Concealed Carry Classes
Several classes are available but these 3
are the most popular for those wishing to obtain their Florida CCW. Follow the
links for Course structure and Cost.
Five
Rules for Concealed Carry
1)
Your Concealed Handgun Is For Protection Of Life Only.
Draw it solely in preparation to protect yourself, your family, or an innocent
third party from the wrongful and life-threatening criminal actions of another.
2) Know Exactly When You Can Use Your Gun.
A criminal adversary must have, or reasonably appear to have:
a) the ability to inflict serious bodily injury (he is armed or reasonably
appears to be armed with a deadly weapon),
b) the opportunity to inflict serious bodily harm (he is physically positioned
to harm you with his weapon),
c) and his intent (hostile actions or words) indicates
that he means to place you in jeopardy -- to do you serious or fatal physical
harm.
When all three of these "attack potential" elements are in place
simultaneously, then you are facing a reasonably perceived deadly threat that
can justify an emergency deadly force response.
3) If You Can Run Away -- RUN!
Just because you’re armed doesn’t necessarily mean you must confront a bad
guy at gunpoint. Develop your "situation awareness" skills so you
can be alert to detect and avoid trouble altogether. Keep in mind that if you
successfully evade a potential confrontation, the single negative consequence
involved might be your bruised ego, which should heal with mature
rationalization. But if you force a confrontation you risk the possibility of
you or a family member being killed or suffering lifelong
crippling/disfiguring physical injury, criminal liability and/or financial
ruin from civil lawsuit. Flee if you can, fight only as a last resort.
4) Display Your Gun - Go To Jail.
If you "brandish" your firearm, you should expect to be arrested by
police at gunpoint. You may be charged with a crime anytime your concealed
handgun is seen by another citizen in public, regardless of how unintentional
or innocent or justified the situation might seem, unless you live in an
"open carry" state such as Virginia. Choose a method of carry that
reliably keeps your gun hidden from public view at all times, if this is the
case. Obviously if you live in an open carry state, your firearm may be
visible and no charges will be filed unless it is brandished.
You have no control over how a stranger will react to seeing (or learning
about) your concealed handgun. He or she might become alarmed and report you
to police as a "man or woman with a gun." Depending on his or her
feelings about firearms, this person might be willing to maliciously embellish
his or her story in attempt to have your gun seized by police or to get you
arrested. An alarmed citizen who reports a "man with a gun" is going
to be more credible to police than you when you're stopped because you match
the suspect's description, and you're found to have a concealed handgun in
your possession.
Before you deliberately expose (brandish) your gun in public, ask yourself:
"Is this worth going to jail for?" The only time this question
should warrant a "yes" response is when an adversary has at least,
both ability and intent, and is actively seeking the opportunity to do you
great harm.
5) Don't Let Your Emotions Get The Best Of You.
If, despite your best efforts to the contrary, you do get into some kind of
heated dispute with another person while you’re armed, never mention, imply
or exhibit your gun for the purpose of intimidation or one-upmanship. You’ll
simply make a bad situation worse -- for yourself (see rule #4).
Use of Deadly Force for Lawful Self-Defense
In receiving a license to carry a
concealed firearm for lawful self-defense, you are undertaking a great
responsibility. A license to carry a concealed firearm is not a license to use
it. I am sure you share my hope that you will never find it necessary to use a
firearm in self-defense. If you do, the law will protect you only if you have
acted within the law. Those who are choosing to arm themselves with firearms
should, therefore, be armed with the most indispensable weapon of all ........
knowledge.
Concealed
Carry Facts & Statistics
Today,
there are only 2 states that do not have a right-to-carry system.
States with right-to-carry laws have lower overall violent crime rates, compared
to states without right-to-carry laws. In states whose laws respect the
citizen's right-to-carry guns for self defense the total violent crime is 13%
lower, homicide is 3% lower, robbery is 26% lower and aggravated assault is 7%
lower.
Ten Commandments of Concealed Carry
written by Massad Ayoob
Carrying a lethal weapon in public confers a grave power that carries with
it great responsibilities. Those who lawfully engage in the practice realize
that. Those who are considering “carrying” need to know what those
experienced people know.
