• On May 2, 1967, openly armed members of the
Black Panther Party marched on the
California State Capitol in opposition to the then-proposed
Mulford Act prohibiting the public carrying of loaded firearms. After the march in the state capitol building, the law was quickly enacted. • On June 16, 2000, the
New Black Panther Party along with the
National Black United Front and the
New Black Muslim Movement protested against the death sentencing conviction of
Gary Graham, by openly carrying shotguns and rifles at the Texas Republican Convention in
Houston, Texas. • In 2003, gun rights supporters in Ohio used a succession of open carry "Defense Walks" attempting to persuade the governor to sign concealed carry legislation into law. • In 2004, the legality of open carry of certain firearms in Virginia was reaffirmed after several incidents in which citizens openly carrying firearms were confronted by local law enforcement. The Virginia law prohibits the open carry, in certain localities, of any semiautomatic weapon holding more than 20 rounds or a shotgun that holds more than seven rounds, without a concealed carry permit. • In 2008, Zachary Mead was detained in
Richmond County, Georgia by law enforcement for openly carrying a firearm. The weapon was seized. The organization
GeorgiaCarry.org filed a lawsuit on behalf of Mead. The court declared that the seizure was a violation of the
Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, awarded court costs and attorney fees to Mead, and dismissed the remaining charges with
prejudice (no possibility of a retrial). • In 2008, Brad Krause of
West Allis, Wisconsin was arrested by police for alleged disorderly conduct while openly carrying a firearm while planting a tree on his property. A court later acquitted him of the disorderly conduct charge, observing in the process that in Wisconsin there is no law dealing with the issue of unconcealed weapons. • On September 11, 2008, Meleanie Hain had a handgun in plain view in a holster at her 5-year-old daughter's soccer game in
Lebanon County, Pennsylvania, leading the county sheriff Michael DeLeo to revoke her weapons permit; Judge Robert Eby, a gun owner and concealed carry permit holder himself, later reinstated it. Hain launched a million-dollar lawsuit against Sheriff DeLeo, claiming he had infringed on her Second Amendment rights. About a year later, her estranged husband shot her dead in her home before killing himself. Police took several handguns, a shot gun, two rifles and several hundred rounds of ammunition from the Hains' home. Meleanie Hain's handgun was found fully loaded and in a backpack near the front door of the home, according to police. A second legal dispute with the sheriff continued after her death, but a federal judge dismissed that lawsuit on November 3, 2010. • On April 20, 2009, Wisconsin Attorney General
J.B. Van Hollen issued a memorandum to district attorneys stating that open carry was legal and in and of itself does not warrant a charge of disorderly conduct. Milwaukee police chief Ed Flynn instructed his officers to take down anyone with a firearm, take the gun away, and then verify if the individual could legally carry it and the safety of the situation. • On May 31, 2009, Washington OpenCarry members held an open carry protest picnic at Silverdale's Waterfront Park, a county park. Attendees openly carried handguns in violation of posted regulations prohibiting firearms at the park. Washington state law allows the open carrying of firearms and specifically preempts local ordinances more restrictive than the state's, such as the one on the books for
Kitsap County. Shortly after the protest Kitsap County commissioners voted to amend KCC10.12.080 to remove the language that banned firearms being carried in county parks. KCC10.12.080 Was amended on July 27, 2009 and as of May 31, 2012 most of the signs in the county still read that firearms are prohibited despite numerous attempts to get the county to update the signs. The amendment is listed as it reads in meeting minutes from July 2009: • In July 2009, an open carry event organized by OpenCarry.org took place at Pacific Beach,
San Diego,
California, where citizens carrying unloaded pistols and revolvers were subjected to Section 12031(e) inspections of their firearms on demand by police officers. The officers were obviously well-briefed on the details of the law, which allowed Californians to openly carry only unloaded guns and allows carry of loaded
magazines and
speedloaders. • On August 11, 2009, William Kostric, a New Hampshire resident,
Free State Project participant, and former member of
We The People's Arizona Chapter, was seen carrying a loaded handgun openly in a holster while participating in a rally outside a town hall meeting hosted by
