Legislature(1997 - 1998)

02/12/1998 08:02 AM House STA

Audio Topic
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
txt
CSSB 214(STA) - PEACE OFFICERS/CONCEALED WEAPONS                               
                                                                               
Number 0010                                                                    
                                                                               
CHAIR JAMES announced the first order of business is CSSB 214(STA),            
"An Act relating to the possession of a concealed deadly weapon by             
peace officers and by chief administrative officers of municipal               
police departments; relating to the definition of police officer;              
and providing for an effective date," sponsored by Senator Mike                
Miller.                                                                        
                                                                               
Number 0018                                                                    
                                                                               
PORTIA PARKER, Legislative Assistant to Senator Mike Miller,                   
testified on behalf of Senator Miller.  She said Senators Miller               
and Green introduced SB 214 to correct an amendment, which was                 
proposed by the Alaska Peace Officers Association, and adopted into            
SB 141 last year.  The impact of that amendment was not realized               
until after the bill had passed and was sent to the Governor.  It              
was neither the intent of the Peace Officers Association, nor the              
intent of the sponsors that that would be the effect in regard to              
police officers, chiefs of police, and law enforcement officers.               
                                                                               
MS. PARKER stated SB 214 corrects the amendment which requires                 
peace officers to carry concealed [weapons], both on and off duty,             
to be certified by the Alaska Police Standards Council.  She                   
indicated there are law enforcement officers that are on probation             
for their first year, are not yet certified, and do not fall under             
the exemption.  Those officers would now have to obtain a concealed            
handgun permit before they could carry on or off the job.                      
                                                                               
Number 0075                                                                    
                                                                               
LEONARD ABEL, Ph.D., Program Administrator, Community Mental Health            
Service, Division of Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities,             
Department of Health and Social Services, testified before the                 
committee.  He said he would like the committee to consider a                  
possible amendment.                                                            
                                                                               
MR. ABEL indicated he is a supporter of concealed carry and has a              
permit.  He is also a mental health professional and the Community             
Mental Health Service's Program Administrator for the state.  You              
cannot at the time of the application, or five years prior to that,            
have a mental illness as defined in AS 47.30.915.  Mental illness              
means an organic mental or emotional impairment that has                       
substantial adverse effect on an individual's ability to exercise              
conscientious control of the individual's actions or ability to                
perceive reality, or to reason, or to understand.  A minor problem             
like nail biting is not going to constitute a mental illness under             
that definition.                                                               
                                                                               
MR. ABEL pointed out the effect of SB 141, in the recent veto                  
override, is to delete that language and adopt a federal standard              
that says that you cannot have a concealed carry permit if you have            
ever been committed.  Most people that have a severe mental                    
illness, that comes to the attention of the authorities, are not               
committed because our statutes allow you to voluntarily enter a                
hospital, or a treatment program and avoid the commitment process.             
Mr. Abel said he believes SB 141 created a situation where very ill            
individuals may apply for and receive a concealed carry permit.                
That concerns him.                                                             
                                                                               
Number 0141                                                                    
                                                                               
MR. ABEL said if you had an illness that was severe, you had to                
wait at least five years before you could apply.  If you had an                
incurable mental illness like schizophrenia or bi-polar disorder               
[manic depressive], you are barred for life from getting that                  
permit.  Those illnesses that (indisc.) very unstable - very                   
quickly if you go off medication.  The total bar does not bother               
him.  He noted that he did not believe it is necessarily a severe              
(indisc.) violation of rights.                                                 
                                                                               
MR. ABEL said, "What the original language did was allow, one case             
so far, a very ill person to be denied a permit.  When this                    
individual notified a relative that he had applied, he said he                 
believed he was being controlled by malevolent forces, he needed               
that gun to protect himself from these imagined evil forces.                   
Consequently, his relative notified the Department of Public Safety            
and the permit was denied."  Mr. Abel suggested SB 214 be amended              
to restore the original mental health language.                                
                                                                               
Number 0182                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE FRED DYSON asked if there is a record of patients               
having submitted themselves for treatment that Public Safety                   
offices could avail themselves of.                                             
                                                                               
MR. ABEL replied no, confidentiality laws would not permit it, it              
would have to surface like the incident mentioned.  A lot of cases             
would not come to the attention under normal circumstances.                    
                                                                               
Number 0198                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE AL VEZEY suggested this subject be addressed in a               
separate bill.  He said, "I think we have an obligation, in light              
of the fact that we overrode a governor's veto on a bill to move               
this correction forward as expeditiously as possible.  Amending it             
unnecessarily would definitely delay that process by a period of               
several weeks at a minimum...."                                                
                                                                               
CHAIR JAMES said she was the first person to put the concealed                 
carry issue on the table.  She said we have struggled with the                 
issues of mental health and the fear of guns.  The fear of someone,            
who is mentally disabled, having a concealed handgun is going to be            
a problem.  According to federal law, that person could have a gun.            
Not allowing them to have a concealed handgun does not necessarily             
mean that they cannot have one.  She noted she is familiar with the            
case Mr. Abel mentioned and said she would be happy to discuss his             
concern in a separate provision.                                               
                                                                               
