Pennsylvania Firearm Owners Association
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  1. #1
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    Default Decent OC news story

    I was reading our local paper and came across this piece on OCing....
    -A

    http://sfe.live.mediaspanonline.com/...ut-in-the-open

    Gun enthusiasts aim to bring guns out in the open

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    George Frey
    Photo: Kevin Jensen proudly displays his handgun outside a Home Depot in Provo, Utah.
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    In most states, individuals allowed to carry firearms like an accessory

    Nicholas Riccardi | Los Angeles Times
    6/7/2008 -
    PROVO, Utah — For years, Kevin Jensen carried a pistol everywhere he went, tucked in a shoulder holster beneath his clothes.

    In hot weather, the holster was almost unbearable. Pressed against his skin, the firearm was heavy and uncomfortable. Hiding the weapon made Kevin feel like a criminal.

    Then one evening he stumbled across a site that urged gun owners to do something revolutionary: Carry your gun openly for the world to see as you go about your business.

    In most states, there's no law against that.

    Kevin thought about it and decided to give it a try. A couple of days later, his gun was visible, dangling from a black holster strapped around his hip as he walked into a Costco. His heart raced as he ordered a Polish dog at the counter. No one called the police. No one stopped him.

    Now Kevin carries his Glock 23 openly into his bank, restaurants and shopping centers. He wore the gun to a Ron Paul rally. He and his wife, Clachelle, drop off their 5-year-old daughter at elementary school with pistols dangling from their hip holsters and have never received a complaint or a wary look.

    Kevin said he tries not to flaunt his gun. "We don't want to show up and say, 'Hey, we're here, we're armed, get used to it,' " he said.

    But he and others who publicly display their guns have a common purpose.

    The Jensens are part of a fledgling movement to make a firearm as common an accessory as an iPod. Called open-carry by its supporters, the movement has attracted grandparents, graduate students and lifelong gun enthusiasts like Kevin and Clachelle.

    "What we're trying to say is, 'Hey, we're normal people who carry guns,' " said Travis Devereaux, 36, of West Valley, a Salt Lake City suburb. Devereaux works for a credit card company and sometimes walks around town wearing a cowboy hat and packing a pistol in plain sight. "We want the public to understand it's not just cops who can carry guns."

    Police acknowledge the practice is legal, but some say it makes their lives tougher.

    Police Chief John Greiner recalled that last year in Ogden, Utah, a man was openly carrying a shotgun on the street. When officers pulled up to ask him about the gun, he started firing. Police killed the man.

    Greiner tells the story as a lesson for gun owners. "We've changed over the last 200 years from the days of the wild, wild west," Greiner said. "Most people don't openly carry. ... If (people) truly want to open carry, they ought to expect they'll be challenged more until people become comfortable with it."

    Kevin and others argue that police shouldn't judge the gun, but rather the actions of the person carrying it. Kevin, 28, isn't opposed to attention, however. It's part of the reason he brought his gun out in the open.

    "At first, (open carry) was a little novelty," he said. "Then I realized the chances of me educating someone are bigger than ever using it (the gun) in self-defense. If it's in my pants or under my shirt I'm probably not going to do anything with it."

    As Clachelle pushed the shopping cart holding their two young children during a recent trip to Costco, Kevin admired the new holster wrapped around her waist. "I like the look of that low-rise gun belt," he said.

    The Jensens' pistols were snapped into holsters attached to black belts that hug their waists. Guns are a fact of life in their household. Their 5-year-old daughter, Sierra, has a child-size .22 rifle she handles only in her parents' presence.

    Clachelle is the daughter of a Central California police chief and began shooting when she was about Sierra's age. She would take her parents' gun when she went out, and hide it in her purse because the firearm made her feel safer.

    "I love 'em," Clachelle said. "I wouldn't ever be without them."

    Kevin's first encounter with guns came when he was 11. His grandfather died and left him a 16-gauge shotgun. The gun stayed locked away but fascinated Kevin through his teenage years. He convinced his older brother to take him shooting in the countryside near their home in a small town south of Salt Lake City.

    "I immediately fell in love with it," said Kevin, a lean man with close-cropped hair and a precise gait that is a reminder of his five years in the Army Reserve. "I like things that go boom."

    When Kevin bought a Glock and the dealer threw in an external hip holster, he began researching the idea of carrying the gun in public and came upon opencarry.org.

    The Web site, run by two Virginia gun enthusiasts, claims 4,000 members nationwide. It summarizes the varying laws in each state that permit or forbid the practice. People everywhere have the right to prohibit weapons from their property and firearms are often banned in government buildings like courthouses.

    According to an analysis by Legal Community Against Violence, a gun control group in San Francisco that tracks gun laws, at least eight states largely prohibit it, including Iowa and New Jersey. Those that allow it have different restrictions: In California, people can openly carry only unloaded guns.

    Utah has no law prohibiting anyone from carrying a gun in public, as long as it is two steps from firing — for example, the weapon may have a loaded clip but must be uncocked, with no bullets in the chamber. Those who obtain a concealed-weapons permit in Utah don't have that restriction. Also, youths under 18 can carry a gun openly with parental approval and a supervising adult in close proximity.

    Most of the time, people don't notice Kevin's gun. That's not uncommon, said John Pierce, a law student and computer consultant in Virginia who is a co-founder of opencarry.org.

    "People are carrying pagers, blackberries, cell phones," Pierce said. "They see a black lump on your belt and their eyes slide off."

    Sometimes the reactions are comical. Bill White, a 24-year-old graduate student in ancient languages at the University of Colorado at Boulder, wears his Colt pistol out in the open when he goes to his local Starbucks. Earlier this month a tourist from California spotted him and snapped a photo on his cell phone.

    "He said it would prove he was in the wild west," White recalled.

    But there are times when the response is more severe. Devereaux has been stopped several times by police, most memorably in December when he was walking around his neighborhood.

    An officer pulled up and pointed his gun at Devereaux, warning he would shoot to kill. In the end, eight officers arrived, cuffed Devereaux and took his gun before Devereaux convinced them they had no legal reason to detain him.

    Devereaux saw the incident as not giving ground on his rights. "I'm proud that happened," he said.
    No matter who you vote for the government always gets in.

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