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For Immediate Release
August 5, 1998
THE DANGERS OF DRIVING THROUGH
DENVER
by Dr. Paul Gallant & David B.
Kopel
Packing the family in your automobile, to set out across
our state for summer vacation? Suppose that your driver's license was issued by the
Department of Motor Vehicles office in Colorado Springs. If you got stopped in Denver for
speeding, the police would confiscate your car, since your license wasn't issued by the
City of Denver. A couple weeks later, after the police and the Denver City Attorney
finished their paperwork, they might give you your car back, after you proved that your
license from Colorado Springs was valid. Absurd?
Not to Denver's piratical city government. The Denver City Council, by a 10-2 vote, has
ratified the continuation of the city's property confiscation ordinance. According to the
ordinance, the police are supposed to confiscate cars containing any concealed
weapon--regardless of whether the owner can show his concealed weapon permit. Later, the
owner has the burden of proving in court that his possession of the gun was legal, and if
the court agrees, the owner gets his car back and his gun back--after spending thousands
of dollars on an attorney, and being deprived of his car and his gun for weeks.
If the City Attorney is in a good mood, he might let the confiscation victim have the gun
and car back without going to court. Even so, the property owner will have been
unjustifiably deprived of his property for days or weeks.
To make matters even more unfair, Colorado state law specifically states that a person can
carry a concealed gun in his car without a permit when his is traveling. So a family that
lives in Limon, is going to Steamboat Springs for vacation, and passes through I-70 in
Denver doesn't legally need a concealed weapon permit. But the Denver confiscation
ordinance just ignores the state law, and orders police to confiscate the vacationing
family's car and gun.
While firearm-prohibitionists--like the supporters of Denver City Councilwoman Cathy
Reynolds--are always claiming that they want to "treat guns like cars," they
don't necessarily really mean it. Now it's true that Denver's Reynolds-backed confiscation
law does treat guns like carsboth get confiscated on the spot, regardless of the
owner's innocence. (The Denver ordinance specifically states that the owner's innocence is
irrelevant.)
But the "treat cars like guns" theory gets discarded as soon as it might
interfere with banning guns. Have you heard of an outcry for legislation banning the sale,
manufacture, and possession of Jaguars, after some poor unfortunate soul was run down by a
drunk driver, seated behind the wheel of one of these killing machines? Or, how about a
call to ban Corvettes, after one of them was used by a pair of bank-robbers making good
their getaway?
Punishing the offender, instead of banning the objects used to facilitate the crime, is
the logical thing to do. We crack down on drunk drivers, not on automobiles.
But in Denver, various rifles and shotguns which have improper cosmetic features have been
banned as "assault weapons." The guns don't function any differently from other
guns, but they do look different, and so the hysterically ignorant Denver City Council
banned them in 1989. Not surprisingly, Mayor Wellington Webb enthusiastically supports
both the gun ban and the confiscation law; at least he's consistent in his contempt for
civil liberties.
Thus, the father who wants to protect his vacationing family from two-legged or
four-legged predators is caught between a rock and a hard place. The right of self-defense
may be most urgently needed when a person is in an unfamiliar area, such as one of
Denver's crime-ridden districts, caught very suddenly and very unexpectedly, right smack
dab in the middle of one of a vacationland's unfamiliar "hot-spots"! But even if
he fully complies with the law, the Denver police can confiscate his car and his gun,
letting him prove his innocence later in court.
"Don't leave home without it!" It's not just the catchy ending to a
once-familiar credit card commercial. To many honest, responsible Americans, especially
those who have to drive through Denver, those five little words are the embodiment of a
painful moral dilemma.
Next year, the Colorado legislature should pass "pre-emption" legislation
similar to the laws in over 40 other states, specifying that all gun laws will be made at
the state level, not the local. The Denver government's flagrant abuse of the rights of
every traveler in the State of Colorado shows that the city's leadership is incapable of
exercising the power to regulate firearms in a responsible manner. It is time for the
legislature to confiscate Denver's often-misused power to abuse law-abiding gun owners.
Optometrist Paul Gallant is a Research Associate with the
Independence Institute, a free-market think tank in Golden, Colorado, http://i2i.org; Attorney David B. Kopel is the research
director of the Independence Institute and award-winning author of several books on
firearm issues.
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