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South Dakota Governor Vetoes Concealed Carry Bill

ccwinstructor

Centurion
Joined
Jul 11, 2008
Messages
919
Location
Yuma, Arizona, USA
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 16, 2011
CONTACT: Joe Kafka or Tony Venhuizen at 605-773-3212

PIERRE, S.D. – Gov. Dennis Daugaard has vetoed the following bill:

HB1248 – An Act to provide for exceptions from certain misdemeanor offenses related to possession of handguns.

For more information about this and other bills, please visit www.legis.state.sd.us

Note: A copy of Governor Daugaard’s veto message follows.

March 16, 2012
The Honorable Val Rausch
Speaker of the House of Representatives
500 East Capitol Avenue
Pierre, SD 57501-5070

Dear Mr. Speaker and Members of the House of Representatives:

I herewith return to you House Bill 1248 with my VETO. House Bill 1248 is entitled, “An Act to provide for exceptions from certain misdemeanor offenses relating to possession of handguns.”

I support our citizens’ right to possess a concealed handgun under our current laws. I ask you to sustain this veto because HB 1248 creates an exception to South Dakota’s firm, fair and reasonable concealed carry permit process. This exception weakens the reasonable protections currently in place, and it could lead to confusion and to longer and more frequent detainment of innocent citizens who choose to carry a concealed weapon.

South Dakota law already allows law-abiding citizens to carry a concealed weapon. The simple, straightforward permit process allows law enforcement to ensure that those who carry concealed weapons do not fall under one of the state’s narrow exceptions. Each year, locally-elected sheriffs deny permits, in most cases because the applicant has a serious criminal history. Under this bill, those who are prohibited from carrying a concealed weapon would no longer be informed of that fact. Understandably, law enforcement officials from across South Dakota have objected to this bill.

This bill will also result in longer and more frequent detention of those who legally carry a concealed weapon. Absent a permit requirement, law enforcement would not be able to ascertain whether an individual is “otherwise eligible to be issued a permit to carry a concealed pistol.” If this bill becomes law, innocent citizens could be detained by law enforcement and subjected to time-consuming criminal and mental health background checks.

Even if this bill becomes law, those who wish to conceal a weapon in another state would, in almost all cases, still be required to have a concealed carry permit. Repealing that requirement in South Dakota could lead to our citizens being arrested in other states because of an honest misunderstanding as to whether they are lawfully entitled to carry a concealed weapon in that state.

This bill is a solution searching for a problem. South Dakota’s current permit process is simple and straightforward, and permits can be obtained in a matter of minutes. The current process preserves Second Amendment rights while respecting concerns for public safety, in particular the safety of law enforcement officers who put themselves at risk to protect us.

It is paramount that our state protects the rights of our citizens while at the same time protecting the lives of our citizens. I believe our current laws appropriately protect both interests, and I respectfully request that you sustain my veto.
Respectfully submitted,

Dennis Daugaard
Governor
 

Nascar24Glock

Regular Member
Joined
Jun 29, 2011
Messages
252
Location
Johnson City, TN
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 16, 2011
CONTACT: Joe Kafka or Tony Venhuizen at 605-773-3212

PIERRE, S.D. – Gov. Dennis Daugaard has vetoed the following bill:

HB1248 – An Act to provide for exceptions from certain misdemeanor offenses related to possession of handguns.

For more information about this and other bills, please visit www.legis.state.sd.us

Note: A copy of Governor Daugaard’s veto message follows.

March 16, 2012
The Honorable Val Rausch
Speaker of the House of Representatives
500 East Capitol Avenue
Pierre, SD 57501-5070

Dear Mr. Speaker and Members of the House of Representatives:

I herewith return to you House Bill 1248 with my VETO. House Bill 1248 is entitled, “An Act to provide for exceptions from certain misdemeanor offenses relating to possession of handguns.”

I support our citizens’ right to possess a concealed handgun under our current laws. I ask you to sustain this veto because HB 1248 creates an exception to South Dakota’s firm, fair and reasonable concealed carry permit process. This exception weakens the reasonable protections currently in place, and it could lead to confusion and to longer and more frequent detainment of innocent citizens who choose to carry a concealed weapon.

South Dakota law already allows law-abiding citizens to carry a concealed weapon. The simple, straightforward permit process allows law enforcement to ensure that those who carry concealed weapons do not fall under one of the state’s narrow exceptions. Each year, locally-elected sheriffs deny permits, in most cases because the applicant has a serious criminal history. Under this bill, those who are prohibited from carrying a concealed weapon would no longer be informed of that fact. Understandably, law enforcement officials from across South Dakota have objected to this bill.

This bill will also result in longer and more frequent detention of those who legally carry a concealed weapon. Absent a permit requirement, law enforcement would not be able to ascertain whether an individual is “otherwise eligible to be issued a permit to carry a concealed pistol.” If this bill becomes law, innocent citizens could be detained by law enforcement and subjected to time-consuming criminal and mental health background checks.

