Many Nevadans think Clark County is the capital of gun
control in the Silver State, but historically, Washoe County and Reno in
particular were the most hostile to the Second Amendment and had the most
obtrusive gun regulations in the state. For much of the 20th
century, until 1999, loaded open carry was illegal in Reno. Few know just how
perilously close Nevada to becoming a gun control state.
Traditionally, concealed carry was preferred to open carry,
which was seen as a rural or outdoorsman’s practice. Urban open carry was
largely unheard of and cause for spectacle, even in frontier towns. Despite
open carry being legal, the overwhelming majority of Americans choose to carry
concealed, even if breaking the law, or not carry at all, sometimes to their
detriment. This right, long affirmed by state courts, was forgotten and the
resurgence around the year 2000 took many by surprise. The lack of practiced
open carry was a catalyst in the shall-issue wave of concealed weapon permit
laws of the 1990s.
Like many places in the West, Nevada had state concealed
weapon bans off-and-on throughout its early history. Despite this, men
continued to carry. Lax attitudes towards violence created an atmosphere where
society largely excused the killing of men left the world better off dead. Sick
of the violence, concealed weapons were banned as an attempt at a solution.
Local ordinances that varied from one place to another
banned concealed, or sometimes even all firearms. The laws were ineffective,
leading to various state schemes that increased in severity until the 1920s.
History is clear; the concealed weapons ban did not stem violence. What changed
was that frontier society (where much violence was) began to strongly
disapprove of easy killing and fighting
over petty matters.
It seems that the most effective laws were ones to provide
for better resolution of disputes in civil court and criminal justice reform,
including laws detailing what exactly self-defense and justifiable homicide
was. Until laws were reformed, juries would find men not guilty if they cited
even a bare, unsubstantiated fear, providing the dead man wasn’t too well
liked.
Concealed weapons, versus openly carried weapons, were
stigmatized for two reasons. First, concealed carry has always been more
popular than open carry. Second, the fear of a man going for a hidden weapon—a
furtive movement—was responsible for many preemptive killings. Guilty by
association, concealed carry received a reputation as something only
degenerates and criminals practiced. If a man felt the need to go armed, he
should carry his revolver openly. Few did.
In 1903, Nevada passed a law prohibiting concealed weapons
in cities, towns, villages and on trains or stages. Permits could be obtained
by applying to the county commissioners and demonstrating need. A reporter from
the Daily Nevada State Journal made multiple citizens' arrests of the Reno
police chief and several officers for carrying concealed weapons as the statute
mentioned "any person" and did not exempt law enforcement. The
officers reluctantly admitted the reporter was right and the reporter's point
was made.
In Washoe County, no concealed weapon permits were issued
between 1917 and 1944, when two businessmen received temporary permits to carry
pistols. The commission planned, in a draft ordinance to deny concealed weapon
permits to all but those "who cannot avail themselves of police protection."
The county commissioner system was changed to the sheriff in
1959 in a bill proposed by Sen. Floyd Lamb (SB93). The concern was that the
commissioners were "not in a position to know the background on all
applicants" and that "the sheriff can exercise greater control."
In 1993, a “shall issue” concealed carry bill failed for lack of support among
law enforcement. Inertia had not quite built up nationally to catapult the law
into effect in Nevada on the first try. Once again, preserving local laws were
a paramount concern.
Barney Dehl, Chief Deputy of Washoe County Sheriff, said “A
concealed weapons permit should be limited to persons who did not pose a threat
to public safety.” He directly referenced Reno’s ordinances (then in force),
complaining that the proposed bill would allow concealed firearm permits to
override local ordinances. “He alleged as the bill currently stood, the cities
and counties would not have the authority to limit any place in their
jurisdiction where weapons could not be carried.” Time has proven these fears
were unfounded.
Only in 1995, did Nevada get a “shall issue” concealed
firearm permitting system, much to the opposition of law enforcement. As
passed, the bill created NRS 202.3673, which for a few years banned concealed
carry in public buildings of every type, but not public places as in Reno.
Two Incidents,
Lasting Effects
In November of 1965,
at the behest of police chief Elmer Briscoe, the Reno city council took up an
ordinance to ban the open carry of loaded weapons. Briscoe was a supporter of
gun control, including the proposals making the rounds during the 1960s like
handgun registration and three-day waiting periods on purchases. Other
proposals like banning non-citizens (green card holders) from owning guns had
been making the rounds over the years, but few managed to stick.
