SUMMARY KEYWORDS
Hollow point bullet, gun safety, New Jersey law, self-defense, high penetration, gun inheritance, prohibited person, gun buyback, friendly fire, gun rights, suppressors, carry permit, private property, gun laws, public safety.
SPEAKERS
Speaker 2, Evan Nappen, Teddy Nappen
Evan Nappen 00:15 I’m Evan Nappen.
Teddy Nappen 00:17 And I’m Teddy Nappen.
Evan Nappen 00:18
And welcome to Gun Lawyer. Teddy, New Jersey’s hollow point bullet law has to go. It has to go because it is a gun safety danger. You know how the gun rights oppressionists always talk about, oh, it’s gun safety. It’s a favorite.
Teddy Nappen 00:46
Oh, yeah. They always tote that one. All the time.
Evan Nappen 00:50
Well, the hollow point bullet, we’ll call it ban, although there are certain exemptions, but it basically operates as a ban. It needs to be repealed because it is in fact promoting a gun safety, public safety danger. The idiots that passed this law don’t understand what a hollow nose bullet is and what it does. So, a hollow nose bullet is merely a bullet with a hollow nose, a hole in the front. And what happens is, when the bullet hits its target, it will expand. By expanding, the energy of the bullet fully transfers to the target that it hits. Now, what it means is hollow nose bullets have less penetration, substantially less penetration, and deliver more or fuller energy transfer to the target. So, the idea, if you have to use your gun in self defense, is to end the threat. Stop the threat. That’s what you want to do. And so the hollow nose is very effective at putting the energy into the target and ending the threat. It is the preferred ammunition for self-defense purposes, but New Jersey prohibits it, except with narrow exceptions. And those exceptions include buying it at the store, bringing it to your home and using it for hunting, if legal. But you cannot legally carry hollow nose ammunition in your carry gun. Even though you have a permit to carry your handgun, you can’t have hollow nose bullets in it.
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Evan Nappen 02:31
Now we’ve talked about certain alternatives that are polymer filled or that kind of thing that the State Police have recognized. (https://www.nj.gov/njsp/firearms/firearms-faqs.shtml – Question 20.) But the bottom line is New Jersey law bans hollow nose. Even if you use these State Police acceptable rounds, we, meaning you and me as representing you, particularly when you’re charged with hollow nose, we have to go through the whole routine of explaining why that bullet is not a hollow nose, why it’s separate, why it’s not under the definition, why legally, it’s distinguishable. And that is not only a pain in the ass, but it can lead you to be charged with possession of a hollow nose, be put in the Gun Owner Gulag over possession of a hollow nose. You’ll spend a week in jail innocent because of hollow nose. Then finally, hopefully, we get you out of the Gulag so we can actually fight the case and have the prosecutor toss it. I mean, it’s really bad. So, the best thing to do in New Jersey is not to carry hollow nose because the law prohibits it and restricts it. Even if you’re going to rely on the State Police exemptions, you know, talking about polymer filled, you know, Critical Duty, all that. Sure, it’s out there, and it’s legal. I get it, but you’re still running a risk. Because the folks that enforce the laws are so freaking stupid, and they don’t know the gun laws. They don’t know the exceptions. So, they just arrest now and ask questions later. Your best bet.
Teddy Nappen 04:03
Especially if you have a key ring with a hollow nose bullet.
Evan Nappen 04:07
Yeah, we’ve seen that all right. We actually had that case, yeah, a dummy round. But if you carry full metal jacket or high penetration ammunition, then that’s no problem. Because your full metal jacket, your high penetration rounds, such as super hard cast bullets, are not hollow nose. And you know, Underwood Ammo makes some great stuff, super hard cast. (https://underwoodammo.com/) I don’t know if you have ever checked it out? We call them cherry bombs. They are coated, super hard cast coated solids. And man, they penetrate. They’ll break bone, and they go through. They’re good for stopping large game as well as anything else. But the problem is, when you’re out in the street now, you’re mandated to penetrating ammo. So, you don’t want your bull to go through the bad guy, the person who is the actual threat of death or serious bodily injury that you’re justified in using deadly force upon. You don’t want the bull to go through the target and hit innocent bystanders, but New Jersey mandates, by way of the hollow point bullet ban, that we in fact carry high penetration ammunition in the streets. Well, if they’re serious, which, of course, we know they’re not, but if they’re serious about “gun safety”, then they would repeal the hollow point bullet law so that all these carriers of handguns are not using high penetration ammunition in the streets. This is ridiculous, and it needs to end on behalf of greater public safety. If they really care about that and that’s what they always hawk their gun rights oppression laws, well, here is a law that needs to go for the genuine reason of gun safety.
