Oklahoma group seeks to overturn permitless carry law

The Associated Press - August 31, 2019 9:20 am

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) – A group seeking to stop a new Oklahoma law that would allow people to openly carry firearms without licensing, training, or a background check is delivering thousands of signatures in hopes of putting the issue to a vote of the people.
Led by Democratic state Rep. Jason Lowe and gun safety group Moms Demand Action, opponents of the new law gathered more than 50,000 signatures in two weeks ahead of Thursday’s 5 p.m. deadline. The group needs 59,320 signatures to qualify the petition for the ballot, and Lowe said that it wasn’t clear on Thursday afternoon if they had enough.
Called “constitutional carry” by its supporters, the bill would allow most people 21 and older to carry firearms without a license.
It was the first bill signed by new Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt.

 

Latest Stories

No. 9 OU women remain unbeaten with 88-58 victory over UNLV

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Senior Skylar Vann scored 15 points and her sister, freshman Zya Vann,...

Bryce Thompson scores 17 points and OSU beats Miami 80-74 in the Charleston Classic

CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — Bryce Thompson scored 17 points, Marchelus Avery had 15 points and eight...

Freshman Jeremiah Fears, Duke Miles propel OU to 84-56 victory over East Texas A&M

NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — Freshman Jeremiah Fears finished with 20 points, Duke Miles scored 19, and...