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Gun laws in Connecticut

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Location of Connecticut in the United States

Gun laws in Connecticut regulate the sale, possession, and use of firearms and ammunition in the state of Connecticut in the United States. After the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in December 2012, Connecticut passed gun laws in April 2013 that made it amongst the most restrictive in the country. The constitutionality of these new laws are being challenged in both the state and federal courts.

Summary table

Subject/Law Long guns Handguns Relevant statutes Notes
State Permit to Purchase? Yes Yes CGS 29–36(f),
CGS 29–36(g)
Certificate of Eligibility for Pistol and Revolvers or Long Guns or Ammunition required to purchase handguns, long guns or ammunition. Applicants must complete an approved safety course, and pass a NICS background check prior to issuance of certificate. Certificate of Eligibility valid for five years. There is a 14-day waiting period for the purchase of long guns, with exceptions for peace officers, Active-Duty military members, and holders of carry permits and hunting licenses.
Firearm registration? No No CGS 53–202 Registration required for assault weapons purchased before October 1, 1993 and for machine guns. There is a de facto registry of the sale of handguns and long guns that is maintained by the Department of Public Safety. Any transfer, be it from a dealer or private party, must be accompanied by an authorization number issued by the DPS and a form containing personal and weapon identification (DPS-3-C) must be submitted to DPS and local police. This form is collected and maintained on all guns purchased from FFL dealers as well.
"Assault weapon" law? Yes Yes CGS 53–202 Selective fire weapons, some .50 BMG variants, a list of specific restricted features and certain brands of semi-automatic assault weapons and weapon "types". List of banned weapons expanded on April 4, 2013 to include firearms with one defined feature; banned weapons lawfully possessed prior to this date must be registered with DESPP.
Magazine Capacity Restriction? Yes Yes As of April 4, 2013, magazines holding more than 10 rounds are considered Large Capacity Magazines (LCM), and such magazines manufactured after that date may not be sold or transferred within the state. Existing owners of LCMs may possess such magazines if they register them with the Dept. of Emergency Services and Public Protection, within one year. Owners of registered LCMs may not loaded such magazines with more than 10 rounds except when inside the owner's home or on the premises of a licensed shooting range. Even if an individual has a permit to carry a pistol or revolver, they can never carry, other than at a shooting range, a pistol that has an LCM loaded with more than 10 bullets.
Owner license required? No No
Carry permits issued? No Yes CGS 29–28 May-Issue by statute, but Shall-Issue in practice. Permit needed to carry open or concealed. Exceptions for peace officers and Active-Duty military members. Out of state permits not valid in Connecticut, but nonresidents may apply for a Connecticut Nonresident carry permit through the mail.
Open Carry? Partial* Yes A Connecticut Permit to Carry Pistols or Revolvers allows the carry of handguns openly or concealed. Despite this however, local law enforcement have been known to detain carriers. There have been very few actual arrests and no convictions in recent history as a result of carrying unconcealed. State law is silent on openly carrying of long guns in public, although some municipalities have enacted ordinances restricting or banning the practice.

Various towns and the state police as well have articulated through training memos that open carry is legal and to not harass people who carry openly without some other cause. [1]

Castle Doctrine? Yes* Yes* No duty to retreat if you are in your home or on property owned by yourself. *There is no "stand your ground law" but, courts have granted civil immunity to those with carry permits and used "reasonable force" in the past.
State Preemption of local restrictions? Partial Partial CGS 29–28 State pre-emption of local ordinances not explicitly specified in state law, but established by court precedence.
NFA weapons restricted? Yes Yes CGS 53–202(c) SBR, SBS, DD, suppressors are legal, provided they also comply with the assault weapons provisions, unless purchased before October 1, 1993. Machine guns are legal but, must not be select-fire unless purchased before October 1, 1993.
Peaceable Journey laws? No No CGS 29–38 Federal rules observed.

