Florida Knife Law Preemption Bill Filed

Critter

Platinum Member
Joined
Mar 23, 2003
Messages
1,759
As promised in our New Years message, we are pleased to announce that another Knife Rights bill is now in play. Florida State Senator Thad Altman (R- District 24) has filed a Knife Law Preemption bill developed by Knife Rights with cooperation of our friends at Florida Carry. We'd also like to acknowledge former president of the NRA, Marion Hammer, the executive director of United Sportsmen of Florida, who was very helpful in this effort. SB 1732 is "a bill...providing legislative intent to preempt the regulation of knives and weapons to the Legislature." You can review the bill here: www.kniferights.org/SB-1732_Knife-Preemption_Altman.pdf

This bill builds upon the success of last year's revised Florida firearms preemption law that provided for painful penalties to political jurisdictions that were previously ignoring the existing firearms preemption law. Our Knife and Weapons Preemption bill voids local laws and regulations and includes these same severe penalties if local jurisdiction were inclined to ignore this expansion of state preemption to cover knives. This puts real teeth into this bill, ensuring "the repeal of rules, ordinances, and regulations prohibited by the [new] section [of law]."

Two encompassing definitions are provided in the bill for "common pocketknife" and "knife" that are otherwise referenced in Florida law without constructive definitions. A "common pocketknife" is defined as "any knife that can be carried in a pocket, purse, handbag, backpack, briefcase, or sheath, or similar container." "Knife" is defined as "a cutting instrument that includes a sharpened or pointed blade, including a sheath knife commonly used for fishing, hunting, outdoor recreation, or work activities."

We are working diligently to get a companion bill filed in the Florida House of Representatives, which is generally required to assure passage. We will keep you posted.
 
Sorry but I'm a little confused. So had this been passed? and does that mean switchblades and fixed blades that fit in pocket are legal? what about daggers? And is a CCW required?
 
Sorry but I'm a little confused. So had this been passed? and does that mean switchblades and fixed blades that fit in pocket are legal? what about daggers? And is a CCW required?

Not much new to report on this. We are continuing to work this. The legislative season has only just started.
 
Back
Top