The ordinance had its roots in two incidents. These are the
two lone examples of gun scares or open carry issues, at least that were
reported, at the time. It seems more likely that the incidents were overblown
by the police chief and pushed by powerful interests.
One incident was where a mental patient from California
stepped off a bus in downtown Reno with two handguns on his hips. Another man
walked into a casino restaurant, with a least a revolver on his hip and
possibly carrying other weapons, “looking for” a security guard. Accounts vary,
including that the man was a hunter carrying a revolver who simply went into
the casino. Exaggeration of the details may not be out of the question, as will
be seen shortly.
The “hunter” was charged under a city ordinance that made it
illegal to 'wear, carry, or conceal' a dangerous weapon. At trial, the Washoe
District Court Judge found that the city failed "to show the weapon was
concealed." The assistant city attorney said that this invalidated the
ordinance, as "its intent [as per the judge] is to ban the carrying of a
weapon that is concealed." He asked the city council to either repeal or
amend the ordinance, proposing that "it apply only to the open carrying of
wearing of dangerous weapons" by removing "conceal" from the
text.
It is strongly implied that the appeals judge deliberately
did not apply the ordinance as the weapon was a carried openly. An editorial
criticized "It's pretty difficult for a layman to understand that the
phrase 'wear, carry or conceal' requires the prosecution to prove
concealment...”
|
Reno's 1905 ordinance |
The original ban from 1905 stated
it was illegal to “wear, carry, or have concealed upon his person” a number of
weapons. Likely, the judge made his decision on a syntaxial basis, imaging
commas to create the grammatical effect of making “wear, carry, or have” apply
to only weapons that were concealed. Apparently, the 1905 city council meant to
ban concealed weapons and dangerous weapons worn, carried, or had on the
person.
Since the 1905 ordinance was invalidated, the city council
prepared a new ordinance, which would persist as 8.18.010 of the municipal code
until 1999. The ordinance banned carrying concealed firearms without a permit
(duplicating state law), prohibited carrying wearing loaded firearms in public
places or on public streets and also any casino, bar, bank, cabaret, theater,
park, school or playground without police permission, and permitted peace
officers to inspect firearms on demand to determine if they were loaded.
The hysterical Chief Briscoe defended his support of the ban
thusly:
“How is a police officer to
determine if a guy carrying a gun in his belt is not intending to hold up some
place? If hunters have small caliber pistols, I see no reason why they can't
secure these guns the same as they do with rifles. Hunters don't walk into
restaurants to have breakfast with loaded rifles in their hands.
"I don't feel people
should be allowed to walk around with guns at their sides just because there is
nothing to prohibit them from doing so. I would hate to be standing in a bank
lobby when four men walked in carrying guns. Oh, I would think, 'It is okay.
They are just going hunting?' This would give a lot of bank officials gray
hair.
"...we should have some
control over the indiscriminate carrying of firearms. There are undesirable
people who could take advantage of the fact that we don't have any law against
the open carrying of weapons. Every law we have penalizes a few people for the
sake of a lot of people."
The appeal was questioned by Councilman Hunter who said that
the obvious intent of the ordinance was specifically intended to prohibit both
open and concealed carry. Councilman Chism said "Who would want to carry a
loaded gun around in public? Anyone who wants to is up to no good. And he is
the type we do not want carrying loaded guns around." Another councilman
said "it is a fundamental teaching of sports groups not to carry loaded
firearms around."
The ordinance immediately "came under heavy fire.” One
editorial opined "some people even brought the U.S. Constitution into
it." Chief Briscoe thought that liberty should suffer for public safety, a
view not at all uncommon among late 20th century law enforcement
leadership. "Unfortunately,
sometimes laws have to be passed to protect the people from themselves. This
law would be for the protection of the community. I don't think it would
penalize the community." He would have made a communist proud.
Chester Piazzo, president of Sportsman Inc. said in
opposition "robbers are not the types to carry firearms openly."
Another businessman, Charles Beaman, sad "I live in constant fear of
robbery. It is not the robbery so much, but being mugged, stomped upon, or
pistol whipped." Both Piazzo and Beamen carried pistols to and from work.
"Either pass a very restrictive law, or let the state
law cover and forget it. If it's against the law to carry a gun into a casino,
then it ought to be against the law to carry one into a grocery store, a
department store—or what have you. And it probably won't be long until the
operator of some such business requests his type of enterprise be added to the
list. Then another—and another, until the confusion will make the ordinance
meaningless. Which happens when you start to compromise to mollify both sides.”
