ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: FRIDAY, February 24, 1995                   TAG: 9502240098
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: B-4   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: ROBERT LITTLE STAFF WRITER
DATELINE: RICHMOND                                LENGTH: Medium


CONCEALED-WEAPON BILL CLEARS FINAL HURDLE

A bill giving the right to carry concealed weapons to virtually anyone who has not been convicted of a serious crime, abused drugs or alcohol or had mental problems cleared a final hurdle Thursday in the General Assembly.

With a 25-13 vote in the state Senate to approve some minor changes made in the House of Delegates, the measure goes to the governor, who has said he supports the idea.

The bill, which could prove to be one of the more substantive law changes to come out of this year's General Assembly, received scant opposition from a body that only two years ago passed a law limiting handgun purchases to one a month.

Under the new law, Circuit Court judges would no longer be able to refuse concealed-weapon permit applications simply because they think the applicant does not need to carry a gun. Supporters of the bill say judges have abused that power and used it as a catchall to refuse permit applications.

It is otherwise illegal to carry a handgun in a public place if the weapon is concealed from view.

``This will simply allow citizens to get these permits in a nonarbitrary manner,'' said Sen. Kenneth Stolle, R-Virginia Beach, who introduced the plan in the Senate.

He called warnings that the bill would drastically increase the number of guns on the street ``baloney.''

``What we'll be doing is making law-abiding citizens out of people who would otherwise have to break the law to protect themselves,'' he said.

Opponents didn't agree.

``It has to be one of the worst pieces of legislation to come out of this 1995 session,'' said Sen. L. Louise Lucas, D-Norfolk.

Lucas' 25-year-old nephew, Kevin A. Smith, was shot on a Norfolk sidewalk just over a year ago and died with a loaded gun in his hand.

The man accused of killing Smith argued self-defense and was acquitted last month. Before Smith's death, the suspect had been convicted of carrying a concealed weapon without a permit.

Lucas called it ``hypocrisy in its highest form'' that Republicans, with their tough-on-crime image, would advance a law making it easier to carry weapons.

``I think it's unconscionable that the very folks who came in here and abolished parole claiming to be concerned about crime would pass something like this,'' Lucas said.

``We should be getting guns off the streets, not giving people an excuse to start carrying them anywhere they wish.''

The bill passed Thursday would deny concealed-weapon permits to convicted felons, drug users, anyone convicted of public drunkenness twice within five years and illegal aliens. Also, anyone convicted of stalking, people with certain recent misdemeanor convictions and anyone who has received mental health treatment within five years would be prohibited from getting a permit.

In other legislative action:

Legislation limiting campaign contributions in statewide and assembly elections appeared headed for defeat in the House for a third straight year.

Lawmakers from both parties voted in a show of hands to allow the measure to "go by" for the day, increasing the chances that campaign limits will die in the final 48 hours of the assembly session.

House Majority Leader Richard Cranwell, D-Roanoke County, - a foe of campaign limits - offered a substitute proposal that would raise the limits contained in a Senate-approved version.

The Cranwell plan would allow candidates for governor, lieutenant governor and attorney general to receive up to $20,000 from individuals and $40,000 from political action committees. The limits for assembly candidates would be $8,000 and $15,000, respectively.

Even if the Cranwell substitute were to pass the House, it contains a booby trap that is almost certain to trip up the bill in the Senate. Senators have insisted they deserve higher limits because Senate districts are larger than House districts.

"It's going to be very hard to work out with the Senate," said Del. Glenn Croshaw, D-Virginia Beach, a contribition-limit advocate.

The House passed a bill that would transfer the regulation of charitable bingo game operators from local governments to a statewide charitable gaming commission in the governor's office.

The House voted to reject a Senate bill that would codify a Virginia Supreme Court decision that gives schoolteachers immunity from being sued for actions of good faith in disciplining students and keeping order in the classroom.

Staff writer David M. Poole contributed information to this story.

Keywords:
GENERAL ASSEMBLY 1995



 by CNB