Teddy Nappen 06:24
I’m kind of curious, just kind of to play out the hypothetical. So, let’s say, God forbid, someone’s in a self-defense shooting and ends the threat. Shoots the bad guy. However, because New Jersey mandates that you have the most highly penetrative round you can carry and if you fire and it goes into a civilian, and now both the purp is dead, and the civilian is dead. What happens then?
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Evan Nappen 06:49
Well, we’re going to have what is so euphemistically called a friendly fire incident, and the friendly fire will have been mandated by New Jersey gun laws. The reason you had the ammunition that you had is because New Jersey wouldn’t let you have the safer rounds. You have to do that, and there’s no way to know when you fire, whether it will penetrate through the target or not. There’s no way to know for sure whether it will make it through, whether it’ll go through the clothing, whether it hits bone, whether the body of the target contains the round. But plainly, with hollow nose, it is far, far more likely that only the target will receive the projectile. As opposed to high penetration ammo, where the risk is increased and a public danger is created by the state of New Jersey, with their idiocy and lack of understanding of actual ballistics and just their emotional basis for passing laws instead of doing what’s actually right. New Jersey is one of the very few places that even bans hollow nose. They’re used successfully by law enforcement and defenders for good reason. They’re less penetrative and they’re way better, too in terms of defending in a home and other places. It’s time for this law to go. It’s time for it to be repealed, and it needs to be repealed in the name of genuine gun safety. Imagine that! Actually doing something for gun safety.
Teddy Nappen 08:38
I kind of look at it as it almost seems like they’re doing it on purpose. Because they want people because, if you because that’s why they were so hard to fight against carry. Because now, if you are ever in a self-defense situation, they’re going to come at you with everything they’ve got. I feel like they want more victims of people where there’s, you know, friendly fire, so they can tack on and make an argument. See, see. He was carrying a gun. He shouldn’t have done that. Now, because of that an extra person is now dead, even though the perp was the one who was a problem.
Evan Nappen 09:04
I put nothing past the evil mindset of the gun rights oppressors. I mean, you know, whether they are just ignorant, or whether they’re intentionally hoping to do a blood dance over it. All I know is that it’s a stupid law, that’s for sure, and it needs to go. It is counter to any claims that they have of caring about public safety and gun safety. It just calls them out on their lies, you know. Unless they get behind taking action on what I’m talking about, and I doubt they will. They’re just full of crap, and it’s just to push an agenda in the motte and bailey style of propaganda, and that’s really all they’re about. They’re not really looking for gun safety. It’s just a farce.
Evan Nappen 10:07
So, you know, I have a letter here, an ask Evan, from David. David asked regarding inheritance. Hi, Evan, as per Episode 182 on gun inheritance. I have multiple guns and multiple children. Can I leave my guns “to my children” and let them sort out who gets what? Or do I need to specify in my will which child gets which guns, and are there any provisions around ammunition inheritance? So, the good news about New Jersey and Federal law is that firearms pass to heirs with no paperwork, no license, no registration, nothing. As long as the person who’s receiving them is not a prohibited person, it can pass to them, and that’s how it works. Now, when you are actually doing your will, you can leave your guns to “my children”, and then the children can sort out and decide who gets what. That’s fine. As long as they’re either beneficiaries of the estate, where you have an executor, and you’ll have multiple beneficiaries, and they have to sort out any other property. Or if you just leave guns to your children,
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they will decide who gets what guns, who wants them, just as if they decide any other property in state. I mean, if it becomes a problem, then the courts could even sort it out. But normally it’s just property. It’s property. It’s property that can be distributed like any other property. And if there are multiple beneficiaries, normally they try to work things out in a friendly way and decide who gets what and that would include the guns.
Evan Nappen 11:53
There’s no inheritance provisions around ammunition, but then there’s no prohibition on that inheritance of ammunition, either. Whereas firearms have all the multiple licensing requirements and other things that might be there. Ammunition, in terms of private inheritance, it’s not part of the statute. It’s not something that is otherwise prohibited. But, of course, no heir, who is a prohibited person, can inherit something that’s illegal. So, if an heir is a prohibited person, even though there’s no paper, no license, no registration, they still can’t take possession. It needs to go then to one of the heirs who is not prohibited, or there are provisions where it has to go to the police if the heirs are prohibited from possession. That’s how that works, and I have it addressed in my book.
