Washington DC Carry Permits Skyrocket After Dismissal of ‘Good Cause’ Regulation
Washington, DC, concealed carry permits are skyrocketing following the dismissal of the District’s “good cause” restriction for permit issuance.
Washington, DC, concealed carry permits are skyrocketing following the dismissal of the District’s “good cause” restriction for permit issuance.
The Supreme Court of the United States denied review on Monday in the case challenging California’s concealed carry law.
The wait time for a concealed carry permit in Riverside County, California, has climbed beyond a few months and now sits at two years.
Law-abiding Californians can no longer buy ammunition out-of-state or possess an unregistered AR-15 with a bullet button accessory.
The U.S. District Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit rejected a request for an en banc hearing of Wrenn v. District of Columbia
On Tuesday the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ruled that D.C.’s “good reason” requirement for concealed carry permit issuance is unconstitutional.
The Crime Prevention Research Center shows that women and blacks led last year’s record-breaking surge in concealed carry permits.
Los Angeles Police Department Chief Charlie Beck warns that national reciprocity for concealed carry will be a disaster in California.
A New York Times editorial suggests the April 10 murder-suicide in California shines a light on the danger of a “laissez-faire” bill that would allow law-abiding South Carolinians to carry guns for self-defense without a permit.
Petitioners in the Peruta case asked the Supreme Court to hear the case as soon as possible, taking the issue of concealed carry, a key question in Second Amendment jurisprudence, to the nation’s highest court.
Under Rep. Richard Hudson’s (R-NC-8) national reciprocity legislation, a person with a resident or non-resident carry permit from one state would be allowed to carry in every state.
A case revolving around concealed carry permits in California, and the alleged infringement certain permit requirements pose to the Second Amendment, is now on a path to the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS).
On June 9, Alabama Attorney General Luther Strange denounced the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit for ruling against carrying guns concealed outside the home.