New Attorney General Opinion regarding ownership of "black powder" arms

Nov 16, 2015 at 09:16 am by Bryan Barrett


Release from the Tennessee Firearms Association:

The Tennessee Attorney General released an opinion (AG 15-75) on November 9, 2015, which addresses the massive confusion under Tennessee law of whether and to what extent a convicted felon can own, possess and use black powder weapons. This opinion is in addition to at least 3 other opinions previously issued by the Tennessee Attorney General on this topic which have created inconsistent opinions and unnecessary confusion about state and federal law on this topic.

Highlights of the opinion include the following statements:

From the Tennessee Firearms Association:

The opinion is a morass of reasoning that yields one of two (or possibly more) conclusions. First, the AG does not have the slightest clue about this topic but has chosen to author an opinion with conclusions that are the most restrictive possible to maximize the infringements of 2nd Amendment rights of individuals who have had their rights restored and/or who are non-violent felons who have served their sentences in full.

Shouldn't it be the duty of the State Attorney General to zealously defend the constitutional rights of the citizens rather than to maximize the degree of the infringement? Perhaps what Tennessee needs therefore is a popularly elected attorney general rather than one appointed solely in the discretion of the five Tennessee Supreme Court justices who now, as a result of "Haslam's law" are appointed by him rather than elected by the citizens!!

A second possible conclusion is that state law is a mess in this area. If this conclusion is accurate, it is particularly frustrating because Republicans have fully controlled state government for the last 5 years but have allowed this confusing and inconsistent statutory scheme to continue to exist despite their claims to be constitutionialists that favor smaller, cleaner, fairer government and minimal infringement of fundamental human and constitutional rights.

Whatever the conclusion, the question is will the Republican controlled and dominated state government lift a finger to address the problem in the 2016 legislative session? The answer is likely - probably not.

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