Number 0251                                                                    
                                                                               
JAYNE ANDREEN, Executive Director, Council on Domestic Violence and            
Sexual Assault, Department of Public Safety, testified before the              
committee to express the council's concern with SB 141 and the                 
impact that it would have on domestic violence victims.  The                   
Governor's Domestic Violence Summit met in Alaska in December.                 
National leaders from around the country attended to help access               
how Alaska is doing in terms of its statutory and practical                    
responses to domestic violence.                                                
                                                                               
MS. ANDREEN said Alaska has gone a long way with the Domestic                  
Violence Act of 1996 in establishing 85 percent of the national                
model code.  The council is taking a serious look at the full                  
gambit of crimes that impact domestic violence victims and                     
recognizing them as such.  A concern is SB 141 adopted language                
that references federal statutes in terms of defining what a                   
domestic violence history and crime is.  She said it seriously                 
eliminates a number of domestic violence offenses that were                    
acknowledged, recognized and prosecuted.  All misdemeanor crimes of            
domestic violence now are not considered part of the criteria that             
must be looked at in the criminal history in terms of being                    
eligible for a concealed handgun permit.  A number of relationships            
that constitute domestic violence are no longer covered because                
they are not recognized by federal guidelines.  This is non-spousal            
relationships, or relationships where there is not a common child              
and eliminates all dating domestic violence.                                   
                                                                               
MS. ANDREEN indicated it also eliminates Alaska's emergency and ex             
parte orders as being accepted for those that are eligible for a               
concealed handgun permit.  She said we realize that emergency in               
particular ex parte orders are very important tools for victims                
seeking protection.  A significant number of the protective orders             
issued are under the emergency and ex parte process.  The council              
is also concerned about the exclusionary language which limits the             
prohibition of bringing concealed handguns into domestic violence              
shelters.  Many people think "shelters" is the term for a domestic             
violence program.  There are programs in Alaska that operate as a              
safe home program and do not provide the residential services and              
do not meet the definition of the shelter.                                     
                                                                               
Number 0306                                                                    
                                                                               
DEL SMITH, Deputy Commissioner, Department of Public Safety came               
before the committee.  He stated he worked with the Alaska Peace               
Officers Association and the Alaska Association of Police Chiefs to            
address the "cop problem" in SB 141.  Senate Bill 214, "cop fix-               
it," needs to be in effect before SB 141 or the problem of                     
disarming 100 police officers will come about.  He noted the                   
language regarding domestic violence, the mentally ill, and                    
indicted felons changed substantially.  Mr. Smith said, "Although              
I'd like to see some other changes in this bill, I realize that by             
adding amendments and slowing it down, it might not do what it                 
needs to do."  The Alaska Peace Officers Association, and the                  
Alaska Association of Chiefs of Police all agreed SB 214 fixes the             
problem.                                                                       
                                                                               
Number 0331                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE VEZEY stated prior to passing the concealed weapon              
carry law back in 1994, it was not legal for peace officers to                 
carry under many circumstances.  There was never prosecution, it               
was always assumed that the law authorizing them to be peace                   
officers, to carry a weapon, and to use legal force superseded the             
laws against carrying.  He said, "What I'm referring to is when a              
police officer was out of their jurisdiction, or off duty in a                 
place serving alcoholic beverages."  That was not the legislative              
intent, when we passed the laws against carrying concealed weapons,            
to exempt police officers.                                                     
                                                                               
MR. SMITH replied he is correct, you could carry in the course of              
your employment.  However, some departments wanted officers to                 
carry weapons at all times, should something occur.  He said, "It              
was very hazy as to whether, for instance as an Anchorage police               
officer, I could go to Fairbanks, off duty, and carry my concealed             
weapon and still be legal.  I don't know if there was ever any                 
prosecutions on any of those.  If I went to Fairbanks and, of                  
course in a prisoner pickup, or some investigation, clearly I was              
in my line of duty so I don't think that was ever an issue."  There            
are a number of officers, when they hire on, who do not become                 
certified until they have had at least a year to 14 months to be               
certified.  There are also a number of police officers in this                 
state that are not required to be certified.  SB 214 takes                     
"certified" out.                                                               
                                                                               
Number 0395                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE IVAN IVAN believes the bill was triggered by a                  
number of police entities in the state, including the University of            
Alaska.  He indicated they were not allowed to carry off the job               
because their interpretation of the law was that it was illegal.               
                                                                               
Number 0393                                                                    
                                                                               
REPRESENTATIVE MARK HODGINS made a motion to move CSSB 214(STA)                
from the committee with individual recommendations and attached                
fiscal notes.  There being no objection, CSSB 214(STA) moved from              
the House State Affairs Standing Committee.                                    
                                                                               
CHAIR JAMES was interrupted by a person on teleconference who                  
wanted to testify.  Chair James stated that she was not notified SB
214 was being teleconferenced, but said she would accept testimony.            
                                                                               