If You Carry, Always Carry
The criminal is the actor, and the armed citizen is the reactor. The
typical violent criminal arms himself only when he intends to do something
with it. He picks the time and place of the assault, and initiates the attack.
Therefore, he doesn’t need to worry about self-defense.
The armed citizen, the intended victim, does not know when or where that
attack will come. Therefore, he or she must be constantly prepared and
constantly vigilant. The “pistol-packer” learns to pick a comfortable
holster and an appropriately sized handgun, and “dress around the
firearm.” After a few days, or a few weeks, it becomes second nature to wear
it.
When the defender does not know when the attack will come, the only reasonable
expectation of safety lies in being always armed.
Don’t Carry If You Aren’t Prepared To Use It
There is a great irony that attaches to the defensive firearm. When you
analyze a great many defensive gun usages (DGUs) you discover that the great
majority of the time, the protection weapon does its job with no blood being
shed. Usually, the offender who is confronted with the prospect of being shot
in self-defense either breaks off and runs or surrenders at gunpoint.
Its most important asset turns out to be its power to deter. The irony comes
from the fact that its power to deter is drawn directly from its power to
kill.
Understand that criminals do not fear guns. They are, after all, an armed
subculture themselves. What they fear is the resolutely armed man or woman who
points that gun at them. Criminals are predators, and their stock in trade is
their ability to read people and recognize victims. They are very, very good
at reading “body language” and determining another’s intent to fight, or
lack thereof. In short, you’re not likely to bluff them.
If you carry a gun, you must be absolutely certain that you can use deadly
force. The person who is hesitant or unwilling to do so will, in the moment of
truth, communicate that vacillation to the hardened criminal they are
attempting to hold at gunpoint. In such a case, it is quite likely that the
offender will jump them, disarm them, and use the hesitant defenders’ own
weapons against them.
If, however, that same criminal realizes that he is facing a resolute person
who will, in fact, shoot him if he takes one more transgressive step, he is
most unlikely to take that step.
The irony: The person who is prepared to kill if he or she must, is the person
who is least likely to have to do so.
Don’t Let The Gun Make You Reckless
Circa 1970, armed citizen Richard Davis invented the Second Chance vest,
concealable body armor that for the first time could be worn constantly on
duty, under the uniform, by any police officer. Some alarmists speculated that
“being made bulletproof” would cause cops to become reckless. Those fears
turned out to be totally unfounded. As any officer who has worn armor can
attest, the vest is a constant reminder of danger and, if anything, makes its
wearer more cautious.
It is much the same with concealed firearms in the hands of responsible
private citizens. People unfamiliar with the practice fear that “the trigger
will pull the finger,” and armed citizens will go looking for a chance to
exercise their deadly power. This, too, is a largely unfounded belief.
The collective experience of ordinary, law-abiding people who carry guns is
that they don’t feel a sudden urge to go into Central Park at three
o’clock in the morning and troll for muggers. They learn that being armed,
they are held to what the law calls “a higher standard of care” and are
expected to avoid situations like traffic arguments that could escalate and,
with a deadly weapon present, turn into killing situations.
Like an officer’s body armor, the armed citizen’s gun is a reminder of
danger, a symbol of the need for caution. The late, great big game hunter and
gun writer Finn Aagard once wrote, “Yet my pistol is more than just
security. Like an Orthodox Jewish yarmulke or a Christian cross, it is a
symbol of who I am, what I believe, and the moral standards by which I
live.”
Get The License!
You’ll hear some absolutists say, “No government has the right to
permit me to carry a gun! I don’t need no stinking permit! The Second
Amendment is my license to carry!”
That is the sound of someone asking to go to jail. Like it or not, the laws of
the land require, in 46 of the 50 states, a license to carry. In two states,
there is no legal provision for the ordinary citizen to carry at all. Realize
that things are not as we wish they were; things are as they are. If things
were as we wish they would be, we wouldn’t need to carry guns at all.
If you are diligent about studying carry license reciprocity, and about
seeking non-resident carry permits in states that don’t have reciprocity,
you can become legal to carry in some forty or more states. It can get
expensive, and it can get tiresome. However, allowing yourself to be made into
a felon and being ramrodded through the courts is much more expensive and far
more tiresome.
Bottom line: if you carry, make sure you carry legally.
