NH attempts to update an old law

lrv

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Last year NY passed a law allowing switchblades to be displayed in a public place. This year NH will discuss a bill that will change the carry law.

This months KnifeWorld pointed me towards this and I thought it was worth repeating. As I get more info I'll update.


Protecting Your Knife Rights!
Written by Rep. Jenn Coffey Friday, 23 October 2009 10:33

Copied from http://www.2asisters.org/

Knife rights and gun rights both come under the Second Amendment of the United States Constitution. The Second Amendment refers to “arms,” not guns. In the Heller decision (which agreed that there is an individual right to keep and bear arms), the U.S. Supreme Court actually referenced the book "Swords & Blades of the American Revolution"in arriving at their decision. Just recently the federal government attempted to classify virtually all one-hand-opening knives as switchblades under federal law; fortunately, this effort was legislatively thwarted by the NRA, Knife Rights, American Knife and Tool Institute, Congressional Sportsmen's Foundation, and Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms.

Unfortunately, New Hampshire has a prohibition against knives that can be misinterpreted in the same way. I have put forward a bill supported by both parties which removes this threat to your right to keep and bear arms, yet at the same time increases the penalty for those who would use knives to commit crimes against people.

For far too long, bans on certain knives have prevented law abiding citizens from purchasing, carrying and selling them in our great state. The New Hampshire law lists them as stilettos, switch knives, daggers, and dirk-knives. Under current law, simply carrying one of these knives with no criminal intent can lead to a 12-month jail sentence. Currently the only citizens allowed to carry them at all times are police officers. Hunters and fishermen are allowed to carry them, but only while actively hunting or fishing; emergency medical technicians, firefighters, and those in the military can carry them, but only while on duty. In other words, if you are caught carrying one of these knives under current law you can face charges even if you were doing nothing wrong!

I believe it is time for that to change. I have filed a bill to do just that (LSR 2010-2015). It removes the prohibition on the sale and carrying of these knives. This means that people who intend no harm will not have to fear having their knives. Businesses can choose to sell them in our state, making it no longer necessary for New Hampshire citizens to travel out of state to purchase them, including our first responders, military, knife collectors and yes, even our police officers.

Honest citizens have nothing to fear, but criminals will have more to fear. In order to be criminally convicted under my bill, the state must prove beyond a reasonable doubt three elements of the law;

a. You must use the knife! Merely carrying it is not enough.
b. You must use the knife on another person. Use of it to gut a deer, cut a rope, open a box, or any other use (not on another person) is not enough.
c. you must use the knife on another person with the intent of committing a crime. Using the knife to cut a pinned person free from a safety belt, to defend oneself, or any other use on a person without the intent of committing a crime is not enough.

In other words, the example given of someone speeding 30 miles over the limit (which is a crime) and simply carrying a knife will never lead to a charge under my bill. By contrast, under current law you can be charged right now for merely carrying the knife! Without this change in law, those that are in the above scenario now are at risk of up to 12 months in jail by simply being seen carrying one of these knives!

In fact under current law if you carry, possess with intent to sell, or sell one of these knives in New Hampshire, you face 12 months in jail. You could also lose your right to carry a firearm, by the issuing authority claiming you are not a “suitable person” due to your conviction of a “weapons” offense. Gun and knife dealers in New Hampshire have been charged under this unfair law and spent thousands of dollars to defend themselves.

To sum up, the bill lifts a longstanding ban on certain knives and allows for their sale in our state, thereby protecting the rights of honest citizens to purchase, posses, and carry knives for personal use including but not limited to rope cutting, box opening, hunting, fishing, saving lives, scuba diving, sky diving, camping, collecting, working, wood carving, and of course self-defense.

The modern automatic knife (switchblade) is no longer the infamous knife immortalized in 1950's movies like West Side Story and Rebel Without a Cause. The modern automatic knife is a tool with unlimited utilitarian use and is a safer pocket knife because it locks both open and closed. Daggers, dirks, and stilettos are also undefined terms under New Hampshire law, and are vague enough that they could be construed to include hunting knives and kitchen knives if the state wanted to make such arguments.

Under my bill, if a person uses such a knife against a person with intent to commit a crime, then even the broadest interpretation of their definition would not affect honest citizens. It also acts as a further deterrent (penalty enhancement) to those who would commit atrocities like what occurred in Mont Vernon with one of these knives.

I look forward to defending the rights of knife enthusiasts and businesses across our state while ensuring that law abiding citizens will be protected and the criminals in our midst will have more of a deterrent against committing atrocities with these knives in our state.

For more information about the proposed legislation, contact Rep. Coffey at jenn@jenncoffey.com
 
I read the proposed NH law and it actually made me look for some land there as I was looking at land upsatte NY for awhile. The law passed law year is only for museums, and I agree it is good to see they allowed them to stay, you have to understand that this occurred because the town attorney said the museum cold not legally own them for display. They were going to get a fishing license to possess them, but since their intent was to display them and not possess them for use while fishing: the fishing excemption did not apply.....
 
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