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Open carry of weapons now prohibited at WA rallies, Capitol

Openly carrying guns and other weapons is now prohibited at the Washington state Capitol and public protests statewide under a measure signed into law Wednesday by Gov. Jay Inslee.

The new law, which had an emergency clause and took effect immediately upon Inslee's signature, bars people from carrying weapons, either on their person or in their vehicle, while attending a permitted demonstration at a public place or while being within 250 feet of the perimeter of a permitted demonstration.

The bill adds permitted demonstrations, the Capitol and the western part of the Capitol campus surrounding the legislative building to the list of designated places where firearms are already prohibited statewide, including restricted areas of jails, courtrooms, taverns and commercial airports.

"This is a common-sense approach that extends our existing prohibition to open-carry firearms in limited situations to ensure an individual can’t use a weapon to intimidate other citizens,” Inslee said before signing the bill.

Aoibheann Cline, the state director for the National Rifle Association, said that the NRA "will continue fighting this injustice on all available fronts.”

“The right of self-protection should never be denied whether at home, on the road, or in the public square,” Cline said in a written statement.

While openly carried guns have been banned in both the public galleries of the Senate and House chambers and in public hearing rooms at the Capitol’s legislative office buildings since 2015, people can still openly carry weapons in the main public areas of the Washington Capitol and on the grounds of the Capitol campus.

Permitted concealed weapons have been banned from the Senate public gallery since 2018, but they are allowed in the House public gallery. The Capitol building has been closed to the public since last March because of the coronavirus pandemic. But the Capitol campus grounds are open and have drawn protests, including people carrying weapons to oppose coronavirus restrictions, and then, after the election, the outcome.

Under the measure, a person must knowingly be in violation of the law in order for the criminal penalty to apply, and the prohibition does not apply to concealed carry of a firearm by someone with a valid concealed pistol license.

Violation of the law will be a gross misdemeanor, punishable by up to one year in jail and a fine of up to $5,000, or both.

Guns are allowed in statehouses in some form in 21 states, according to a February review by The Associated Press.

Last week, the Oregon Legislature passed a measure that bans guns from the state Capitol.