Know What You’re Doing
You wouldn’t drive an automobile without knowing the rules of the road.
Do not keep or carry lethal weapons for defense without knowing the rules of
engagement. It is a myth to believe that you can shoot anyone in your home.
When Florida rescinded the requirement to retreat before using deadly force if
attacked in public, the anti-gun Brady Center introduced a publicity campaign
claiming that the new law allowed Floridians to shoot anyone who frightened
them. This, of course, was blatantly untrue, but a great many people believed
it to be so because “they heard it on TV” or “they saw it in the
paper.” Such dangerous misconceptions can cause the tragic death of people
who don’t deserve to be shot, and can get good people sent to prison.
It is the practitioner’s responsibility to “learn the rules of the road”
when they take the path toward armed self-defense. There are many firearms
training schools, and at least one, the author’s Lethal Force Institute,
specializes in teaching the rules of engagement. Information is available
under the LFI section at Massad
ayoob, lethal force institute, ammunition sales, handgun ammunition, tactical
gear. It is wise to take local classes that emphasize the rules of
“deadly force decision-making.”
Similarly, a person who opens fire with a gun they don’t know how to shoot
is a danger to all. If you need the firearm for its intended purpose, you will
be under extreme stress. Learn to shoot under pressure. Quick draw from
concealment, safe holstering, proper tactics, and much more are on the
curriculum if you are serious about defending yourself and your loved ones to
the best of your ability.
Concealed Means Concealed
A very few people carrying guns for the first time feel an irresistible
urge to let others see that “they’ve got the power.” First-time carriers
and rookie cops, usually young in both cases, may fall into this trap. It is a
practice to avoid for several reasons.
In most of this society, the only people the general public sees carrying guns
in public are uniformed “protector figures,” such as police officers and
security guards. When they see someone not identifiable as such, who is
carrying a lethal weapon, they tend to panic. This makes no friends among the
voting public for the gun owners’ rights movement—you do not make people
into friends and sympathizers, by frightening them—and can lead to a panicky
observer getting the wrong idea and reporting you to the police as a “man
with a gun.” This can lead to all sorts of unpleasant confrontations.
Moreover, a harasser who has picked you as his victim and knows you carry a
gun can create a situation where there are no other witnesses present, and
then make the false claim that you threatened him with the weapon. This is a
very serious felony called Aggravated Assault. It is his word against yours.
The fact that you are indeed carrying the gun he describes you pointing at him
can make his lie more believable than your truth, to the ears of judge and
jury.
MCRGO, Michigan Coalition of Responsible Gun Owners, is directly responsible
for getting reform concealed carry legislation enacted in their state, and has
been in the forefront of fighting for the rights of armed citizens in that
state. MCRGO’s Steve Dulan, in the organization’s Weekly E’News of
6/23/08, had some cogent points to make on the topic of private citizens
carrying handguns visibly in public:
“Open carry of firearms, subject to MCL 750.234d, it is legal to carry a
visible pistol in public. MCRGO has not adopted an official position on this
subject,” wrote Dulan, who continued, “I agree with Ted Nugent and many
others that it is a bad idea in almost every situation. Tactically, you are
giving up the element of surprise should you face a deadly force situation.
Furthermore, you run the risk of being called in to 9-1-1 as a ‘man with a
gun.’ I have been on police ride-alongs when this call comes over the radio.
It creates a very dangerous situation for all concerned. I do not carry
openly. I have a CPL (Concealed Pistol License) and take care to choose a gun
and holster that, along with appropriate clothing, allow me to keep my gun
concealed unless/until I need it to save a life.”
As cogent and valid as Steve Dulan’s arguments are, it still makes sense to
have legal open carry available as an emergency option. If the wind
accidentally blows your coat open and reveals the gun, an open carry provision
assures you have committed no crime. If someone who has not yet felt the need
to get a concealed carry license suddenly begins getting death threats, open
carry provides an emergency avenue of self-protection until the paperwork can
be processed to acquire the license to carry the weapon discreetly out of
sight.
