COLLEGE
STUDENTS SEEK TO USE CONCEALED CARRY PERMITS
Mountain States
Legal Foundation 12/30/08
One minute, Suzanne was eating lunch with her mother and father.
The next, the happy hubbub of the restaurant was silenced when a
pickup truck crashed through the brick, mortar, and glass. How
could that happen? The driver emerged, but Suzanne noticed he
wasn’t dazed or drunk; he was angry and purposeful. Then, she saw
the guns. He stepped over the debris and began to shoot patrons.
She must be dreaming. Her father leaped to his feet, charged the
gunman, was shot, and fell to the floor. When the gunman turned
his back to shoot others, she remembered: she had a gun! Where was
it? She had to find her gun! Oh no, it was in her car. She
crawled, then ran toward a window to escape, to get her gun, and
to return to save her mother. Was it only a nightmare?
Tragically, for Suzanna Gratia Hupp and scores of others, the
murder and mayhem on October 16, 1991, at Luby’s Cafeteria in
Killeen, Texas—60 miles north of Austin—was real: 23 men and women
were murdered in cold blood; another 20 were wounded in the
deadliest killing spree in American history. (The killer turned
one of his two weapons upon himself when cornered by the police.)
Dr. Hupp, a chiropractor, had indeed brought her gun to Luby’s
that day; however, it was illegal then to carry a concealed weapon
in Texas. Despite the admonition of a friend, “Better to be tried
by 12 than carried by 6,” she feared losing her license if she
violated the law. Instead, she lost both her father and her
mother; she had thought her mother would follow her through the
window, but her mother had returned to comfort her dying husband
and had been murdered. Dr. Hupp blames herself to this day.
As a result, Dr. Hupp became one of the Nation’s leading advocates
for concealed carry permits; in fact, at her urging, in 1995 the
Texas Legislature adopted a “shall-issue” gun law requiring all
qualifying applicants to be issued a Concealed Handgun License. In
1996, she was elected to the Texas House of Representatives, then
traveled the country giving personal testimony why States should
enact concealed carry laws. Most recently, she filed a friend of
the court brief when the Supreme Court considered the
constitutionality of Washington, D.C.’s ban on handguns for
personal safety, District of Columbia v. Heller.
One of the states that enacted the law advocated by Dr. Hupp was
Colorado, which, in 2003 created statewide standards for issuing
concealed carry permits, adopted a narrow list of
exclusions—locations prohibited by federal law; K-12 schools;
public buildings with metal detectors; and private property— and
prohibited local governments from enforcing any contradictory laws
and policies. Despite the Colorado General Assembly’s intent to
supplant local rules as to concealed carry, the Regents of the
University of Colorado refused to withdraw their 1994 policy
barring concealed carry on CU’s campuses throughout the State.
The massacre that killed Dr. Hupp’s parents was the deadliest
shooting rampage in American history, that is, it was until the
Virginia Tech Massacre of April 17, 2007, when 32 were killed and
17 wounded. Subsequently, on February 14, 2008, a gunman killed 6
and wounded 18 at Northern Illinois University. Little wonder,
therefore, that students on CU’s campuses in Boulder, Denver, and
Colorado Springs—who have a license to carry concealed weapons
almost anywhere else in Colorado—wish to exercise that right in
what, in their view, is one of the most dangerous settings they
will encounter: “a gun-free zone.”
Students for Concealed Carry on Campus (SCCC), a national advocacy
group with over 30,000 members that supports the legalization of
concealed carry by licensed individuals on college campuses,
agrees. Last month, SCCC, two CU students and a recent CU graduate
filed a lawsuit in Colorado state court seeking a ruling that CU’s
policy is illegal and unconstitutional!
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