Author Topic: Arkansas became Constitutional Carry State July 1st  (Read 8377 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline REDNECK JEW

  • Full JTFer
  • ***
  • Posts: 181
Arkansas became Constitutional Carry State July 1st
« on: August 15, 2013, 08:05:03 PM »
Next month Arkansas will join Vermont, Alaska, Wyoming and Arizona as a “Constitutional Carry” state. That means that you don’t need a permit or license to carry weapons, either openly or concealed for lawful purposes.

Arkansas law will now consider people carrying guns the same way many state laws handle possession of any kind of hand tools, so-called “tools of burglary.” Normally, you can get away with carrying common hand tools anywhere you otherwise have a right to be. But if you are caught trying to use them in an attempt of breaking and entering or even trespassing, you can be charged with a crime based on obvious intent to use that tool in a crime. As long as you are not harming, or attempting to harm others with a weapon, then possession alone should not be a crime.

This means the accuser would have to prove you were going to commit a crime, rather than you had the “potential” of committing a crime.

The measure was signed by Arkansas Gov. Beebe on April 4, 2013.

Here is the official press release from ArkansasCarry.com:


There are no specifications whether a legally carried handgun should be carried openly or concealed; thus it is considered Constitutional Carry by Arkansas Carry and the gun owners of the state. Act 746 is further supported by the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, and by Article II, § 5 of the Arkansas Constitution (right to bear arms). The manner of carry under Act 746 also does not require a permit or training; however, Arkansas Carry desires that all citizens obtain firearms safety training before carrying a firearm in public. Arkansans should also obtain a state CHCL permit to enable them to carry in reciprocal states.”
“It is a revolution; a revolution of the most intense character; in which belief in the justice, prudence, and wisdom of secession is blended with the keenest sense of wrong and outrage, and it can no more be checked by human effort for the time than a prairie fire by a gardener’s watering pot.”
 
JUDAH P. BENJAMIN HEBREW CONFEDERATE