Evan Nappen 12:45
If you get my book, New Jersey Gun Law, the Bible of New Jersey gun law, you will see I have an entire chapter dedicated to inheriting firearms. It’ll help you plan your estate when dealing with firearms. There’s so much information in that book. It covers everything you need to know so you don’t become a victim of New Jersey gun laws. Go to EvanNappen.com, and you’ll be able to get your copy today. Make sure when you do that you download and scan the QR code, right on the front of the book, so you can get the 2025 Comprehensive Update. I’ve updated many of the chapters with the newest laws and things you need to know. So, jump on that. You’ll find that great chapter in my book on inheriting firearms. If you want to get the book, go to EvanNappen.com and order yours today.
Evan Nappen 13:35
I also want to mention our good friends at WeShoot because WeShoot is doing something pretty cool. They usually have exciting things, and this is no exception. So, this week at WeShoot, they are offering a special sale, special offerings as well. They have a Canik METE MC9LS, which is slim, sleek and built for control. This extended-slide beauty brings lightning-fast sight tracking and Canik’s signature crisp trigger. They have an LWRC IC-DI. That’s a direct impingement done by LWRC, and it’s a premium build, impeccable balance, and battle-ready reliability in every pull. They also have the Canik SFX Rival-S with wood grips. It’s the competition king, and it just got even classier with rich wood panels, blending speed and old-school style. And they have Mollie Friedman and the AK platform. Molly shows why the AKs rugged design, legendary liability and raw power have earned it a permanent spot in shooters’ hearts. That’s right. So, check out the WeShoot website at weshootusa.com. You’ll see the great photos. You’ll see the great guns. And most importantly, you will see Molly with her AKs. And I bet you want to see that. I know you do. So, go to weshootusa.com, and treat your eyes to a beautiful website with beautiful pictures of the best stuff that we all love. That’s WeShoot. It’s an indoor range in Lakewood. That’s place where Teddy and I shoot, and where we got our training. You can do the same. They offer great training to get your carry permit certifications. You can enjoy that magnificent resource right there in Lakewood, New Jersey. Central Jersey. A great range, great place, and great people. We love WeShoot. Check them out at weshootusa.com.
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Evan Nappen 16:06
Let me also tell you about the Association of New Jersey Rifle & Pistol Clubs. They are the premier gun rights group in New Jersey. They have joined in the lawsuit to take out New Jersey’s ban on silencers and suppressors. You know, the same thing, just different words from different times. But we want to get rid of that law. President Trump is helping along with the federal issues where we have, of course, the big, beautiful bill that removed the NFA tax on silencers and suppressors. Silencers and suppressors are super useful hearing protection tools. They’re also great for a home defense gun so you don’t blow your ears out. They’re great while hunting, too. So, you don’t blow your ears out, and you can listen for game. You can also listen for other hunters even. Great stuff. They should never be banned. Again, it is in fact, mandating public danger by having stupid gun laws that have “safety” as what they create. Safety. It is safer to shoot with a suppressed weapon than not. Yet, the law requires more danger. It is an absurdity. If they were really serious, they being the Second Amendment oppressionists, they would promote genuine gun safety. But of course, they don’t. It’s up to us to promote it. So, we are waiting here with really high expectations, and I’m glad to see the state Association in the fight to allow suppressors to be legal, as they are in just an overwhelming majority of states already.
Evan Nappen 17:48
And that’s not all the Association is doing. They’re challenging the Carry Killer bill, the sensitive places. They’re also going, after the assault firearm law , magazine ban. All that stuff. They’re constantly on a vigilant watch over the shenanigans in Trenton. They stopped the package so far, but we suspect that after the next election, they’re going to be back with those horrible, horrible rights-crushing bills. Trying to make the Gun Owner Gulag chock full of law-abiding gun owners that are held in jail. Not being found guilty of anything. Just today, I had another big fight. Every day I’m fighting in the Gulag to get our people out. It’s disgusting to think that we live in a place that does this, and they want to make it even worse. These are all the things the Association is fighting. You need to get behind your state Association. Go to anjrpc.org, ANJRPC.org, and join today. So, Teddy, tell me what you have for us in Press Checks.