Briscoe defended the ban by saying "...we should have
some control over the indiscriminate carrying of firearms. There are
undesirable people who could take advantage of the fact that we don't have any
law against the open carrying of weapons. Every law we have penalizes a few
people for the sake of a lot of people." A councilman suggested
prohibiting only loaded pistols, to
which Briscoe replied "An unloaded pistol is just as much a threat as a
loaded one because you do not know if it is loaded." Briscoe’s suggestion
was not heeded.
A little known joke is that during the second half of the
last century, the Second Amendment only applied to hunting (except with a
machine gun), at least in the minds of many, as it continues to persist in the
opinions of many anti-gun individuals and politicians. Thankfully for the
Washoe sportsman, Briscoe wanted to protect hunters. Chief Briscoe stated that
hunters would be recognizable, as "they are appropriately dressed and on
the streets at certain hours of the day," but that he would know a man
carrying golf clubs and a .45 would not be a hunter.
Despite public outcry, the ordinance was passed, but exempted
unloaded firearms, mirroring provisions of California’s later Mulford Act.
According to Charles Beaman, a laundromat owner, the ordinance was passed
"because of pressure from casino operators,” certainly nothing new in
Nevada. Opposition by the public was apparently limited. The NRA would not
transform into the heavily politically involved organization is today until the
1977 “Cincinnati Revolution.”
Today, a similar proposal would be met with a flood of
negative publicity. Lawsuits would be legion. However, in the days before the
Internet, only legal experts with access to a myriad of old court decisions
could prove that across the country, open carry was the constitutionally
preferred method of carry. In fact, for most Americans, it was not until the
publication of the Ninth Circuit Court’s final decision in Peruta v. Gore that Second Amendment advocates became aware of the
open carry cases.
Again, one must remember this was a different time in
America where urbanites largely forgot about their right to self-defense. In
the 1960s, the consensus among some that carrying guns for self-defense didn’t
make people safe was nothing new. Even in the 1930s, relying on city police was
considered the “right” thing to do.
“Since police protection is pretty effective in most cities,
even for tourists who are guests of the cities, the simpler way might be to
make the possession of guns a some what more difficult matter. Few citizens
have ever bettered their position by the use of firearms.”
Las Vegas was a dusty, rural backwater by comparison then,
while Reno was a well-known, almost cosmopolitan, city. The peaceful times that
Reno residents experienced in their lives were far from the Wild West days
where the local sheriff was far away. Only after the turbulent and bloody years
from the mid-60’s on would public opinion change to support daily self-defense
carry.
Attitudes
Ten years after banning open carry, Reno police warned its
"jittery women" not to carry loaded guns in public without permission
of the chief of police. A 1971 senate bill was proposed at the request of a
citizen to allow women to carry mace, then considered a concealed weapon.
Carson Sheriff Robert Humphrey opposed the bill, proud of his record of denying
the right to bear arms.
"I don't think a woman is going to be able to get mace
out of her purse and use it effectively. It might give a woman a false feeling
of security and cause her to be hurt more than if she didn't have it. I've
never issued a concealed weapon permit and never will and I feel the same way
about mace. If a person has it, they're going to be looking for an excuse to
use it."
Elsewhere
Stupid gun laws are not limited to just the urban counties.
In 1984, Mineral County Sheriff John Madraso Jr. proposed to expand the town of
Hawthorne's 1946 ban on concealed weapons to the entire county. The public was
incensed and flooded the county commissioners' meeting. Allegedly, it would
require registration of anything definable as a weapon, including any sharp
object, and ban openly carried weapons.
Madraso claimed that the changes were needed because of 20
cases of persons calling about openly carried weapons, some of which were taken
into schools. At the time, it was not illegal under state to carry a firearm
into a school. Madraso blamed DA Larry Bettis for the uproar, who blamed the
sheriff in return. The ordinance was not passed.
Hawthorne’s 1946 ordinance is still on the books of the
Mineral County Code.
Preemption
In 1987, light appeared at the end of the tunnel. Florida
was leading the nation with its efforts to create a shall-issue concealed
weapon permit system. Self-defense carry and handgun ownership was beginning to
re-emerge from its long stigma dating from the days of the Old West. All fronts
of the Second Amendment were not in sunshine, however.
In 1981, the city of Morton Grove, Illinois, decided to ban
ownership of handguns and the Supreme Court did not hear the appeal. Concerned
for such abuses spreading, over thirty states passed laws to prevent local
governments from making their own abusive gun control laws. Assemblyman Dini
touted that the preemption bill would prevent panic legislation (as happened in
Reno in 1965).
