By : Kentucky’s Lexington Herald-Leader has recently reported:
The contingencies of how this law will affect both guns and violence in Kentucky are almost too numerous to list. But it makes for strange bedfellows to imagine the largely campus-feminist, anti-patriarchy DV professions, and the flag-waving, God & country gun rights community, actually working in common to reduce domestic violence by means of a kind of State-sanctioned vigilantism, to transform an individual’s unproven status of victimhood into an armed sentry-post on the front lines in the fight against domestic violence.
So many nightmare scenarios arise, it is hard to know which ones to highlight:
Further reading & discussion: Kentucky: trading DV allegations for guns
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FRANKFORT, Ky. — Domestic violence victims in Kentucky could gain quick access to temporary concealed weapons permits under a bill that passed the House after emotional debate Friday. Abuse victims receiving court-issued protective orders meant to keep their assailants away would be eligible for the 45-day concealed carry permits. Supporters said the short-term permits would provide a measure of self-protection at a time when victims can feel most vulnerable.House Bill 351 is hardly a “gun-control” measure. Far from it. Nor can it credibly be called a measure to “prevent violence.” Indeed, this may be the first case in US history where guns and domestic violence have been addressed together by a legislature in the sense of arming alleged victims rather than dis-arming alleged abusers. It strains credulity to see this as a means to less violence, or as a path to the safer presence of guns.
…The bill [House Bill 351] cleared the House on a 79-13 vote. It goes to the Senate, which is considering similar legislation.
The contingencies of how this law will affect both guns and violence in Kentucky are almost too numerous to list. But it makes for strange bedfellows to imagine the largely campus-feminist, anti-patriarchy DV professions, and the flag-waving, God & country gun rights community, actually working in common to reduce domestic violence by means of a kind of State-sanctioned vigilantism, to transform an individual’s unproven status of victimhood into an armed sentry-post on the front lines in the fight against domestic violence.
So many nightmare scenarios arise, it is hard to know which ones to highlight:
- Most obvious is the urging of inexperienced weapons handlers into a belief that “a gatt in the hand means the world by the tail” (spoken by Humphrey Bogart in The Big Sleep). The inherent threats to bystanders, children, family members, police, and shooters themselves, are familiar to anyone with basic firearms knowledge.
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As protective orders are not criminal convictions, innocent people
may well be gunned down with the State’s pre-approval, never having been
arrested, indicted, tried or convicted for anything, nor any evidence
having arisen other than one person’s hearsay that any crime had ever
occurred at all.
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The strain on service providers is potentially enormous: shelter
employees, attorneys, counselors, educators, social workers,
transitional housing management, medical staff, truly anyone in contact
with the one under the Court’s protection, now faces the unknown of
whether their client is armed or not, and what may ensue in their
presence if she or he is.
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Protective orders, once a crime-prevention tool, have morphed into a
crime-entrapment device by prosecutors who know they cannot convict on
DV charges lacking evidence, and who use the orders to ensure that
almost anything the party named in the order does (going home, seeing
his children, shopping in the same store, earning a living in the same
workplace, etc.) is potentially a new crime that a jury indeed can
convict on. This measure now recruits the protected party, not only to
presume a threat by someone they may well have already made homeless,
childless and unemployable, but further to respond to that threat with
lethal force and be assured in advance of impunity. (See: “Criminal Law Comes Home” by Jeannie Suk)
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Domestic violence intervention tends largely to be geared toward a
presumption that “the vast majority of victims are women.” Even if this utter myth
were true, what of the male “minority?” Men presumably may seek this
same protective device of a court order plus a concealed-carry status,
but is society prepared for men gunning down women with the State’s
approval, and thereupon acquitted of (or never charged with) criminal
actions by the State? Could any effort being made for better provisions
serving male victims of DV ever recover from even one such occurrence?
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The potential for judges, prosecutors and even the State government
being held as accessories to violent crimes, or respondents to
wrongful-injury or -death suits, is uncharted territory. If a shooting
occurs under these conditions and the evidence says the shooter was in
no immediate danger at the time, will the court that gave essential
permission to fire upon a named individual then reverse itself and find
the shooter guilty of a crime, or will it protect its own interests by
letting her/him walk regardless of the evidence?
- The gun industries see a market largely among women while gun-rights supporters see free advertising for the “armed populace” mindset;
- DV professionals see a radically new “by any means necessary” approach to victim protection, targeting predominantly men, which they may or may not be prepared to deal with but apparently have decided to embark on. Lost in the political glare is how this flies in the face of their own historic position that guns bring violence, and that controlling guns means controlling violence.
Further reading & discussion: Kentucky: trading DV allegations for guns
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