Teddy Nappen 19:01
Well, as you know, Press Checks are always free, and this kind of was making the rounds of story. This comes from NRA-ILA, and it was written up. “Chicago Woman Shot with Stolen Buyback Gun Files Suit”. (https://www.nraila.org/articles/20250811/chicago-woman-shot-with-stolen-buyback-gun-files-suit) I know, right?
Evan Nappen 19:20
Wait a minute, wait a minute. What’s a stolen buyback? You mean the Government bought the gun “back”, which is a gun they didn’t actually own in the first place, but they bought it back. Then that gun that was bought back got stolen from the Government and used in a crime?
Teddy Nappen 19:39 Yeah, apparently.
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Evan Nappen 19:40
What? How did that happen?
Teddy Nappen 19:42 I’m shocked.
Evan Nappen 19:43 How did that happen?
Teddy Nappen 19:44
In of Chicago, of all places.
Evan Nappen 19:46
Oh, come on. Not such an honest town like Chicago.
Teddy Nappen 19:51 I know.
Evan Nappen 19:51
Where the police there are true professionals. Teddy, how did this occur? Tell me.
Teddy Nappen 19:58
Well, it’s quite simple. Chicago’s long running gun turn-in program says all guns are to be destroyed and never returned to the streets, as on their website. Apparently, this woman named Twanda Willingham didn’t get the memo, as she is filing suit after she was shot by Glock 21 that was relinquished to the Chicago Police at a gun turn-in event in December 2023. Then that same gun was used that shot her, and has also been used in two other shootings and was later discovered on a 16 year old.
Evan Nappen 20:39
So, when they track the gun from the moment that their buyback acquired it, where did the chain go with the police acquisition of the firearm? What happened?
Teddy Nappen 20:52
According to the article, it was transferred to the tactical team office following the turn-in event. Later, the Glock disappeared in a room full of police officers.
Evan Nappen 21:02
Oh, the disappearing Glock. That’s one of their defects. They like to just disappear. They do magic tricks. They pull rabbits out of Sigs. All kinds of crazy things. But the disappearing Glock, yeah, that’s a known thing. So, this Glock did its disappearing act and what happened?
Teddy Nappen 21:18
Then the tag that was tagging the Glocks identified as a turn-in was found in the trash.
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Evan Nappen 21:26
Oh, that’s another part of the magic trick of gun buyback Glocks. When the police have control, the tags can just like, you know, a deck of cards. It’s kind of like a card trick the Glock does, right? So, the tag can detach. It’s like the linking rings, the old linking rings. But this is now with gun tags. It was in the trash. Fascinating.
Teddy Nappen 21:47
And to further add to this Columbo episode, the officer that was listed on the inventory records was later shot and killed by a fellow tactical team.
Evan Nappen 21:58
Of course, he was. Of course, he was. How convenient. So, the trail ends of how that gun ever got out of a gun buyback and ended up back on the street, wrecking havoc and actually filtering it to criminals instead of stopping criminals.
Teddy Nappen 22:18
Yeah. And I love how they labeled it friendly-fire accident during police pursuit. Like, all you can think of is that scene where, after Serpico was shot in the face, like, just, oh, friendly fire.
Evan Nappen 22:30
Well, even the term gun “buyback” has always bothered me, because they’re not buying back something that wasn’t theirs. Except for one time that I’m actually aware of a person I know went to police gun auctions in another state and purchased all types of air guns and other things from the police. And then the following month, they sold them back to the police for a huge profit, huge profit, thousands of dollars in profit. So, he is the only person I knew that truly made it a buyback, because they literally bought back guns that were theirs. But normally, they’re just taking guns from law-abiding citizens, and often they’re just doing wonderful upgrades to citizens’ guns. So, you turn your junk guns and buy quality guns, like semi-autos and other things that are just well worth it. Right, Teddy?
Teddy Nappen 23:26
Yeah, and it got me thinking, like, who sparked this idea? The idea of a gun “buyback”? And doing some research, I pulled this up from the Inquirer, by Ryan Briggs, (https://www.inquirer.com/news/gun- buybacks-philadelphia-shooting-crime-20220814.html) Philadelphia is often credited with launching the first gun buyback program. This goes back to 1968 where it was a city council police commissioner turned Mayor, Frank Rizzo, organized.
Evan Nappen 23:57
Frank Rizzo. Yeah, we’ve heard of Frank Rizzo.
