Thursday, May 16, 2024

Let’s Take A Look At New Jersey’s New ‘John Wick’ Concealed Carry Permit Qualifying Standards

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By Lee Williams The Truth About Guns

After the U.S. Supreme Court issued its historic Bruen decision, which obliterated most state restrictions on the public carrying of and changed forever how lower courts should decide -related challenges to anti-gun regulations, many blue states seemingly tried to outdo each other with the number of unconstitutional post-Bruen tantrum laws they could pass. At this, New Jersey certainly lead the way, especially for its residents seeking to carry a defensive firearm. 

Obtaining a New Jersey permit to carry was never easy. It's not easy now. Instead, it remains an expensive multi-step nightmare specifically designed to make the process as difficult as possible for the applicant. 

Now, not only must New Jerseyans bend a knee, pay a fee and beg permission from the Crown to buy back their constitutional rights, they must also pass a difficult shooting test that was designed for police, not civilians, to prove they're capable of exercising their constitutional rights to the 's satisfaction.  

Last month, the Superintendent of the New Jersey State Police in conjunction with the state's Attorney General, issued new requirements titled “Use of Force Interim Training for Private Citizen Concealed Carry.” The document contains written material for in-person classroom training as well as the requirements for an arduous 50-round qualification course that every concealed carry applicant must pass. 

It's easy to get lost in the minutia of the qualification standards and lose sight of the big picture here: New Jersey's concealed carry requirements are a massive infringement of the Second Amendment, which clearly violate Bruen. Does New Jersey test other constitutional rights? Do journalists there need to demonstrate competency before writing news stories? Do clergy in the Garden State need to pass state testing before delivering a sermon? Must voters prove proficiency before they're allowed into a booth? 

Clearly, New Jersey Attorney General Matt Platkin and his state police sycophants want to hold gun owners to a far higher standard than those who exercise other constitutional rights. 

Vintage training 

New Jersey's new CCW qualification standards have been criticized for being too high, too rigid and too much like a police qualification course. The critics are right. This is nothing but a decades-old police qualification course revamped and repackaged for civilians.

It does not reflect current best practices, far from it. The tactics and techniques it requires applicants to master were state-of-the-art in the 1990s. 

Unrealistic score

New Jersey requires a 50-round qualification course, which uses an “-type Q-target,” which looks like an oversized milk bottle. To pass, students must somehow achieve a score of 80% or 40 rounds within the border of the Q-target. 

25 yards 

Applicants must fire four rounds kneeling and three rounds standing at a 25-yard target. This precludes most new shooters from using popular concealed carry firearms, such as smaller and easier to conceal 9mms, .380s or short-barrel revolvers. Sure, there are some who can make consistent hits at 25-yards with any handgun, regardless of its size. However, many new shooters have difficulty hitting beyond 15 yards.

Twenty-five yards is also a totally unrealistic test for civilian concealed carry. While there are certainly a few incredible exceptions, most justifiable deadly-force encounters involving civilians occur at much closer ranges, usually within spitting distance. 

Open carry holster

This qualification course is designed to use an open-carry holster, worn either outside or inside the waistband. However, only officers can openly carry in New Jersey. Civilians must carry their defensive firearms concealed.

Therefore, why test them on their ability to draw and fire from an open-carry holster? Most ranges won't even allow drawing from the holster, so where can civilians train this technique other than dry firing at home? 

Kneeling

In a gunfight, once your knees touch the ground you're stationary, and stationary targets don't survive very long. 

Shooting from the kneeling position is an old-school law enforcement tactic, not unlike shooting a handgun from the prone position. Testing a civilian's ability to shoot from the kneel is lunacy. 

Like drawing from the holster, most private ranges don't allow their customers to practice from the kneeling position. One range I know that did quickly abandoned the practice after a customer positioned their target too close and put five rounds into the ceiling. 

Additionally, there are many shooters who can't kneel because they suffer mobility issues or use a wheelchair. Will they be denied their Second Amendment rights because of their disability? 

Forcing applicants to kneel violates the Americans with Disabilities Act, which requires “state and local governments including their criminal justice agencies to comply with the ADA.” 

New Jersey's AG and its state police should be ashamed of their “ableist” misdeeds. 

Point shoulder 

“On command, from a secured holster position, draw and fire 3 rounds in 5 seconds from a point-shoulder position,” the training document states.  

Those words haven't been spoken at an American gun range for quite some time, yet New Jersey still plans to require its concealed carry applicants to shoot from the point-shoulder position.

The point-shoulder or Weaver stance was developed by Los Angeles County Sheriff's Deputy Jack Weaver in the 1950s. It fell out of favor among law enforcement tactical trainers decades ago, because by blading their body toward the threat it exposed the officer's side, which was not protected by body armor.

While the point-shoulder position has remained popular with some competitive shooters, nowadays, most instructors teach a modified isosceles shooting position, which was first developed by Tier One trainers. It's more natural and not as awkward as the point-shoulder because it makes it easier to absorb recoil and track moving targets.   

Offhand Shooting

New Jersey requires concealed carry applicants to draw using their strong hand, transfer their weapon to their support/weak hand and then fire three rounds in two seconds at a 5-yard target. 

Offhand shooting requires constant practice because it is not a natural skill. While it is a prerequisite for police and military shooters, it has no place in a qualification test for civilians – other than to prevent them from achieving a passing grade. 

Besides, has there ever been a documented defensive shooting where a civilian was forced to transition their handgun to their off hand? 

Takeaways 

Critics of New Jersey's concealed carry qualification have likened it to the “John Wick” film series. While the comparison may not be totally accurate, it certainly deserves a chuckle or two. 

What's not laughable is that anti-gun elected officials have come up with yet another way to infringe upon the Second Amendment by reworking an antiquated police qualification course and making it mandatory for anyone who wants to exercise their right to carry a gun New Jersey has erected an unconstitutionally high hurdle for the average person to to qualify for a carry permit. 

Nowadays, many police departments are understaffed and their response times have suffered. Those of us who live in free states have long understood that we are our own first responders and are responsible for our own safety. Clearly, New Jersey Attorney General Matt Platkin and his pals in the state police don't want their subjects to have this ability to defend themselves. It doesn't fit their narrative. After all, when someone in New Jersey is murdered, they'd prefer just to blame the gun 

Find the original article in its entirety on The Truth About Guns.

4 COMMENTS

  1. If Matt Platkin is such a coward that he is afraid of armed, legal Americans then he should stay far from the south. We are all armed here.

  2. I find myself curious respecting the silly games the state of New Jersey is playing regarding firearms law/regulations. When, I wonder are the courts going to tell New Jersey that there are limits that cannot be gone beyond, and that they have transgressed far beyond those limits.

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