Number 0405                                                                    
                                                                               
DENNY WEATHERS testified from Cordova.  First she stated she had no            
problems with SB 214.  The January 14, letter to Senator Mike                  
Miller from Mr. Smith indicated persons indicted for a felony will             
not be precluded from obtaining a permit.  If a person had a                   
felony, most type of felonies, you could not have a firearm.                   
                                                                               
Number 0417                                                                    
                                                                               
MS. PARKER replied part of that is accurate, you would have to have            
been convicted of a felony, not charged or indicted.  If you are               
convicted of a felony, there is a prohibition on possession of                 
firearms under federal law and under state law for ten years.                  
                                                                               
MS. WEATHERS asked if that would apply to police officers as well.             
She question if "persons" means everyday citizens or peace                     
officers.                                                                      
                                                                               
MS. PARKER replied everybody falls under that same rule in regard              
to conviction of a felony.                                                     
                                                                               
Number 0430                                                                    
                                                                               
MS. WEATHERS asked if persons indicted for a felony will not be                
precluded, were they precluded before.                                         
                                                                               
MS. PARKER responded she was not sure.                                         
                                                                               
Number 0436                                                                    
                                                                               
MS. WEATHERS suggested the committee check into that and asked Ms.             
Parker to explain the wording, "Persons convicted of some                      
misdemeanor, domestic violence crimes, will not be precluded from              
obtaining a permit."  She questioned the meaning of the word                   
"some".                                                                        
                                                                               
Number 0440                                                                    
                                                                               
MS. PARKER said, "You mean it is applied equally to police officer             
and other individuals who are not peace officers."                             
                                                                               
MS. WEATHERS indicated police officers that have had domestic                  
violence claims can still work and carry a weapon, other citizens              
would be precluded.  Subsistence hunters, that have to carry a                 
firearm to get their food every day, are precluded from having a               
firearm.  She asked again what "some" meant.  "Persons convicted of            
'some' misdemeanor domestic violence crimes will not be precluded."            
She said she would like to see it apply equally.                               
                                                                               
Number 0449                                                                    
                                                                               
MS. PARKER said it was her understanding that it was applied                   
equally.  She stated, "When they are talking about 'some' - a                  
misdemeanor crime of domestic violence definition under federal law            
is different than under state law, and what was incorporated in SB
141 was the federal law definition.  So it didn't include every                
situation and every misdemeanor crime that's covered under state               
law, so that's where the change was made."                                     
                                                                               
MS. WEATHERS indicated concealed firearms will not be prohibited               
from domestic violence shelters that are not state funded                      
facilities. She asked if a sign could still be posted.                         
                                                                               
Number 0468                                                                    
                                                                               
MS. PARKER replied that is correct.  This leaves it up to them on              
whether they want to prohibit firearms within their home or                    
community center, their church, or whatever, rather than the state             
dictating to them that they must prohibit firearms.  It is also up             
to them on whether they want to post and have no firearms.                     
                                                                               
MS. WEATHERS said the only difference is a state facility would                
ban.                                                                           
                                                                               
MS. PARKER replied that is correct.                                            
                                                                               
MS. WEATHERS asked if a state facility could have a police officer             
with a firearm.  She said it would be silly to make it a total ban.            
                                                                               
MS. PARKER pointed out there is an exemption that allows the                   
administrator, of the facility, to give written approval if someone            
wishes to carry a handgun in the facility.                                     
                                                                               
Number 0487                                                                    
                                                                               
MS. WEATHERS noted SB 141 had that exemption, but SB 214 does not.             
"Concealed firearms will not be prohibited in domestic violence                
shelters that are not state funded or in a facility of any domestic            
violence program."  She indicated that was confusing and was                   
satisfied with the old version.                                                
                                                                               
Number 0500                                                                    
                                                                               
CHAIR JAMES suggested Ms. Weathers specifically contact Ms. Parker.            
                                                                               
MS. WEATHERS asked Chair James if police officers were required to             
get a permit to carry off the job.                                             
                                                                               
CHAIR JAMES replied they are required to get a permit at this time.            
                                                                               
MS. WEATHERS stressed she would like the bill to stay the way it               
was.                                                                           
                                                                               
CHAIR JAMES stated SB 141 is already law, everything that has been             
made into law will stay except the one provision where police                  
officers were not included.                                                    
                                                                               
Number 0528                                                                    
                                                                               
ERIC WEATHERS testified via teleconference.  He said peace officers            
should have to obtain a permit to carry concealed as everybody else            
does.                                                                          
                                                                               
Number 0533                                                                    
                                                                               
CHARLES BRANCH testified via teleconference.  He understands this              
corrects a glitch offered by the Alaska Peace Officers Association.            
                                                                               
CHAIR JAMES replied that is correct.                                           
                                                                               
MR. BRANCH indicated he would like to see it remain that peace                 
officers are not to be above the law, and remain consistent with               
the general citizenry.                                                         
                                                                               
Number 0550                                                                    
                                                                               
CHAIR JAMES noted public testimony was completed and indicated CSSB
214(STA) moved from the State Affairs Standing Committee earlier in            
the meeting.                                                                   
                                                                               

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