Concealed carry illegally banned at upcoming DeSantis event
DeSantis campaign, FDLE said attendees cannot be armed.
by Lee Williams
Donors attending the upcoming “Ronald Reagan Black Tie and Blue Jeans BBQ” will have to decide for themselves whether hearing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speak is worth an infringement of their Second Amendment rights.
The $60-per-plate fundraiser will be held Thursday in the Legacy Park Multipurpose Center — a public building owned by the city of Alachua, Florida, which is taxpayer funded and supported.
The barbecue was organized by the Alachua County Republican Executive Committee. It’s their annual fundraiser.
Once attendees purchased tickets online, they were warned in an email that their gun rights would be forfeit:
********** IMPORTANT NOTICE **********
Be aware that all guests will be required to pass through a security check-point at entry which will include scanning by METAL DETECTOR.
********** IMPORTANT NOTICE **********
The warning was signed by Ann Stone, treasurer of the Alachua County Republican Executive Committee.
A Florida Carry member who purchased four tickets for the event told Stone in an email that banning firearms from a public event on public property is illegal.
“Just a quick note, since the facility is city-owned on city property, concealed carry CANNOT be banned during the event. That’s the law. I hope everyone understands this,” the member wrote in the email to Stone.
Stone responded by warning the member DeSantis might pull out if he raised the issue.
“It might be the law but Ron DeSantis is NOT speaking unless there are no guns or other weapons. I think you would be mobbed if you caused him to leave without speaking,” Stone said in her reply.
Delanie Bomar, press secretary for the Ron DeSantis for Governor campaign, did not respond to several requests seeking comment for this story.
Unwritten rules
Reached by phone Monday afternoon, Stone confirmed that it was the Alachua County REC that organized the event. However, she said the DeSantis campaign and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FLDE) gave them a list of very specific rules.
“All I know is that he will not appear if there are guns there,” Stone said. “It’s more his campaign. They’re not organizing the event, but they gave us the rules for having him on board, and that’s the rules they gave us.”
Stone said the Alachua County REC did not receive a written copy of these rules, adding that they were given “vocally.” She also said she possessed a valid Florida Concealed Weapon and Firearm License but was more than willing to be disarmed.
“I am a gun person, but what I see is that Ron DeSantis is an up-and-comer. He’s important and needs to be protected, so I have no problem going without my gun,” she said.
Stone claimed she does not see concealed-carry licensees as a threat but added that “people bought tickets to begin with, and who knows who they could be.”
“We didn’t make the rules,” she said. “But we have to live with them.”
Legal questions
While the concealed carry of firearms is perfectly legal in the governor’s office, it is unclear why it is not legal at a fundraiser held on public-owned property.
If FDLE issued the no-guns directive, they are regulating firearms, which violates Florida’s powerful preemption statute. Signed into law in 1987, the preemption statute only allows the state legislature to regulate guns, and it has severe penalties for any public official who violates the law, including a $5,000 fine and removal from office.
The Second Amendment Foundation’s Investigative Journalism Project sent a Florida Public Records Request to FDLE seeking copies of the rules they use when DeSantis speaks at a public event.
Stone claimed the concealed-carry ban was lawful because the barbecue was no longer a public event, at least not anymore.
“According to someone, they ran it past legal and legal said it was a ‘closed event,’ so it’s okay,” she said. “Members of the public could buy tickets but then we closed it. There aren’t any more tickets available.”
Eric Friday, general counsel for Florida Carry and one of the most experienced Second Amendment attorneys in the state, said local party leaders should look at their own platform, which supports gun rights.
“After 35 years of preemption in Florida, it’s disturbing that FDLE and some people still think they have the ability to limit citizens’ self-defense rights,” he said.
Takeaways
DeSantis is running for reelection against former governor Charlie Crist. While DeSantis has promised to sign a constitutional carry bill, Crist supports Joe Biden’s entire anti-gun agenda and more — including “assault weapon” and standard-capacity magazine bans, as well as repeal of Florida’s preemption statute. To be clear, DeSantis wants to expand our gun rights, while Crist wants even more infringements.
Since his campaign spokeswoman did not return calls, it is not known if DeSantis is even aware that he will be speaking to an audience that was unlawfully disarmed.
Legally armed Floridians are not a threat, especially to a governor whom so many admire. At the very least, this is incredibly bad staff work and terrible optics by members of his campaign.
Going forward, I hope the DeSantis campaign will factor in gun rights when it plans future events. There are more than a few of us who would not willingly disarm even if Ronald Reagan himself was speaking at the Ronald Reagan Black Tie and Blue Jeans BBQ.
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Chances of me attending such an event even if local is slim, but I have a mixed feeling about the "ban". I was under the impression that "no guns allowed" was SOP for events such as these, but I'm not a lawyer and don't play one on the internet.
Jane and John Doe with their gun is not the problem but I am sure there are a lot of nut-jobs out there that would like nothing more than to see someone take DeSantis down.
You know what is really annoying in my opinion is that the same people that are whining about this probably have no problem going to an NFL game disarmed. It is a god thing that we can't bring our guns into a saloon because I wouldn't put it past an NFL fan to shoot up the TV when his team lost.
Good story raising valid questions, Lee.
As a cynical old news editor I don't trust anyone or much of anything, but I DO trust the horse's mouth. Speculating on Ron DeSantis's role in this ban is idle folly: the condition of the horse's teeth is still unknown. The root questions are what's its origin, did/does DeSantis know of the restriction and is he on board with it? All of which, of course, go to how deep are the Guv's true feelings about guns?
Frankly, if he was totally on board with it I'd still vote for him because I don't think it's altogether unreasonable and I'd never vote for a scumorat, especially a weasel like Crist.
I'm a fanatic supporter of Donald Trump, whom I consider one of America's strongest and best presidents, so I seriously worry every time I watch one of his rallies: Will this be the one when some never-Trumper loose-cannon shithead figures out how to kill him?
My old editor's nose smells rusty, dusty aging boilerplate here, rules concocted long ago by the FDLE bureaucrats that are hauled out and waved around every time something like this event comes up.
I have no problem whatsoever with everyone passing through a metal detector, but if someone rings its bell and responds with a valid Florida carry permit why not just let him through? It's the instant lawbreaker who rings its bell and has NO permit who would worry me. Arrest him on the spot.
But we still need answers to those questions I mentioned for the horse's mouth, Lee. Officially credentialed now or not, your tenure as a legitimate Florida newsman qualifies you for five minutes of personal contact with the Guv.
You know he talks one-on-one with big shot slimestream reporters and he can damned well extend that gracious openness to you.
And if you try long enough with no success, then you've got a new column.