Chad Blair: Hawaii Lawmakers Consider Restrictions On Electric Guns
Tasers and stun guns were legalized barely three months ago and already the law may be tweaked to control their use.
By Chad Blair
March 23, 2022 · 6 min read
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Just a few days before the new year I received an email from a PR consultant with Axon, formerly Taser International of Scottsdale, Arizona. Would I like to come to a training session at a Kalihi shopping center on Jan. 1, where Axon would introduce its products?
The invitation was extended because I had written a column in August on how Tasers and stun guns would become legal this year, making Hawaii the 49th state (according to Axon) to allow the self-defense products. Would lead local folks 21 and older to arm themselves, I wondered.
I took a pass on the training, but there was a lot of interest, as .
鈥淭here has been a lot of questions on what people want from the device,鈥 said Raymond Craig, a former cop who just started up , a business that focuses on training and stun gun education. 鈥淎nd they want it for the right reasons.鈥
That same law 鈥 part of that regulates firearms, ammunition and dangerous weapons 鈥 is now being considered for amendment to specify exactly where a Taser or stun gun 鈥 also known as electric guns 鈥 can be used. It鈥檚 an illustration of how new laws are rarely perfect, so lawmakers have to tweak them from time to time, and sometimes even repeal them.
, as currently proposed, would prohibit most people 鈥 other than law enforcement personnel and members of the Army or Air National Guard involved in emergency relief activities 鈥 from carrying an electric gun 鈥渋n or near certain sensitive locations,鈥 with exceptions.
That list of places initially identified as 鈥渟ensitive鈥 included: in or near an airport, passenger transportation terminal, commuter operations areas, state or county government buildings or any meeting place required to be open to the public for government meetings.
The of HB 1732, which awaits decision-making in the Senate Judiciary Committee , is more specific as to where electric guns would not be allowed:
- a public school including any building, grounds, facility or parking structure;
- a nonresidential building owned, leased or controlled by the state or county, including Iolani Palace, the state Capitol, an office building, a library, a college, a court of law, a stadium or an arena;
- an airport including any terminal, building, structure, facility or parking structure;
- a public mass transit vehicle, mass transit terminal or transit center, except for a bus stop that is located on a public sidewalk; and
- a government meeting place required to be open to the public.
My read of the latest draft is that people who are lawfully allowed to have electric guns could take them to just about anywhere else, including a public park or beach.
HB 1732 drew testimony, including from Todd Yukutake, a security guard who spoke directly to Senate Judiciary on Tuesday. He argued that the new restrictions would only hurt the 鈥済ood people鈥 who want to defend themselves but help the 鈥渂ad guys鈥 commit crimes, especially in high crime areas.
In his written testimony, Yukutake elaborated: 鈥淭here are homeless, drug addicts, crazy people and criminals everywhere and these people have to walk the gauntlet undefended. I do the same by walking a half mile to my car late at night or catching the bus home.鈥
My guess is there is more work to be done on HB 1732. Can electric guns be brought to hospitals, for example? Day care centers? Care homes?
What About Committing Robberies?
Hawaii was not exactly clamoring for electric guns. The Legislature approved the legislation and the governor signed it into law only because the state鈥檚 ban was constitutionally in question due to recent court rulings. So now we have electric guns in the islands.
Tasers and stun guns, if you don鈥檛 know, are handheld devices that administer an electric shock. Tasers shoot small projectiles that attach to an attacker, sending electric current through their body, while stun guns emit an electric charge and, therefore, can only be used if an attacker is close by.
Which brings me to another bill stemming from the legalization of electric guns: . It comes at the request of the Honolulu Police Department and it would amend the offense of robbery in the first degree to include being armed with 鈥 wait for it! 鈥 an electric gun. The statute specifically refers to stealing motor vehicles.
鈥淓lectric guns can cause severe pain and completely incapacitate a person,鈥 according to聽the latest draft of the bill, which is advancing. 鈥淐riminals will begin to use these devices against others to facilitate crimes as they become more prevalent in the community.鈥
And that is something that I also wondered about when electric guns were approved for Hawaii. They are generally not seen as lethal, but it seems obvious that they have offensive as well as defensive possibilities.
鈥楽tand Your Ground鈥
The electric gun bills remains alive even as another, higher profile measure on self-protection was shelved earlier this month at the Legislature.
Described as Hawaii鈥檚 version of , which allows people in homes who feel threatened to stay and use or threaten to use force, called for clarifying when the use of deadly force is justified.
The arguments for and against essentially boiled down to helping protect potential victims versus increasing the potential for gun violence. Proponents included the Hawaii Firearms Coalition and the National Rifle Association of Hawaii, while Everytown for Gun Safety opposed it.
A perceived rise in crime influenced .
鈥淩ecent headlines have continued to demonstrate the need for our community to be able to protect itself,鈥 testified Michael Kitchens of Stolen Stuff Hawaii. 鈥淣ot only while in our homes and workplaces, but anywhere we may frequent.鈥
Others said HB 2464 would have the opposite impact.
鈥淚t has been shown in other states to be an inherently biased law where people of color are more likely to be killed and if the shooter is not a person of color then there is a better chance of not being convicted,鈥 testified Janie Bryan of Moms Demand Action For Gun Sense in America. 鈥淭his is basically a shoot first and ask questions later stance with no requirement to retreat in the face of danger.鈥
Question: Can an electric gun be used to defend a private residence? Probably.
I suspect the interest in having a Stand Your Ground law will not go away. The debate over guns continues even as Hawaii for its gun safety measures, has the lowest rate for overall gun violence and has the 鈥 14.9% of adults in Hawaii have guns at home.
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Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .
Latest Comments (0)
Even if Hawaii allowed open carry we would still have low gun violence because we do not have inner cities like so many places on the mainland. Were it not for these inner cities, many of the states with high gun violence would be quite pleasant.
Arewethereyet · 2 years ago
will a jolt from an electric gun potentially kill someone with a heart condition? what will happen to people with pace makers or implantable cardiac devices? any legislator bother to ask a cardiologist about these scenarios? can we look at a wider picture?
dork · 2 years ago
Hoping for nationwide constitutional carry. If we put as much effort into barring free speech as we do with limiting the bearing of arms, we'd all be neatly muzzled. Limiting constitutional rights is all fun and games until we lose something the majority considers important.
Jay · 2 years ago
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