty to criminalize the absence of action.

    A better question would be, “What responsibility does a power tool owner have if an unauthorized person uses that tool to injure or kill another person or persons?”

    • So you are cool with the dad leaving out the shotgun his 11 year old used to murder a 8 year old? The good news is he is free an clear

        • An you keep stating that the “laws are sufficient” Well I would agree with you if the dad of the kid was charged for leaving his loaded 12 gauge where the kid could get it.

      • I am cool with calling you a failure at logic, rhetoric, and propagandizing.

        Nothing I said implied seeing kids die is “cool”, your argument is against an assertion I did not make (see: “straw man”), and your belligerence is off-putting to thoughtful people, thus zero marks for opinion-modifying.

    • The responsibility is “depends” None at all, if someone breaks in a steals it. Quite a bit if it is his son or daughter and he acted carelessly in storing it.

  26. With a few minor quibbles, I actually support the original safe storage laws California enacted in the 90’s (not the recent addition a few years ago).

    The difference between that law, and the present one, is that California law (at the time) held the responsible adult liable if and only if a) he kept a loaded gun (unloaded didn’t count) b) where he reasonably should know a kid WITHOUT parental authorization could get it and c) the kids actually got it and death or serious injury ensued (1st class offense), or lesser injury or bringing it to school (2nd class). And the exceptions made it very clear that any attempt at securing the gun (gun safe, in your physical control, gun lock), as well as situations you weren’t responsible for (illegal entry by teens) lifted liability. Further, there is a provision that if the responsible adult is also the one who has lost a child, that the prosecutor take into account the grieving of the parents before pressing charges (a death of a child may be enough of a hell)

    Essentially, it didn’t actually mandate any action. It expressly allowed you to give access to your children as you deemed fit… but it held you accountable for the consequences of fairly crass negligence

    I knew a guy whose son killed himself with a loaded, unsecured gun. Nearly broke the man. Citing the provision mentioned above, the police and DA not only did not charge him, but were very compassionate. Allowance of such mercy is fairly rare with “mandatory sentencing” laws.

    Of course they have since added a “third degree” offense, that does not require any harmful result. It is virtually unenforceable though, at least with respect to one’s own children, since it still only applies to cases where access can be gained “against parental consent”

        • I will be happy when people are responsible. I know that is not going to ever happen 100%, but I also know that laws can help that along. Just like we have laws about speeding a jaywalking. I this case I would equate kipping guns from pre-teens with drunk driving. (the kind where you give a 17 year old beer and keys to a car)

      • Sorry, about the first comment, but the law in this case is about securing firearms from pre-teens and making people responsible for the results

    • So, in summary, they got their foot in the door with a “good” law, and then morphed it into a worse law?

      Tells you absolutely everything you need to know.

      Governments do this all the time.

      Remember the Income Tax? “In 1913 Congress enacted a top rate of 7 percent and a high exemption that spared all but 2 percent of households entirely. But just five years later, the top rate was 11 times higher.”

      Once it was too late to smother the law in its crib. Then only a little while later, it reached out and touched nearly everybody in the wallet, and the result is what we have now — universal wage slavery.

      Soo-prise, soo-prise.

      • But dead 8 year old are going to kill our rights faster than any law that the democrats can purpose (laws don’t get passed without public backing or at least apathy). The problem is the lack of responsibility and unfortunately a lot of people will not do what is responsible unless there is a law (a lot of people still will not, but at least there is a way to discourage it)

        • Two points you’re missing here:

          1. Laws are only as effective as the willingness to enforce them. Even if “McKayla’s Law” had been in effect, there is nothing in any law that compels a prosecutor to proscecute someone under that law. In this case, the prosecutor declined to press charges based on extant, criminal negligence laws. What makes you think he would have pressed charges based on “McKayla’s Law”?

          2. “McKayla’s Law” (an inherent appeal to emotion, btw) might not even have come into play in McKayla’s murder, even if it had been on the books when she was killed. Her death was not the result of an accidental shooting due to negligent storage of firearms that were accessed without consent. Rather, her death was a deliberate act premeditated murder. His son likely reasonably had intentional access to the father’s firearms. The father was not negligent in storage of his firearms; he was negligent in raising a bullying, murderous son.

        • OK, then pull out the last part of the law and just make the Dad responsible for the actions of his kid if he fails to secure his firearms. That way we can make a example of him and hopefully wake some people up.

  27. How about a government subsidy to buy safes making a good safe more accessible to gun owners. Or the purchase of a safe could be written off on ones taxes.

    • Good idea, I had to buy my own safe–Everything is locked up that is not being carried or used–I would not feel comfortable without a good safe for my firearms & other things that I put in it, even though it is just my wife & I in the house

    • Again, no. This trick never works, Bullwinkle.

      Back in 1998, one of the handul of pro-rights legislators in the Massachusetts House brought this precise bill to the floor, ith the intent of giving his friends an unrequested present.

      The opposition immediately (and skilfully) played the “compromise” card, arguing that if the state were going to subsidize safes for gun owners, gun owners should be required to use them. Since gun-haters were in the majority (it’s Massachusetts), both the amendment and the bill were passed before the sound of the gavel reached the back of the chamber — completely undoing two years of work by the state gun owners’ association to PREVENT the passage of a safe-storage law.

      Compromise is not just morally repugnant, it’s tactically stupid. “Free favors” from government always come at too high a price.

      • How about you are responsible is your pre-teen kid shoots or kills someone with your unsecured firearm, are you good on that one?

        • You certainly are hell-bent to punish a third-party for a crime committed by someone else. You may want to spend a moment and think about why this is so important to you.

