Pennsylvania LTC Numbers for 2008

I have here, thanks to reader Alex, a copy of the county by county numbers for 2008 for the number of Licenses to Carry issued in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The numbers are only a good estimate, taken by adding up the number of applications approved for a five year period for each county sheriff.  In total Pennsylvania issues 638,000 LTCs, or a total of 7% of the adult population.  Highest issuing counties, on a per capita basis, are Armstrong (20%), Cameron (19%), Potter (18%), and Centre (18%) counties. All predominantly rural, though Centre county is home to Penn State. Lowest on a per-capita basis is Philadelphia (still at 2.7% of the adult population) followed by Delaware, Montgomery, Chester, Northampton and Bucks (at 5.2% of the adult population).

Given these numbers, it’s amazing Arlen Specter thought it was a good idea to vote with Mayors Against Illegal Guns and vote against the Thune Amendment. Keep in mind many people in Pennsylvania have LTCs, but do not carry regularly. A little known fact, but Pennsylvania’s laws for transporting handguns in a vehicle without an LTC are as strict as New Jersey’s, so there are folks who have them just for transporting handguns in their vehicles.

If you live in a town with a MAIG mayor, this might be a big wake-up call to see these kinds of numbers. I’ll bet a lot of Bloomberg mayors have no idea how many LTC carriers they have in their county. All of which, presumably, would like their LTCs to be valid in other states, even if they are just transporting a handgun to go shooting, rather than for personal protection.

Dear Representative Metcalfe,

I am very pleased with your record on the Second Amendment. Really. I appreciate it. You’re a true leader on the issue, which is more than you can say for a lot of reps. But man, on other issues, you talk like you just escaped from the insane asylum.

Is it smart politics to be the only State Representative to vote against Domestic Violence Prevention month? Because of some imagined gay agenda? Is it smart politics to call veterans who don’t agree with you traitors? And then doubling down?

No, it isn’t, and it makes it much harder for Second Amendment advocates to defend you. Why give your political enemies this kind of ammunition to use against you? What constituency are you hoping to please with this nonsense?

Get serious. Otherwise we’re not going to be able to defend you next time you’re politically vulnerable. Which may be very soon if this crap keeps up.

Local DA Candidate has Gun Control Connections

Cross posted from PAGunRights.com

One candidate for Bucks County District Attorney has deep ties to an outfit that pushed such extreme gun control that it would create a database of gun owners and also risk putting ammunition manufacturers out of business.

Democratic candidate Chris Asplen is the Vice President of Gordon, Thomas, Honeywell’s Governmental Affairs Division (GTH), a position he has held since 2002. In 2007, Asplen’s office was hired to manage the legislative strategy of Ammunition Coding Services, the company that created a patent for bullet serialization, but could not make the technology work. Instead of finding a consumer for their technology, the company’s founders – lead by investor Russ Ford – hired GTH to pass laws in more than a dozen states to mandate the unworkable technology.

The “model legislation” pushed by Asplen’s office would have been a nightmare burden for ammunition makers and serious shooters.  The price hikes and lack of supply would all but kill off casual shooters.

The technology is so complex that the company’s founder Russ Ford even agreed with Cam Edwards during an NRA News interview in 2008 that they had been unable to do large scale testing, the only test examples were created by hand, and they didn’t even have evidence it would work to support the needs of not only the civilian market, but also police and military.

Cam Edwards: People have said, people in the know, people in the industry have said this is unworkable. That’s it. That is their answer. It doesn’t work. Now, if you think that it does, it’s up to you to prove it. But you have been unable to do so. And you’re pushing legislation that would again mandate this, legislation that ammunition manufacturers say would cause them to either go out of business or stop selling to the states that pass this. That’s you doing this.

Russ Ford of Ammunition Coding Systems: Thank you for highlighting that, Cam.

The legislation that Ford hired Asplen’s company to push would have not only mandated these markings that the industry said it cannot produce, but it also would have required gun owners to forfeit all non-encoded ammunition in their possession by making possession of regular ammunition illegal. For precision shooters or even casual plinkers trying to save a few dollars, reloading would have been completely outlawed if GTH had their way in Harrisburg.

Currently, shooters go through about 8 billion rounds of newly manufactured ammunition a year. But the Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturing Institute estimates it would take three to four weeks to produce ammunition currently produced in a single day. Supplies would dwindle and prices would skyrocket.

Interestingly, Asplen’s client Russ Ford admitted in an interview that as the holder to the patent for the process, his goal was to make money off of these new mandates on the backs of lawful sport shooters & hunters.

Cam Edwards: On the Ammunition Accountability website, and on the Ammunition Coding Systems website, you mention a license fee, per round that would be charged to the manufacturer’s and then passed on to the consumers. What type of license fee are you looking at per round?

Russ Ford: Uh, we have discussed, uh, with, and this is where the, the wheels come off, huh, of the capitalist society. We have been entertained by financial planners, stock brokers, bond brokers, uh, business valuation people, and quite frankly, for me for me, it’s like looking at hieroglyphs on the side of a pyramid. I don’t understand all these parameters. We have talked about, uh, a tenth of a penny to a fifth of a penny a round for royalties. Whether that pans out is completely in speculation.

It’d be, It’d be nice to make money on this. It really would. This is America, we believe in capitalism, uh, uh, it would be nice to have a return on the investment and for the years we’ve put in on this.

