NAT’L – GUN CONTROL – SAF Sues Maryland over Regulations Limiting Concealed Permit Issuance
The Second Amendment Foundation (SAF) filed suit on November 13, 2020, against Maryland’s “good and substantial reason” regulation, claiming it limits concealed carry permit issuance to miniscule numbers throughout the state. The suit, Call, et.al. v. Jones et. al., was filed in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland. The Firearms Policy Coalition (FPC), the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms, and Maryland Shall Issue, Inc., are plaintiffs along with the SAF. The suit lists State Police Secretary Woodrow Jones III and Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh, in their official capacities, as defendants. Maryland is a ‘May Issue’ state for concealed carry permit issuance. This means that, even if a law-abiding citizen with no criminal record applies for a concealed carry permit, the state is not bound to issue one. Rather, WBALTV reports the state requires the law-abiding citizen with no criminal record to show “good and substantial reason” for wanting to carry a gun on his person. The lawsuit filed by SAF, FPC, and the rest of the Plaintiffs seizes on this regulation, noting that it greatly limits the number of concealed carry permits that would otherwise be issued, were the threshold that of being law-abiding and having no criminal record. The Plaintiffs argue, “The State of Maryland has criminalized the carrying of handguns by ordinary citizens, making it wholly unlawful for law-abiding citizens to exercise their fundamental right to bear arms in public for self-defense without first satisfying the State that they have a ‘good and substantial reason’ to do so.” They further claim that the structure of Maryland’s concealed permit issuance system means self-defense “is not a sufficiently good reason” to be allowed to carry a handgun on one’s person. [full article]