Gun fight at the O.C. corral
Just because I donât want a Glock in my pocket doesnât mean I donât understand law-abiding people who do. I just think of them as having a more hyper-developed sense of âkill or be killedâ than the rest of us.
Eric Magness would hardly describe himself as a gunslinger. He says heâs a licensed firearms instructor, but his day job is in the technology industry. He had a concealed weapons permit for six years until it expired in October, at which point the new sheriff in town put the kibosh on his right to pack.
And yes, heâs a mite upset about it.
So are an unknown number of other Orange Countians. What that number turns out to be may say something about whether Sheriff Sandra Hutchens becomes more than a two-year appointee when she runs for election in 2010.
Hutchens has tightened the policy for carrying concealed weapons that was embraced by predecessor Michael S. Carona. The policy has hit Magness, 47, where it hurts -- in the holster.
Magness concedes the issue may be a passionate one for only a relatively small group of people. âBut itâs a telling sign of a public official who brings in a philosophy from Los Angeles that doesnât belong in Orange County and imposes that philosophy against the will of the people and the board that hired her.â
I donât know how to prove it, but Magness says Caronaâs policy on permits was âwidely acceptedâ among the public and the Board of Supervisors. But heâs right on one count -- Hutchens, appointed in June to fill out Caronaâs term after he was indicted on corruption charges, has butted heads with the board over some aspects of her permits crackdown.
She thinks Carona too broadly interpreted who had a reason to carry a gun. In some cases, people who showed they frequently went to firing ranges could get a permit. Or, in some cases, people who contributed to his political campaigns.
Hutchens has moved to roll back some of those permits and limit them to people who, in broad strokes, can show âgood causeâ proof of being in potential danger, either for personal reasons or because of their occupation.
Under Carona, roughly 1,200 people had concealed weapons permits. Hutchensâ tighter guidelines could significantly reduce that number.
You might say Magness is up in arms over it. He doesnât see why people with clean records who have taken firearms safety courses shouldnât be allowed to carry concealed weapons.
âA firearm is nothing more than a force-multiplier,â Magness says. âNothing more than that. It allows you to provide protection against those who wish to do you harm, if the need arises. Itâs like an insurance policy. If I never have to use my firearm, Iâll be happy. I hope I never have to. I hope I never have to cash in that policy.â
Even though the idea of fellow citizens carrying a force-multiplier makes me nervous, I get Magnessâ argument. I donât buy it, but I understand the desire not to be a sitting duck if some guy with a knife or a gun wants to do you in.
And thereâs no disputing that a good citizen with a gun would have been able to stop some criminals in their tracks before they did their dirty deeds.
But unlike him, I donât feel any safer knowing that anybody walking down the street might have a gun under their jacket. Even law-abiding citizens get angry, flip out for a second, start arguments . . . and I donât want them doing that with a gun within easy reach.
Magness sees Hutchens as being âvery hostileâ to the 2nd Amendment. And if you want to stretch a point, he sees her arbitrariness in granting permits as having other potential constitutional problems.
Cut through all that and youâre left with a legitimate societal debate: Should any citizen with a clean record who is properly trained be allowed to carry guns on the street?
To me, itâs a big fat no.
The idea of defending oneself on the street is hard to argue against, but what happens when the âprotectorâ accidentally shoots an innocent bystander instead of the bad guy in a moment of frenzy?
Magness concedes that the sheriff has the authority in Orange County to decide who does or doesnât carry. He doesnât like how Hutchens is handling that authority, citing among other things a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding the right under the 2nd Amendment to have a gun for protection. That ruling, however, involved guns in peopleâs homes and did not address the concealed weapons issue.
Magness thinks his rights are being abused. He hopes he and others can change Hutchensâ mind.
If he wants a new sheriff whoâll let more people carry guns on Orange Countyâs streets and freeways, fair enough.
The election, sir, is next year.
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