Virginia Grants 60% More Permits For Guns; Concealed-Carry Surge Tied to Va. Tech Killings

March 1st, 2012

Virginia Grants 60% More Permits For Guns; Concealed-Carry Surge Tied to Va. Tech Killings
Date: Apr 12, 2008 10:27 AM
PUBLICATION: The Washington Post
DATE: 2008.04.12
SECTION: Metro
PAGE: B01
BYLINE: Tom Jackman
WORD COUNT: 759

——————————————————————————–

Va. Grants 60% More Permits For Guns; Concealed-Carry Surge Tied to Va. Tech Killings

——————————————————————————–

The number of Virginians who obtained a permit to carry a concealed weapon jumped
60 percent last year over 2006, an increase that many gun experts say was a reaction
to the fatal shootings of 32 students and professors at Virginia Tech.

In Northern Virginia, the numbers were much the same. In Fairfax County, there were
2,471 concealed-carry permits issued in 2007, a 64 percent increase. In Prince William
County, the number rose to 1,636, a nearly 59 percent gain. In Loudoun, the number
of permits issued was 962, a 52 percent increase.

People applying for a concealed-weapon permit do not have to explain why they want
one. But most experts think the Virginia Tech shootings, in which a heavily armed
student met no resistance as he went from classroom to classroom firing, could explain
the sudden increase in applications.

Some gun rights supporters noted that the university had lobbied against legislation
that would have required colleges to honor concealed-carry permits.

“They wanted to create an environment where students and faculty can feel safe,”
said Joel Kliesen, manager of the Dominion Shooting Range in Richmond. “A lot
of folks would rather be safe than feel safe.”

The shooting incidents in turn create more publicity about gun-related issues and
probably inspire more people to arm themselves, gun control supports said. Both
gun-control activists and members of law enforcement noted that those people who
take the time to get a permit are largely law-abiding and unlikely to commit a crime.

Gun stores report increased sales and increased participation in training classes.
Completing a firearms safety class as well as a background check are prerequisites
for obtaining a concealed weapons permit in Virginia. Permits are issued by the
state’s circuit courts and are good for five years, but they can be renewed
if there is no good cause to refuse the renewal.

“More people are wanting guns,” said Robert Jensen, a salesman at Virginia
Arms in Manassas. “They’re not believing the myth that guns cause crime.
It’s like saying flies cause trash. We’ve got more people doing competitive
shooting and more people taking defensive training, and that’s all around the
gun industry.”

The number of people approved to carry concealed weapons in Virginia has gone up
and down in recent years. In 2002, a year after the terrorist attacks on the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon, the number of permits granted went up almost 100
percent, from about 15,000 to more than 30,000. But the annual number soon drifted
down into the 20,000s until 2007, when it shot up to 43,927. The rise was first
reported yesterday in the Virginian-Pilot newspaper.

State police said that more than 152,000 people currently hold valid concealed-carry
permits. In addition to concealed carrying, openly carrying a weapon is legal in
Virginia and is done regularly by gun rights activists.

“People are realizing that it’s not just crazy people out there carrying
guns, it’s everyday people,” said Philip Van Cleave, president of the Virginia
Citizens Defense League. “The stigma that developed in the ’80s and ’90s
about guns, that’s died down tremendously.”

Van Cleave pointed out that student groups that favor concealed-carry laws on college
campuses have grown rapidly, first after Virginia Tech and then again after the
shooting at Northern Illinois University in February. A student group at George
Mason University in Fairfax is working for the right to carry concealed guns there.

James Plowman, the commonwealth’s attorney of Loudoun County, noted that Virginia
is “the opposite of D.C., where everybody who’s carrying a gun is either
a police officer or a criminal” because of laws largely prohibiting gun ownership.
“That restriction hasn’t really helped out their crime situation much.
All you’re doing is hamstringing the people who want to protect themselves.”

Ladd Everitt, spokesman for the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence, said Virginia had
not done enough to keep guns out of criminals’ hands in the wake of the Virginia
Tech shootings. “I think what we should be more concerned about is the next
Cho can still get guns,” referring to Seung Hui Cho, the Virginia Tech gunman.

Kliesen said he saw greatly increased interest in guns for self-defense after the
Harvey family was killed at home on New Year’s Day 2006 in Richmond. “A
lot of folks are realizing that, as much as the police would like to be there,”
Kliesen said, “the only person you can guarantee will be there if you’re
ever victimized by a criminal is . . . you.”

The Second Amendment IS Homeland Security !