Permitting system

Connecticut, by law, is a May-Issue state, as state statutes contain a suitability clause for the issuance of a Connecticut State Permit to Carry Pistols and Revolvers. This means state and local authorities have some of the broadest powers in the nation to deny, delay issuance of, or revoke a permit.[2] As of the end of 2012, there were 179,092 active pistol permits in Connecticut. Of the more than 12,000 pistol permit applications received and processed by the Connecticut Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection (DESPP) in 2011, only 23 applicants were denied a pistol permit. [3]

Connecticut has a two step permitting process: a 60-day Temporary permit issued by the local police chief, and a Regular 5-year permit issued by the Department of Public Safety Special Licensing and Firearms Unit (SLFU).[4] The Temporary permit, issued by local authorities on a May-Issue basis, is a vestige of the pre-1965 pistol permitting system, when Connecticut permits were issued entirely by local authorities. The rewriting of the Connecticut State Constitution in 1965 intended to consolidate authority to issue pistol permits with the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection (DESPP) and require permits to be issued on a Shall-Issue basis, but the transition to the uniform statewide permitting system was never fully completed, resulting in the two step permitting system in Connecticut today.

Those desiring a pistol permit in Connecticut must first apply for a temporary permit (valid for 60 days from the date of issuance) from the local police department, or in some locations the town clerk's office, which conducts the background checks and fingerprinting. Temporary permits are issued on a May-Issue basis, and each town is different in its willingness to approve permits; some towns create their own requirements that go well beyond the State requirements. It is typically much more difficult to obtain temporary pistol permits in larger cities, such as Bridgeport, Hartford, and New Haven. Other towns will automatically issue a permit as long as the individual does not meet any statutory criteria that would disqualify him or her from holding such a permit; one does not have to travel to remote parts of the state to find towns with permissive permit policies. For example, the city of Shelton, located 12 miles from Bridgeport and 17 miles from New Haven is Shall-Issue in its temporary pistol issuing practice. The town has 8 weeks to approve the temporary permit. If the temporary permit is granted, the applicant must apply to the SLFU for a regular pistol permit (valid for 5 years), which will generally grant the permit unless there is reason specified by law the individual should be denied. These include:

  • Criminal possession of a narcotic substance;
  • Criminally negligent homicide;
  • Assault in the third degree;
  • Reckless endangerment in the first degree;
  • Unlawful restraint in the second degree;
  • Riot in the first degree;
  • Stalking in the second degree;
  • Has not been convicted as a delinquent for the commission of a serious juvenile offense;
  • Has not been discharged from custody within the preceding twenty years after having been found not guilty of a crime by reason of mental disease or defect;
  • Is not subject to a restraining or protective order issued by a court in a case involving the use, attempted use or threatened use of physical force against another person;
  • Is not subject to a firearms seizure order issued for posing a risk of personal injury to self or others after a hearing; or
  • Is not prohibited from possessing a firearm for having been adjudicated as a mentally incompetent under federal law.

An applicant who is denied a temporary pistol permit from local authorities may appeal to the state Board of Firearms Permit Examiners (BFPE), which will generally grant the appeal and issue a Regular 5-year pistol permit, provided the applicant does not meet the statutory criteria prohibiting him or her from holding such permit. Applicants may appeal an unfavorable ruling by the BFPE through the state courts.

Connecticut residents are issued a "permit to carry pistols and revolvers", which permits both open and concealed carry.[5] Although open carry is not restricted by state law, the BFPE suggests that, “every effort should be made to ensure that no gun is exposed to view or carried in a manner that would tend to alarm people who see it.”[6] Residents with permits who carry openly may be cited by police for breach of peace, although state prosecutors usually dismiss such charges after the defendant appears in court and pays applicable court fees.[citation needed]

Connecticut also has a provision in the statute that if a carry permit holder loses a firearm and does not report it, they may lose the permit.

