#17 in a series of information leaflets from The Stentorian (www.stentorian.com)
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Handgun Control Incorporated and Maryland governor Parris Glendening have a new idea: make gun owners use trigger locks to prevent access by children. It sounds like a good idea up front.
Before I get started, I'll say up front that voluntary use of trigger locks is often prudent and reasonable. A trigger lock can keep a child (or an adult thief) from getting an immediately-usable firearm.
"At a recent antigun conference in Chicago, Mr. Henigan, who is the top lawyer with Handgun Control Inc., the country's largest gun control organization, waved a version of the [Saf T Lock], extolling how easy it is to operate. Then, punching in what he thought was the correct combination, the lawyer failed to unlock the gun, much to the evident discomfort of the sympathetic audience." He excused his failure with the words, "Even if a klutz like me fumbles on the first try, the benefits of having a lock outweigh the risks." (Barrett, "A Simple Invention Points Up Complexity of Gun-Control Suits," Wall Street Journal, 4/23/99, A1).
"Yesterday, the Maryland-National Capital Park Police announced that its officers would begin using one version of the locks, locking magazines, on their Glock pistols when they are off-duty. At a photo opportunity at the department's Silver Spring headquarters, Glendening had an extended struggle to remove a locking magazine from one of the pistols." --"Dumbing Down Smart Guns: Md. Senate to Vote on a Weakened Version of Bill." Daniel LeDuc, Washington Post Staff Writer, Thursday, March 23, 2000; Page B04
Sorry, Mr. Henigan and Mr. Glendening. You don't get a second try. If you had been facing a real assailant instead of a friendly audience and camera, you would be dead-- along with any family members who were relying on you for self-protection. So why are you still insisting that people use these locks?
My advice (this is not legal advice, I am not a lawyer) to anyone who is prosecuted for disobeying a trigger lock law would be to subpoena the videotape of Governor Glendening as evidence-- especially in any Maryland courtroom. A reasonable jury should laugh the prosecutor out of court.