State preemption of firearm regulation was first proposed in
1987 as AB 288 by Assemblyman Thompson of Clark County. He vehemently denied
dogged accusations that preemption was at the behest of the NRA, but drafted at
a constituent’s request. "The point is, [preemption] is not part of some
nefarious plot, or secret scheme,” he later said in response to those baseless
allegations the “gun lobby” was trying to weaken law enforcement. Opposition,
largely by LVMPD, was intense and caused the bill to die in the 1987
legislative session.
In 1989, Thompson proposed AB 147, which ultimately became
law. In its original form, the various changes to preemption, including
enhanced preemption of 2015, would have been unnecessary. Once again, the
powerful forces of LVMPD doomed the provisions that would have put all
localities on an even playing field. Reno police were in opposition as well as
they would lose their open carry ban ordinance.
Clark County and Metro officials objected because their
three-day waiting period and handgun registration (“blue cards”) ordinances
would be invalidated. Undersheriff Cooper said that "Las Vegas was
becoming a major city with major city problems, therefore, Las Vegas could not
be compared to the remainder of the state." Metro fear-mongered that
public safety would suffer and detectives would stumble blindly through
criminal investigations.
Sheriff Moran said: "[...] I think Las Vegas is a very
unique city and requires gun regulations that would be impractical in rural
areas. [...] Las Vegas is unlike any other city in the world. [...] but there comes a time when even I have to
interpret the Constitution as I see fit [emphasis added]."
Moran’s statement shows the shocking arrogance of law
enforcement leaders of the time and why Metro in particular was so dead-set against
preemption laws and for strictly restricting citizens' Second Amendment rights
(until Sheriff Lombardo saw the writing on the wall).
Unable to overcome Metro’s opposition, Assemblyman Garner
suggested grandfathering all local laws already in existence. The intent of the
grandfather clause was specifically to preserve Clark County ordinances, which
Metro practically begged to keep. As a side effect, Reno’s ordinances also
remained in effect, which was not at all the aim of the bill.
AB 147 passed and state preemption of firearms laws became
Nevada law. Only the legislature could regulate guns, except for unsafe
discharge of firearms. Yet the bill failed in its original purpose; as a result
of Garner’s amendment to grandfather in existing laws, only future regulations
could be prevented. Clark County and Reno’s law remained on the books and
enforceable. For Nevadans, nothing would change except to alleviate fears of
ordinances getting worse. Preemption
was dreadfully weak and had no teeth.
In 1999, John Riggs, a member of the now-defunct Nevada
State Rifle and Pistol Association, successfully petitioned the Reno city
council to repeal their ban. Ordinance 5035 made open carry legal in Reno once
again. Details behind this action seem to be lost to history. It is unknown if
the ban had been enforced in recent times.
One by one, prior to 2015, effectively all the local legal
obstacles to open and concealed carry were repealed, except in Clark County.
Even in the counties that didn’t repeal their ordinances, active enforcement
stopped long before 2015. Notably, in regards to Clark County’s park gun ban
ordinance, Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto wrote an opinion justifying the
enforceability of pre-1989 local ordinances and regulations. This directly led
to the call for enhanced preemption.
Under Cortez Masto’s logic, as long as the ordinance or
regulation had not been altered since 1989, it would continue in force. SB 92
of 2007 should have invalidated all local ordinances, as it did not contain the
1989 bills grandfather clause, but corruption prevailed and local laws stayed.
Without the success of enhanced preemption being signed into law in 2015, Reno’s
open carry ban would have stood for nearly fifty years, long into the era when
openly carried guns were once again nothing to get excited about.
Conclusion
Today, anachronisms remain on the books in northern Nevada.
While most local regulations go unenforced, they have no place under the law.
Washoe and Mineral Counties are in violation of the law for failing to repeal
its conflicting ordinances on the carry of weapons. Some of the local laws,
such as sale or possession of weapons by minors, are now covered by state law.
Whether discharge ordinances area “unsafe”
discharge ordinances is up for debate. Those laws, while not bothering anyone,
need to be removed as well.
However, our focus need to be first aimed at expunging the
offensive legacy of gun control in northern Nevada, particularly the remaining
laws in Washoe and Mineral Counties. One by one, the small issues can be
corrected, but first and foremost, the ugly scars remaining among the
ordinances of those counties must be erased.
Sources
- Sec. 6568, Crimes and Punishments, Statutes of Nevada (1903)
- "Is this law
defective?" Daily Nevada State
Journal. July 18, 1903. p. 1
- "Concealed Weapon Ordinance Planned." Nevada State Journal. Feb. 6, 1953. p. 1
- "Concealed Weapon Control Tightened." Nevada State Journal. Jan. 30, 1959. p.