Mr. Ford’s candor in admitting to make untold fortunes off of the backs of gun owners every year is refreshing, if not humorous in the NRA News interview.  However, at one point he justifies such “honesty” as an effort to be transparent and have a real discussion about gun control issues.  Cam Edwards calls him out on the fact that the lobbying website GTH created to promote the mandates, AmmunitionAccountability.org, has no link or public connection to the company’s for-profit site, AmmoCoding.com.  Rather than addressing the point, Mr. Ford tries to pick an argument over links with Cam during the questioning.  But, as Sebastian pointed out at the time, the lack of transparency in the operation is a much bigger problem:

And to think, Russell Ford said on Cam’s show he wants this whole thing to be as transparent as possible.  Transparent as in we hire a lobbying firm to anonymously set up a web site to push for model legislation, and to lobby key legislators that have been quietly bought off, in order to be able to skim off the top of every one of the eight billion rounds of ammunition produced each year.  You have to admit, that’s quite an ingenious scam, that would make even the most talented con artist jealous.

There is certainly nothing illegal about the actions, but it is hardly a model of transparency.

Though Asplen’s group tried to make the argument that ammunition registries would be an important tool to law enforcement, a hearing in California cleared up that misconception very quickly.  The Law Enforcement Alliance of America, California Police Chiefs’ Association, California Peace Officers’ Association, Association of Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs and Los Angeles Police Protective League all urged lawmakers to vote it down.  In Hawaii, the Attorney General called the system “unduly burdensome” and unworkable.

In fact, according to Mr. Ford, the only support that Chris Asplen’s company could find for the laws came from gun control groups such as the Brady Campaign and their Million Mom March division.

As a leader at GTH, it is fair to ask whether Mr. Asplen continues to support his client’s goals, especially in light of the public confessions that the technology is unproven, unworkable, and even detrimental to law enforcement.

NRA does not typically endorse in local races, so it is unlikely we will see a firm grade issued for either candidate in the Bucks County District Attorney’s race.  But consider this post an opportunity for Mr. Asplen to clarify his support for gun owner registries, ammunition encoding, and bans on reloading for competitive shooters.

Wikipedia Joke?

Found while researching trends in Pennsylvania Governors last night, under the entry for Governor Martin Grove Brumbaugh, 25th Governor of Pennsylvania from 1915 to 1919:

His son, Dr. David Brumbaugh died in a barnstorming accident over Lake Michigan in 1921 when he choked on a sausage.

I had to do a double take on that one. There are barns to storm over Lake Michigan? And I’m not sure I want to know what role the sausage played in this daredevil stunt, or how he ended up choking on it. But I was unable to find any credible independent verification out there on how M.G. Brumbaugh’s son may have actually met his demise. So I’m thinking maybe someone on Wikipedia has a twisted sense of humor.

Attacks from the West

When I was updating the Bloomberg Pennsylvania anti-gun mayors map to reflect the challenges to preemption, I was again amazed at the geographical breakdown of the cases.


View Bloomberg’s Anti-Gun Mayors in Pennsylvania in a larger map

Notice that these attacks are not coming from Philadelphia and its suburbs – the area most gun owners believe to be the hot bed for gun control in Pennsylvania. Of the 10 cities that have passed a lost-and-stolen ordinance in violation of state preemption laws, 4 of the 5 in Western PA are in Allegheny County. If West Mifflin enacts their proposal tonight, that will make 5 of 6 (out of 11 total cities).

But sticking to the 10 that have actually passed as of this afternoon, 6 of those are west of the Philadelphia metro area. In fact, 3 of the 4 I am willing to consider in the Philadelphia metro area are not at all considered suburbs of the city. They aren’t even in the same media market, but I opted to be extremely generous in defining Mayor Nutter’s reach with this one.

I’m sure that some will point to the fact that I haven’t mapped York and Scranton, but I have good reasons for those two exceptions. In the case of York, they didn’t actually pass an ordinance. They knew it would be illegal and just passed a resolution. In Scranton’s case, the matter has been tabled.

So for those of us in the Philadelphia area, we’re the ones who need to take cover from the gun control assault being launched by the rest of the state. Isn’t that interesting, if not a little unexpected?

Bloomberg Mayors Continue to Break State Laws

West Mifflin, Pennsylvania’s mayor is the latest to try and break state law by supporting municipal gun controls. Supported by his membership in Michael Bloomberg’s anti-gun group, the Borough Council will take up a proposal tonight to mandate that gun owners report their lost or stolen guns within an arbitrary time period, putting the burden of proof on the accused rather than the state. These ordinances are currently being challenged by the NRA in courts across the state.

Recently, Homestead Borough did the same thing, becoming the 10th city in Pennsylvania to violate the state preemption laws and the state Supreme Court’s Ortiz v. Commonwealth decision. Last night, Clairton became the 11th, though the first non-MAIG-mayor-lead city to do so. However, the proposal was pushed by extremely anti-gun Rep. David Levdansky who has recently taken up the charge of CeaseFirePA.


View Bloomberg’s Anti-Gun Mayors in Pennsylvania in a larger map

I’ve updated the map to reflect the mayors who are pushing Bloomberg’s agenda in violation of state law and the Supreme Court’s decision. At this point, it’s not enough to just track members and former members of the group. Bloomberg is hiring out from the Brady Campaign to try and undermine our state legislature and state courts.