On April 1, 2013, lawmakers announced a deal on what they called some of the toughest gun laws in the country. It included a ban on new high-capacity ammunition magazines, although magazines lawfully owned prior to the ban may be kept. The proposal also called for background checks for private gun sales and a new registry for existing magazines that carry 10 or more bullets. The package also creates what lawmakers said is the nation's first statewide dangerous weapon offender registry, immediate universal background checks for all firearms sales and expansion of Connecticut's assault weapons ban.[7] On April 3 the State Senate, then shortly after midnight on April 4, the State House approved a bipartisan gun control legislation that would be the toughest in the United States.[8] It was signed into law by Governor Dannel Malloy on April 4. The law makes Connecticut the first state to establish a registry for people convicted of crimes involving dangerous weapons. It also requires background checks for all gun sales, restricts semiautomatic assault rifles and limits the capacity of ammunition magazines.[9]

Reciprocity

Connecticut does not recognize pistol permits from any other state, but residents of other states who hold a concealed weapons permit may apply to the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection for a non-resident Connecticut permit through the mail. Nonresident pistol permits are generally granted on a "shall-issue" basis, provided the applicant meets Connecticut's statutory requirements and completes a weapons safety course that satisfies the state's training requirement.

Assault weapons

Connecticut has bans on defined 'assault weapons,' which includes selective fire firearms unless purchased before October 1, 1993, and a limited list of semiautomatic AR, AK, and SKS variants. Magazines holding more than 10 rounds are considered Large Capacity Magazines and are prohibited, with grandfathering for those possessed prior to April 4, 2013 provided they are registered with DESPP by April 1, 2014. [10] On April 4, 2013, Governor Malloy signed a comprehensive gun control bill that expands the scope of the assault weapon ban by reducing the number of defined features from two to one, while adding 100 specific firearms to the existing assault weapons ban list. Such weapons that were lawfully owned prior to the enactment of the law are grandfathered, but must be registered with the DESPP. Exceptions to the ban also exist for law enforcement and military members, but these weapons too must be registered.

Connecticut allows all NFA firearms other than selective fire machine guns, however guns of this type that existed in Connecticut before the ban are grandfathered. Selective fire means that a machine gun can fire semi or fully automatic. Machine guns that can only fire fully automatic are legal in Connecticut if they were possessed prior to April 4, 2013 and registered on or before January 1, 2014.

Seizure of weapons

Connecticut statutes contain provision that allow law enforcement officials to pre-emptively seize a person's firearms without a warrant or court order, when they have probable cause that the person may either be mentally unstable or intends to use the weapons to commit a crime. The weapons remain in the custody of the law enforcement office that confiscated them until further directed by an appropriate court of law.

State preemption of local laws

State laws do not explicitly preempt local ordinances, but courts have found intent of preemption in regards to firearm sales, hunting and carrying (openly or concealed) with a state-issued permit. Most municipalities have enacted ordinances to restrict or ban the discharge of firearms within their jurisdictions.[11]

See also

References

  1. ^ Connecticut Carry's Article on open carry citing state and town evidence
  2. ^ "Gun Laws – Connecticut". NRA-ILA. August 22, 2012. Retrieved January 6, 2013.
  3. ^ Basic Questions on Firearms in Connecticut, State of Connecticut, Accessed July 30, 2013
  4. ^ Chapter 529, Division of State Police; Section 28–29, Permit to Carry Pistol or Revolver, etc. Retrieved November 19, 2012.
  5. ^ "Gun Permit Issues", Connecticut Board of Firearms Permit Examiners. Retrieved November 19, 2012.
  6. ^ "NRA-ILA Firearms Laws for Connecticut". Retrieved November 19, 2012.
  7. ^ "Conn. lawmakers reach deal on 'strongest' gun laws". WABC TV. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
  8. ^ "Connecticut General Assembly passes bipartisan gun bill". CTMirror.
  9. ^ "Conn. passes toughest U.S. gun laws". USA Today. Retrieved 4 April 2013.
  10. ^ "Assault Weapons", Connecticut Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection. Retrieved November 19, 2012.
  11. ^ Rose, Veronica (11 March 2011). "OLR BACKGROUNDER: FIREARM PREEMPTION ISSUES—DOES CONNECTICUT LAW PREEMPT MUNICIPAL FIREARM ORDINANCES?". Connecticut Office of Legislative Research. Retrieved 2 December 2012.