President Barack Obama at
Portsmouth High School in
New Hampshire. Kostric never attempted to enter the school, but rather stood some distance away on the private property of a nearby church, where he had permission to be. He held up a sign that read "It's Time to Water the Tree of Liberty!". • On August 16, 2009, "about a dozen" people were noted by police to be openly carrying firearms at a health care rally across the street from a Veterans of Foreign Wars Convention in the
Phoenix Convention Center, where President Barack Obama was giving an address. While the Secret Service was "very much aware" of these individuals, Arizona law does not prohibit open carry. No crimes were committed by these protesters, and no arrests were made. • In May 2010,
Jesus C. Gonzalez was arrested and charged with homicide in a shooting which occurred while he was carrying a handgun. Gonzalez had been involved in two prior arrests for disorderly conduct, based on his open carry practice. He filed a lawsuit claiming fourth and fourteenth amendment violations. His suit and appeal were both dismissed. Gonzalez was convicted on lesser charges, including reckless homicide. • The
Starbucks coffee chain has been the target of several boycotts arranged by gun control groups to
protest Starbucks' policy of allowing concealed and open carry weapons in stores, if allowed by local laws. A counter
buycott was proposed for
Valentine's Day of 2012 to show support from gun owners for Starbucks, with the use of two-dollar bills to represent Second Amendment rights. On September 17, 2013 Howard Schultz, the CEO of Starbucks, published a letter asking customers to refrain from bringing guns into his stores. • On February 5, 2017, two self-admitted open carry political activists, James Craig Baker and Brandon Vreeland, walked into a
Dearborn, Michigan police station in order to protest what they felt was unfair profiling from an earlier traffic stop which had resulted from a 911 call after Baker had been seen near local businesses armed and dressed in tactical gear. When Baker entered the police station he was carrying an assault rifle at the "low ready" position, meaning it could be raised and fired at a moment's notice, with a fully loaded and inserted magazine. Baker was also wearing tactical gear and a
ski mask. Vreeland was not armed, but was wearing body armor and carrying a camera on a tripod. The police on duty in the station immediately sounded an alarm that there was a possible
active shooter in the lobby and the two activists were approached from all sides by police with guns drawn. Baker was ordered to set down his rifle and get on the floor, which he did so after a few minor protests. Vreeland, however, angrily confronted the police, stating he was not armed and only had a camera. He refused to comply with officer instructions and was tackled after several warnings to which he replied "fuck you". The two men were arrested and initially charged with misdemeanor crimes, including brandishing a weapon and disturbing the peace. These charges were later upgraded to felonies in court, partially due to a post-investigation which revealed e-mails and text messages between the two men in which they discussed deliberately provoking police, staging incidents to incite lethal force situations, as well as discussing how to elude capture should police attempt to arrest them. Vreeland was eventually convicted on one count of carrying a concealed weapon, one count of felony resisting and opposing an officer, and one count of disturbing the peace. Baker was convicted on a single count of carrying a concealed weapon. Vreeland received a prison sentence of nine months to five years, and began serving his sentence at the
Charles Egeler Reception and Guidance Center in the fall of 2017. Baker received time in county jail and three years probation. • On September 1, 2017 the state of Texas legalized the open carrying of blades longer than 5.5 inches in public. gun rights rally in Virginia on January 20, 2020 • On April 30, 2020, in the midst of the
COVID-19 pandemic, hundreds of protesters—many of them carrying guns—descended on the Michigan Capitol to oppose Gov.
Gretchen Whitmer's imminent two-week extension of the state's
stay-at-home order. Protesters had demonstrated against stay-at-home orders at capitols in dozens of states, but the protests in Michigan were the most extreme example yet, with protesters actually entering a capitol while the legislature was in session and bringing weapons with them. However, the protesters' actions were perfectly legal, not only in regard to open-carrying, but to carrying in the Michigan Capitol, as no rule existed to prohibit it. ==Diversity in state laws==