Florida Carry

Florida Carry is a non-profit organization that serves to protect over six million gun owners's rights in the state of Florida. The organization works tirelessly in repealing ill-conceived gun control laws that both provide a double-edged sword for criminals and is deadly for law-abiding citizens.

Florida Carry, Inc.

Florida Carry logo
Founded January 6, 2011
Founders Sean Caranna, Richard Nascak
Location
Services Membership organization
Method Lobbying, Litigation, outreach programs
Members
Over 13,000 (as of December 2014)
Mission Advancing the fundamental civil right of all Floridians to keep and bear arms for self-defense as guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution and the Florida Constitution's Declaration of Rights.
Website FloridaCarry.org

Mission Statement

"Florida Carry is a Florida non-profit, non-partisan, grassroots organization dedicated to advocating the ability of Floridians to keep and bear arms for self-defense.

History

Florida Carry, Inc. was formed in 2011 in order to better coordinate the activities of a number of gun rights advocates and to provide a legal entity capable of lobbying the state legislature and file legal challenges in state and federal courts.

Legislative Activity

Florida Carry has actively lobbied the Florida Legislature and Governor on a variety of self-defense, firearms, and defensive weapons related topics.

2011 Session

During the 2011 Florida Legislative Session Florida Carry’s legislative work focused on the legalization of Open Carry and amending Florida’s 1987 Firearms Preemption Statute to create a private right of action against state actors who violate the law. HB 517 and its companion bill, SB 234, initially provided for the licensed Open Carry of firearms, licensed carry of firearms and defensive weapons on college and university campuses,[1] storage of firearms in private vehicles, the out of state purchase of Long Guns, and Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services finger printing services for concealed weapons and firearms license applications. Opposed by the Florida Retail Federation and the Florida Sheriffs Association, the bills passed without the Open Carry and Campus Carry provisions. HB 45 and its companion bill, SB 402, provided for Firearms Preemption law enforceability and expansion of the preemption to include substantially all state and local government agencies of Florida. The amended law provides penalties for government officials who knowingly & willfully violate Florida's Firearms Preemption Statute, allows for the collection of attorney’s fees, fines, and damages. HB 45 Passed and became effective October 1, 2011.[2]

2012 Session

In 2012 Florida Carry’s lobbying efforts centered on the passage of HB 463 and SB 998. The bills provided for concealed carry licensure of current military service members and honorably discharged veterans to obtain a license to carry regardless of age or duty station. The bill also requires that fingerprint cards be accepted from military police and provost so that service members stationed overseas can complete their applications. The bills passed the Florida House and Senate unanimously.[3]

2013 Session

Florida bill would require anger management courses for bullet buyers.[4]

2014 Session

During the 2014 Florida Legislative Session Florida Carry supported SB 296[5] in an attempt to create exceptions to criminal penalties for carrying or transporting firearms in public, with or without a license, during mandatory evacuations.[6] Opposed by the Florida Sheriffs Association, the bill failed to pass. Florida Carry also supported changes to Florida’s self-defense laws to allow immunity from prosecution or civil action for the threatened use of force in response to a criminal attack, an exception to mandatory minimum sentencing laws in cases of imperfect self-defense with a firearm, expungement of arrest records in cases of lawful self-defense. Despite the opposition of the Florida Sheriffs Association and State Persecutors, HB 89 became law in June 20, 2014.

References