Even if this bill becomes law, those who wish to conceal a weapon in another state would, in almost all cases, still be required to have a concealed carry permit. Repealing that requirement in South Dakota could lead to our citizens being arrested in other states because of an honest misunderstanding as to whether they are lawfully entitled to carry a concealed weapon in that state.

This bill is a solution searching for a problem. South Dakota’s current permit process is simple and straightforward, and permits can be obtained in a matter of minutes. The current process preserves Second Amendment rights while respecting concerns for public safety, in particular the safety of law enforcement officers who put themselves at risk to protect us.

It is paramount that our state protects the rights of our citizens while at the same time protecting the lives of our citizens. I believe our current laws appropriately protect both interests, and I respectfully request that you sustain my veto.
Respectfully submitted,

Dennis Daugaard
Governor

What are the chances of getting enough votes to override the veto?

And, dangit!!! That makes the second state in which a Constitutional Carry bill has been passed, only to be vetoed by the governor (Montana was the first one). Even more disappointing, this one was vetoed by a Republican governor :banghead:.
 

Superlite27

Regular Member
Joined
Jul 12, 2007
Messages
1,277
Location
God's Country, Missouri
So, to summarize what the governor is saying in his veto statement:

"This freedom stuff would be a huge inconvenience for you. Agents of the state would spend a significant amount of time figuring out whether or not you really deserve it, causing you tons of hassle. Therefore, by vetoing this bill, I'm really saving you lots of trouble. You should thank me for limiting this freedom stuff. You really don't want it."

That's what I gathered from it.
 

ManInBlack

Regular Member
Joined
Jul 2, 2006
Messages
1,551
Location
SW Idaho
This bill will also result in longer and more frequent detention of those who legally carry a concealed weapon. Absent a permit requirement, law enforcement would not be able to ascertain whether an individual is “otherwise eligible to be issued a permit to carry a concealed pistol.” If this bill becomes law, innocent citizens could be detained by law enforcement and subjected to time-consuming criminal and mental health background checks.

Ummm...no. LOL

Even if this bill becomes law, those who wish to conceal a weapon in another state would, in almost all cases, still be required to have a concealed carry permit. Repealing that requirement in South Dakota could lead to our citizens being arrested in other states because of an honest misunderstanding as to whether they are lawfully entitled to carry a concealed weapon in that state.

I wonder how many Alaskans, Vermonters, Wyomingites, and Arizonans were arrested last year for unlawful concealment in another state due to an "honest misunderstanding" of that state's laws. Although a few recent arrests in New York have made the news, they are the exception, rather than the rule. Expecting citizens, under pain of imprisonment, to understand the rules and limitations of carrying with/without a permit within a state, but then trying to protect them from "honest misunderstandings" in other states is foolhardy at best.

In any event, in my anecdotal experience, those who OC without a permit (or CC in constitutional-carry states), on average, have a better understanding of firearms carry laws than any other subgroup of the population, including LEOs.
 
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ccwinstructor

Centurion
Joined
Jul 11, 2008
Messages
919
Location
Yuma, Arizona, USA
Governor Daugaard's veto was upheld in the house 27-40

So, to summarize what the governor is saying in his veto statement:

"This freedom stuff would be a huge inconvenience for you. Agents of the state would spend a significant amount of time figuring out whether or not you really deserve it, causing you tons of hassle. Therefore, by vetoing this bill, I'm really saving you lots of trouble. You should thank me for limiting this freedom stuff. You really don't want it."

That's what I gathered from it.

It takes a 2/3 vote to override the veto. 27 to 40 was not enough.
 

randian

Regular Member
Joined
Mar 10, 2011
Messages
380
Location
Phoenix, AZ
It takes a 2/3 vote to override the veto. 27 to 40 was not enough.
It was 50-18 to pass, which would have overridden the veto. Half of the yes votes defected. That suggests that the passing vote was a sham designed to get some anti-gun legislators some pro-gun cred.
 

ManInBlack

Regular Member
Joined
Jul 2, 2006
Messages
1,551
Location
SW Idaho
It was 50-18 to pass, which would have overridden the veto. Half of the yes votes defected. That suggests that the passing vote was a sham designed to get some anti-gun legislators some pro-gun cred.

Yep. I hope the good, firearms-owning citizens of South Dakota never let the scalawag legislators, or their constituents, forget this betrayal. They should all be forever marked with the scarlet "T" for "turncoat."
 

adam_SDOCsiouxfalls

Regular Member
Joined
Feb 17, 2011
Messages
67
Location
Sioux Falls,SD
South Dakota Open Carry (SDOC) Sioux Falls Chapter

Don't Worry guys, They may have won the fight but they have not won the war. We are in it for the long haul and things will change but it takes time. We can not let them Discourage us and break our will, we must stick with it and continue to fight for what is True and Right. We still have a few things up our sleeves......... Stay Tuned.... LOL
 

XDSTEEL

Regular Member
Joined
Mar 14, 2010
Messages
216
Location
North Dakota
We didn't lose anything and we had everything to gain. I think that the consitutional carry bill made it further this time than the other similar bills.
 
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