Maximize Your Firearms Familiarity
The more you work with the firearm, the more reflexively skilled you will
become in its emergency use and its safe handling. If your home defense
shotgun is a Remington 870, then when you go claybird shooting or hunting, use
an 870 pump gun with a barrel and choke appropriate for each task. If you are
a target shooter who uses the 1911 pistol platform at bull’s-eye matches and
have become deeply familiar with it, it makes sense to acquire a concealable
1911 to use as your carry gun, so that the ingrained skill will directly
transfer. If a double-action .44 Magnum is your hunting revolver, and another
double-action revolver is your home defense gun, it makes sense to choose a
carry-size revolver as your concealment handgun when you’re out and about.
Consider training classes or competition shoots where your chosen defensive
firearm is appropriate to the course of fire. This skill-building will
translate to self-defense ability if your carry gun ever has to be used to
protect innocent life and limb. If training ammunition is too expensive,
consider a .22 conversion unit for your semiautomatic pistol or a .22 caliber
revolver the same size as your defensive .38 or .357. The more trigger time
you have with a similar gun, the more confidence and competence you’ll have
with the gun you carry, if you can’t afford to practice as much as you’d
like with the carry gun itself.
Understand The Fine Points
Every state has different laws insofar as where you can and can’t carry a
gun. It’s your responsibility to know all the details. In one state, it may
be against the law to carry a weapon in a posted “no-gun zone.” In
another, that sign may have no weight of law at all behind it. In a third, you
may be asked to leave if your gun is spotted, and if you do not depart, you
will be subject to arrest for Trespass After Warning.
In the state of New Hampshire, it is perfectly legal to carry your gun into a
bar while you sit down and have a drink. If you do the same in Florida, it’s
an arrestable offense, though you’re allowed to have a cocktail in a
restaurant with a liquor license, so long as you’re seated in a part of the
establishment that earns less than 50% of its income from selling alcoholic
beverages by the drink. In North Carolina, you can’t even walk into a
restaurant that has a liquor license, with a gun on. And, perhaps strangest of
all, in the state of Virginia at this writing, it is illegal to enter a tavern
with a concealed handgun, but perfectly legal to belly up to the bar and sip a
whiskey while carrying a loaded handgun “open carry” fashion in an exposed
holster!
A superb current compendium of gun laws in the 50 states can be found at Handgunlaw.us.
Review it frequently for possible changes.
Carry An Adequate Firearm
If you carry a single-shot, .22 Short caliber derringer, you will be
considered armed with a deadly weapon in the eyes of the law. You will not,
however, be adequately prepared to stop a predictable attack by multiple armed
assailants. Most experts recommend a five-shot revolver as the absolute
minimum in firepower, and the .380/9mm/.38SPL range as the minimum potency
level in terms of handgun caliber.
It is a good idea to carry spare ammunition. Many people in their first
gunfight have quickly found themselves soon clicking an empty gun. A firearm
without spare ammunition is a temporary gun. Moreover, many malfunctions in
semiautomatic pistols require a fresh (spare) magazine to rectify. Some fear
that carrying spare ammo will make them look paranoid. They need to realize
that those who don’t like guns and dislike the people who carry them, will
consider carrying the gun without spare ammunition to still be paranoid.
It’s an easy argument to win in court. Cops carry spare ammunition. So
should you.
Carrying a second gun has saved the lives of many good people. When the
primary weapon is hit by a criminal’s bullet and rendered unshootable…when
it is knocked from the defender’s hand, or snatched away by a
criminal…when the first gun runs out of ammo and there is no time to
reload…the list of reasons is endless. It suffices to remember the words of
street-savvy Phil Engeldrum: “If you need to carry a gun, you probably need
to carry two of them.”
At the very least, once you’ve found a carry gun that works for your needs,
it’s a good idea to acquire another that’s identical or at least very
similar. If you have to use the first gun for self-defense, it will go into
evidence for some time, and you want something you can immediately put on to
protect yourself from vengeful cronies of the criminal you were forced to
shoot. If the primary gun has to go in for repair, you don’t want to be
helpless or carrying something less satisfactory while you’re waiting to get
it back.
Use Common Sense
The gun carries with it the power of life and death. That power belongs
only in the hands of responsible people who care about consequences, who are
respectful of life and limb and human safety. Carrying a gun is a practice
that is becoming increasingly common among ordinary American citizens. Common
sense must always accompany it.
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