Teddy Nappen 23:59
Yeah, yeah. You mean rats. Oh, but continue. Rizzo organized a gun turn in event. By the way, the event didn’t even give you money. You just turned them in. They wouldn’t even. It was he noted the program was not aimed at nabbing criminals, but attracting good citizens interested in doing their civic
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duties of getting guns out of circulation. And for a more ironic note, as you could tell, he, of course, being a Democrat and someone pushing for this idea of a gun buyback, he himself owned guns that went for auction. From the Philly mag, from city life written by Dan McQuaid, apparently, Rizzo owned a Sterling Arms .25 cal.
Evan Nappen 24:47
Oh, my God, a sterling. Wow. He was real high end guy, huh?
Teddy Nappen 24:52
Yeah. And an American Firearms .38 caliber pistol and a baby hammerless .22 short caliber revolver.
Evan Nappen 25:01
Didn’t he, like, steal them out of the gun buyback? Or did he actually spend money for those guns?
Teddy Nappen 25:07
Well, you know, you know. You don’t want to. When you’re, I guess, he didn’t really have good knowledge on firearms. And he thought, well, you know, this will do the trick. Whatever, you know. He just found them in the trash, like.
Evan Nappen 25:22
Oh, man, yeah. So, the hypocrisy never ends. But gun buybacks are just another absurdity that they think and have all the good intentions, and then the reality ends up never what they put forward, right?
Teddy Nappen 25:41
Well, funny enough. So, it was Baltimore later in 1974 who made it, kind of, put it on the nation as they were the ones running one of the largest buybacks out of all of them. It was like 13,000 firearms netted, and that sparked it. So, like, oh, we’ve got to do that, too. And now, currently, this is out of The Journalist’s Resource by Clark Merrefeld. (https://journalistsresource.org/health/gun-buybacks-what- the-research-says/) The left do realize these gun buybacks don’t do anything at all. They even said, handguns recovered in buyback programs are not the type most commonly linked to firearm homicides.
Evan Nappen 26:17
Oh, crap. They’re catching on.
Teddy Nappen 26:19 Yeah, I know right?
Evan Nappen 26:20
Ending the gun owner upgrade program, too bad.
Teddy Nappen 26:27
Although buyback programs may increase awareness of firearm violence, limited resource for firearm injury prevention may be better spent in other ways, instead of paying them and buying the guns. They even went on a full analysis, breaking down the numbers. It goes into by like 2014, they’re even citing
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to the fact that they have wasted the amount of time and money and realizing that it is does not actually.
Evan Nappen 27:02
And New Jersey is a large offender. They will run these buybacks in a county. I once had a case where they claimed that my client did not surrender all his guns. He was hit with a domestic violence order, of which he was not guilty, but it didn’t matter. Because there’s the order to turn in his guns, and they were missing 13 guns that they claimed he had. But they didn’t understand New Jersey’s own permit system. Every time you buy a handgun on a permit, there’s no de- registration. You could sell it the next day to another dealer, and it doesn’t get de-registered. So, we were able to trace every one of those guns to a sale to a dealer that was legal and lawful, except for one. Because one of the guns he turned in to the buyback program in the county that they were holding them. And when I brought out that, why don’t you check your records of guns that were turned in? You’ll find that his gun went to you. OH, we don’t have those records. They don’t have records of the guns that are turned in. So, they end up getting guns that they themselves end the paper trail on, apparently, which is just hilarious. They make it essentially, turn in your guns, no questions asked, and no paper trail. So, I’ll tell you what, folks. It must be the world’s greatest way to get rid of a crime gun when they run those kind of gun buybacks, where you can turn it in and have the state take it. No more needing to throw it in the river, or any of that stuff that the criminals do with their guns. You can just go to a gun buyback in New Jersey, and the prosecutor’s officer is happy to take care of disposing of the evidence for you, with no questions asked. Isn’t that cute?
Teddy Nappen 28:52
It just comes down to this. The only reason they still run these programs is they want to, you know, boiling the frog. Keeping the idea of, oh, a gun buyback, a gun buyback. The article even mentions the goal, “mandatory gun buyback” like in Australia. That is what they want to create. They want people to think, oh, but the only time we’ve already seen it successful is when it’s mandatory. Huh? I wonder what that means?
Evan Nappen 29:18
Which, by the way, the Australian program failed because there’s still a million other guns in circulation there. It did nothing. There’s still. It was a waste. And by the way, they still have tons of crime and violent crime. So.
