Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva says his department plans to expand the issuance of concealed weapons permits, citing a surge in violent crime in the area.
The sheriff in a
video on June 2 promised to lower the “good cause” standard required to obtain a carry permit. He added, however, that he doesn’t intend to make the area a “shall issue” region.
In explaining his plans, Villanueva said that last month, Los Angeles County saw a 95 percent rise in murders, a 7 percent jump in rape cases, an increase of 13 percent in aggravated assaults, a 22 percent increase in arson incidents, and a 40 percent uptick in grand theft auto compared to last May.
“We’ve increased our capacity to process CCW permits,” he said. “We made the ‘good cause’ standard achievable, and we’re recognizing that the threat to the residents is increasing, so we’re responding accordingly.”
Villanueva said in April that violent crime has soared in the county this year because criminals have been emboldened by progressive law enforcement policies as well as the “defund the police” movement, which followed the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis police custody.
Last summer, the Los Angeles Police Department’s (LAPD) budget was slashed by $150 million amid protests and pressure to defund the police. Mayor Eric Garcetti, a Democrat, has since proposed a
3 percent increase in the LAPD’s budget to $1.76 billion from $1.71 billion.
The protection of Second Amendment rights has drawn renewed scrutiny since President Joe Biden, who has repeatedly called for tougher
gun restrictions, took office.
According to a
report from the conservative Heritage Foundation, citing data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), “Almost all national studies of defensive gun uses have found that firearms are used in self-defense between 500,000 and 3 million times every year in the United States.
“Additionally, an independent analysis of the CDC’s own internal data on defensive gun uses indicates that firearms are used defensively about 1 million times a year, dwarfing the number of deaths and injuries attributable to their criminal use.”
The U.S. Concealed Carry Association said in a
letter to Biden in February that “record numbers of Americans have been purchasing firearms to keep themselves and their loved ones safe,” adding that “women and minorities are now leading the way as the fastest-growing groups of concealed carry permit holders in the country.”
Jack Phillips contributed to this report.