          We already have general negligence law. If the parent was negligent, the parent can already be convicted. Creating laws to make the same offense secret-double-illegal is the mark of a mental and moral incompetent.

          We’ve told you this multiple times. The answer hasn’t changed, and it’s the answer you’re going to get no matter how many times you ask the same stupid question.

  28. No.

    I’m tired of “thoughtcrime” laws, and I’m tired of “precursor” laws. Laws that make it illegal to possess a crate of glassine envelopes because you MIGHT be dealing drugs. Laws that make it illegal to make a large unreported cash transaction because you MIGHT be laundering the proceeds of a crime. Laws that make it illegal not to wear a seatbelt because you MIGHT get injured in an accident. Laws that make it illegal to wear your gun into a school or Post Office because you MIGHT decide to murder somebody with it. Laws that make hundreds of innocent and reasonable actions crimes because criminals sometimes perform those same actions. It’s the “Baby Hitler was bottle-fed” fallacy, except with a prison sentence as a punchline.

    If there is no victim (or the only “victim” is the state), there is no crime. Imprison people for things they actually do that hurt other people are damage their property — not for things they MIGHT do or things that offend the state.

    • It not the state, its society. Large groups of people don’t work out to well without rule of law. Now I would agree with you on the post office, but set-belts, not so much.

      • Frankly? The fact that you don’t agree with me doesn’t bother me in the least. After all the posts I’ve read from you, in truth, the opposite would cause me greater concern.

  29. I have to wonder how a closet could be considered in “plain view”, granted I’m a mental health counselor and not a lawyer. I would think loaded in a bedroom closet would not meet the definition of plain view.

  30. Should there be safe storage laws? No, obviously not. And while people who are irresponsible enough to leave their guns where children can easily find and use them deserve some kind of reprimand, I suppose that having to live with knowing that whatever happened was their fault is consequence enough. It doesn’t really make sense to jail or even fine a hypothetical mother whose toddler accidentally killed themselves with her EDC; I’m sure it’s a mistake she won’t make twice. She’s an idiot, not a criminal. It would be, if nothing else, a waste of resources.

  31. Yes, I’m Necro-ing a post that’s more than six years old but this needed doing because you’ve all missed the crux of the biscuit. I can tell that much even without reading all of the other replies because I searched and the word “Heller” didn’t appear in any of them … until now.

    The 2008 Heller decision — which it would appear none of you has ever read in its entirety — holds as UNCONSTITUTIONAL any mandatory firearm “Safe Storage” if it prevents the firearm(s) in question from being “operable for the purpose of immediate self-defense.”

    Which means none of you cited the only detail that matters. In the opinion for the majority, Justice Scalia writes:

    “… [T]he [District of Columbia] law totally bans handgun possession in the home. It also requires that any lawful firearm in the home be disassembled or bound by a trigger lock at all times, rendering it inoperable….”

    .. and later he continues, …

    “…[W]e hold that the District’s ban on handgun possession in the home violates the Second Amendment, as does its prohibition against rendering any lawful firearm in the home operable for the purpose of immediate self-defense….”

    So if access to your firearm is slowed by so much as one nanosecond, it is in violation of 2A and UNCONSTITUTIONAL.

    Also relevant to this post because if you haven’t read the Heller decision then you also likely haven’t read the 2010 Herrington decision (Kevin A. Herrington v. US) either, which draws direct inference from the Heller decision’s ruling that mandatory trigger locks are UNCONSTITUTIONAL and also extends that protection to the possession of ammunition. Which also always made sense to the everyone except the hoplophobes and other neo-Bolsheviks because you can’t use a firearm in any of its Constitutionally-protected roles if you have no ammunition.

    In the DC Court of Appeals ruling in the Herrington decision, Associate Justice Stephen H. Glickman writes as follows:

    “…Heller specifically held that ‘the District’s ban on handgun possession in the home violates the Second Amendment, as does its prohibition against rendering any lawful firearm in the home operable for the purpose of immediate self-defense.’ The latter prohibition, derived from a District statute requiring lawfully-possessed firearms to be kept ‘unloaded and disassembled or bound by a trigger lock or similar device,’ was unconstitutional because it made it “impossible for citizens to use [their handguns] for the core lawful purpose of self-defense.

    In neither Heller nor McDonald did the Supreme Court directly address restrictions on the possession of ammunition per se. (The District’s requirement that lawfully-maintained firearms be kept unloaded was not challenged in Heller.) Nonetheless, from the Court’s reasoning, it logically follows that the right to keep and bear arms extends to the possession of handgun ammunition in the home; for if such possession could be banned (and not simply regulated), that would make it ‘impossible for citizens to use [their handguns] for the core lawful purpose of self-defense.’ By the same token, given the obvious connection between handgun ammunition and the right protected by the Second Amendment, we are hard-pressed to see how a flat ban on the possession of such ammunition in the home could survive heightened scrutiny of any kind. We therefore conclude that the Second Amendment guarantees a right to possess ammunition in the home that is coextensive with the right to possess a usable handgun there….”

    It bears mention at this juncture that the DC Court of Appeals is one rung of the federal judicial ladder below SCOTUS, which means unless and until SCOTUS reverses this decision, it stands as prevailing case law.

    Which means that all laws mandating any form of gun storage are UNCONSTITUTIONAL if they retard access to your arms even infinitesimally. And all laws that ban or unduly limit possession of ammunition are UNCONSTITUTIONAL.

    There’s no need if your only objective is Conservative Virtue Signalling bit if you want to be effective in your defense of 2A/RKBA, you’ve got to get off your keester and read the case law. Otherwise you don’t even know what it is you’re fighting against.

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