Evan Nappen 29:18
That is just called confiscation, and they don’t give you anywhere near the what the guns are worth. It’s basically disarmament of a people. So, if you want to have confiscation disarmament, that is plainly what the Second Amendment was all about stopping.
Evan Nappen 29:18
Well, I want to get to one of our most popular segments, Teddy, which is the GOFU. That’s the Gun Owner Fuck Up. And this week’s GOFU is extremely interesting. It demonstrates something that I’m sure many of you are unaware of as a problem. As part of the traps laid by Murphy and company, and the gun rights oppressionists in passing the laws that make it very difficult for people to follow, this
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GOFU is very important. The whole purpose of GOFUs is so that you can learn for free what has been expensive lessons for others. And what I’m talking about here is one particular “sensitive place” when it comes to carrying your lawfully permitted gun. When you’re carrying a handgun in New Jersey, properly in the holster with a concealed carry permit, and you’re all 100% legal, you know that there are all these “sensitive places” that you can’t go. Well, one of the “sensitive places” is private property. The original law said private property, including but not limited to residential, commercial, industrial, agricultural, institutional or undeveloped property, unless the owner has provided express consent or has posted a sign that it is permissible to carry on the premises.
Evan Nappen 31:23
So, this was trying to create that you could not walk on any private property unless there was a sign that affirmatively said, you know, we love guns. You know, guns are welcome. Carry here. So, the Association of New Jersey Rifle & Pistol Clubs, the group that I talk about on every show and tell you to join, they brought a legal action. This is one of their great things. And in the case in federal court, Judge (Renee Marie) Bumb ruled on that provision. She found that when it comes to private property, if it’s open to the public, then you can carry without a problem. But if it’s not open to the public, then you have to have the consent. It’s split. So, let’s say you want to go to 711 and that’s private property. It’s owned by a company that owns 711, right? But it’s open to the public, so you can carry there. You don’t need a sign that gives you permission. But if you want to go in, let’s say, your friend’s house that he owns, then he has to give you permission to carry there. Even if he’s your buddy and owns guns themselves. He has to say, yes, yeah, I give you permission to come in.
Evan Nappen 32:36
Well, here’s the GOFU, folks. Only an owner can give permission. That’s right, only an owner. So, the problem is, if you go to a friend that has an apartment that he’s renting, that person is not the owner, necessarily, of the building. Now, if they happen to own the building, then this would be okay. But normally the renter doesn’t own the building. If your friend is merely renting an apartment and calling it his home, you cannot go in that apartment with your gun, even if the friend gives you permission. You need permission from the landlord, or the owner, not the renter. Otherwise, it doesn’t fly. And if you’re going into an apartment building where you’re stepping on private property that’s not open to the public and they have to buzz you in, again, you better have permission of the owner, not the renter. So, this is a GOFU. It’s a trap. It’s a trap when dealing with persons who live in apartments. They don’t have a problem with giving permission for folks to have their guns there, but it doesn’t matter, because their permission doesn’t cut it under the law, It doesn’t address the required exemption of it being an owner.
Evan Nappen 34:18
This is Evan Nappen and Teddy Nappen reminding you that gun laws don’t protect honest citizens from criminals. They protect criminals from honest citizens.
Speaker 2 34:29
Gun Lawyer is a CounterThink Media production. The music used in this broadcast was managed by Cosmo Music, New York, New York. Reach us by emailing Evan@gun.lawyer. The information and opinions in this broadcast do not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney in your state.
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Known as “America’s Gun Lawyer,” Evan Nappen is above all a tireless defender of justice. Author of eight bestselling books and countless articles on firearms, knives, and weapons history and the law, a certified Firearms Instructor, and avid weapons collector and historian with a vast collection that spans almost five decades — it’s no wonder he’s become the trusted, go-to expert for local, industry and national media outlets.
Regularly called on by radio, television and online news media for his commentary and expertise on breaking news Evan has appeared countless shows including Fox News – Judge Jeanine, CNN – Lou Dobbs, Court TV, Real Talk on WOR, It’s Your Call with Lyn Doyle, Tom Gresham’s Gun Talk, and Cam & Company/NRA News.
As a creative arts consultant, he also lends his weapons law and historical expertise to an elite, discerning cadre of movie and television producers and directors, and novelists.
He also provides expert testimony and consultations for defense attorneys across America.
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