UPDATE: 2/15/2010; copied and pasted from Richmond Times Dispatch:>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
The Republican-dominated House of Delegates advanced a slew of Second Amendment-related bills today.
They ranged from a bill that would repeal the one-gun-a-month limit on handgun purchases, to shielding applicants for concealed weapon permits, to protecting some Virginia-made guns and ammunition from potential federal regulation.
In all, about a dozen gun bills cleared a preliminary hurdle in the House yesterday and are up for a final vote Tuesday.
Del. Scott Lingamfelter, R-Prince William, sponsor of House bill 49, argued that the rationale for the state's one-gun-a-month law, enacted in 1993 under then-Gov. L. Douglas Wilder, has been "neutered" because of technological advances.
Handguns are subject to the national instant check system to verify that the purchaser is not prohibited from buying a firearm, Lingamfelter said. And, he added, some people like to buy one gun for personal protection and another for target practice.
"In reality, one gun a month does not stop crime," Lingamfelter said. "Criminals who are inclined to break the law don't obey this one."
But Del. Joseph D. Morrissey, D-Henrico, countered that people can now buy up to 12 guns a year. He raised concerns that with a repeal of the law, the state could be the source of gun purchases for across-state sales.
He asked Lingamfelter if he could "really state that a citizen of the commonwealth is legitimately inconvenienced by not being able to buy more than one handgun a month?"
The House also gave initial approval to House Bill 854, which would shield from liability people who defend against intruders in their home.
House Bill 69, which declares that firearms and ammunition made in Virginia and retained here would not be not subject to federal regulation cleared the initial hurdle in the House. So did a measure introduced by Del. Lee Ware, R-Powhatan, that would shield from public view applications for concealed handgun permits without written consent of the applicant.
Do not forget the dinner Wednesday nite for the Preservation of Bail in Virginia... please come support this needed effort and get a chance to meet some of the better looking bondsmen in Virginia (yep, I'll be there!) Maggiano's Little Italy
Short Pump Town Center
11800 West Broad Street
Richmond, VA 23233When: February 17, 2010 at 07:00 PM