10
- Minutes of the Assembly Judiciary Committee. March 10, 1993.
- "Council Mulls Gun
Law-And Then Compromises." Nevada State
Journal. p.. 17 Nob. 24, 1965.
- Ordinance 45, Section 7. Aug. 29, 1905. (Reno
Municipal Code), repealed
It shall be unlawful for
any person within the limits of the city of Reno, to wear, carry, or have
concealed upon his person any dirk knife, pistol, sword in case, slung shot,
brass knuckles, razor or other dangerous weapon without first obtaining permission
from the City Council. The City Council may, upon application made in writing
showing the reason of the person or the purpose for which any concealed weapon
is to be carried, grant permission under the seal of the city and attested by
its clerk to the person making such application authorizing such person to
carry the concealed weapon described in such permission. Any person who shall
violate any of the provisions of this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor
and on conviction thereof shall be fined not less than twenty ($20.00) dollars
nor more than five hundred ($500.00) dollars, or imprisoned in the city jail
for not less than thirty (30) days, nor more than six (6) months. This section
shall not apply to peace officers in the discharge of their duties, nor to
persons acting or engaged in the business of common carriers within this state,
nor to person traveling through the state.
- Section 8.18.010
Concealed and dangerous weapons (Reno Municipal Code), repealed
a. It is unlawful for any person
within the city limits to carry or wear a firearm in any casino, bar, bank,
cabaret, theater, park, school or playground without first obtaining permission
from the chief of police.
b. It is unlawful for any person,
except as provided in subsection (c) to carry or wear a loaded firearm upon the
public streets or in a public place within the city without first obtaining
permission from the chief of police.
c. The prohibition of subsection
(b) does not apply to a person carrying a concealed weapon pursuant to a permit
issued by a sheriff pursuant to subsection 4 of section 202.350 of Nevada
Revised Statutes.
d. Further, it is unlawful for any
person to refuse any police officer to examine any firearm worn or carried for
the purpose of ascertaining if the firearm is loaded or not.
e. This section does not apply to
a peace officer in the discharge of his duties.
f. As used in this section the
term "firearm" includes any weapon immediately capable of propelling
an object with destruction force as the result of the combustion of gases or
the generation thereof through another device including the expulsion of air
from a weapon. The term incudes, but it not limited to: Rifles, shotguns,
pistols, airguns, pellet guns and blow guns or dart guns capable of ejecting
metal darts of any nature.
- “Council Mulls Gun Law-And Then Compromises." Nevada State Journal. p.. 17 Nob. 24,
1965.”
- "Chief Backs Gun-Toter Crackdown." Nevada State Journal. Nov. 11, 1965.
- Kauth, Robert. "Gun Crackdown Comes Under Fire." Nevada State Journal. Nov. 16, 1965.
- Kauth, Robert. "Gun Crackdown Comes Under Fire." Nevada State Journal. Nov. 16, 1965.
- "Council Revamps Reno Gun Law by 4-3 Vote." Nevada State Journal. Nov. 23, 1965.
- “Council
Mulls Gun Law-And Then Compromises." Nevada
State Journal. p.. 17 Nob. 24, 1965.”
- "Chief Backs Gun-Toter Crackdown." Nevada State Journal. Nov. 11, 1965.
- Kauth, Robert. "Gun Crackdown Comes Under Fire." Nevada State Journal. Nov. 16, 1965.
- "Council Mulls Gun Law-And Then Compromises." Nevada State Journal. p.. 17 Nob. 24,
1965.
- Kauth, Robert. "Gun Crackdown Comes Under Fire." Nevada State Journal. Nov. 16, 1965.
- "Chief Backs Gun-Toter Crackdown." Nevada State Journal. Nov. 11, 1965.
- "Reno Ok's Loaded Gun Ban." Reno Evening Gazette. Nov. 22, 1965. p. 1
- Defending His 'Castle'. Reno
Evening Gazette. Sept. 12, 1930.
- "Reno women reminded of law." Reno Gazette-Journal. March 10, 1976.
- "Women barred from carrying mace in purse." Reno Evening Gazette. Feb. 4, 1971. p. 2
- McMillan,
Doug. "Firearms ordinance creates furor in Mineral County." Reno Gazette-Journal. Nov. 24, 1984. p.
23
- 9.76.10 and 9.76.020 Mineral
County Code
- Compiled
Legislative History, AB 147 (1989)