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DEMOCRACY
US capital votes to allow concealed firearms
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Sept 23, 2014


Police in US capital put body cameras to the test
Washington (AFP) Sept 24, 2014 - Washington's city police force began putting body cameras to the test Wednesday, making the US capital the latest to use video technology as a routine part of law enforcement.

Under a $1 million program, volunteers within the Metropolitan Police Department will try out five different kinds of body cameras, before the city decides which ones work best.

Plans call for the District of Columbia to acquire 250 cameras, which officers would activate every time they respond to a call or make a traffic stop, police chief Cathy Lanier said.

"It's very rare that we're not being videotaped somewhere by somebody anyway," she told a city hall press conference. "We're the last people to get cameras, right?"

More and more US cities are adopting body cameras, with interest surging after the fatal police shooting in August of an unarmed black teenager in a Missouri town that didn't use the devices.

Mayor Vincent Gray said Washington initiated its program about 18 months ago, well before the August 9 killing of 18-year-old Michael Brown in the St Louis suburb of Ferguson.

Lanier expected body cameras to slash the time spent by supervisors investigating citizens' complaints and discourage individuals from trying to assault a police officer.

City council members voted unanimously but reluctantly Tuesday to allow residents and visitors alike to carry concealed weapons n the streets of the US capital.

The measure replaces Washington's longstanding ban on carrying firearms in public, which a federal judge in July declared unconstitutional.

"We really don't want to move forward with allowing more guns in the District of Columbia," said council member Muriel Bowser, a front-runner in the city's mayoral election in November.

"But we all know we have to be compliant with what the courts say," she said, quoted by The Washington Post newspaper.

Washington outlawed public ownership of firearms in the mid-1970s, until the US Supreme Court ruled in 2008 that the ban violated Americans' constitutional right "to keep and bear arms."

Strict regulation remained in place, however, until July when a US District Court judge ruled that a prohibition on carrying guns in public also violated the US Constitution.

Tough gun laws are credited in part with helping to bring down Washington's once-notorious homicide rate, with just over 100 murders reported last year.

Tuesday's vote came amid the aftershock of a major security breach Friday when a former US army soldier, carrying a small folding knife, jumped over a fence and into the White House.

Prosecutors revealed Monday in court that the accused, Omar Gonzalez, had more than 800 rounds of ammunition in his car, and had previously been arrested in Virgina with a sawed-off shotgun, among other firearms.

Under the city's new legislation, gun-owners would still have to apply for a permit to carry a firearm in public, and show police that they have good reason to do so.

It would also remain illegal to carry a gun inside schools, hospital, government buildings, public transit, sports venues and anywhere within 1,000 feet (300 meters) of a dignitary under police protection.

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