Tennessee Hearing Protection Act Passes Senate, Scheduled in House

Teddy Roosevelt’s silenced model 94 Winchester

By Dean Weingarten

Dean Weingarten
Dean Weingarten

Arizona – -(Ammoland.com)- A bill in the Tennessee Legislature to remove the ban on gun mufflers (silencers, suppressors) has passed the senate with an overwhelming vote, 28-1 on April 3rd, 2017.

SB 921 is the companion to HB 0011 in the House. The bill simply  removes  the sections of Tennessee statutes that define and include “silencers” as prohibited weapons. Here is the summary of the bill. From legiscan.com:

As introduced, enacts the “Tennessee Hearing Protection Act,” which deletes the prohibition on possession, manufacture, transport, repair, or sale of a firearm silencer. – Amends TCA Section 39-17-1301 and Section 39-17-1302.

Those sections would be amended by the removal of paragraph (5), which lists firearm silencers as part of prohibited weapons.

From justia.com:
TCA Section 39-17-1301

(5) “Firearm silencer” means any device designed, made or adapted to muffle the report of a firearm;

 TCA Section 39-17- 1302

(5) A firearm silencer;

This is a very clean approach to reforming the law. It simply eliminates Tennessee law as it relates to gun mufflers, (silencers, suppressors). Silencers were legal in the United States from the time of their invention in 1902 until they were placed with machine guns and short barreled rifles and shotguns in the National Firearms Act (NFA) of 1934.

Currently, Tennessee has a portion of 39-17-1302 that allows people who have a silencer that is registered with the federal government under the NFA, to have an affirmative defense for their possession. The exception is listed in paragraph (7).

(7) Involved acquisition or possession of a sawed-off shotgun, sawed-off rifle, machine gun or firearm silencer that is validly registered to the person under federal law in the National Firearms Registration and Transfer Records.  (remainder omitted)

The change in the law means that federal registration would no longer be required as part of state law. This potentially decouples the federal requirements from state law enforcement.

SB 291 has been sent to the House, but no action has been taken as of April 18. Now that tax season is past, we may see some movement.

HB 0011, the House version of the bill is scheduled to be heard on 19 April in the Finance, Ways & Means subcommittee, with nine other bills, including HB 1176, a bill to reduce the penalties for carrying a handgun without a permit.  If HB 0011 does not pass out of the subcommittee, it is probably dead for the year. There is not a lot of time left in the legislative session in 2017.

Bills removing silencer bans have been quite popular in the states. 42 states no longer ban the ownership of silencers; 40 allow them to be used in hunting. According to the American Suppressor Association, 18 states have reformed firearms law to restore the right to own suppressors since 2011.

The eight states that still ban silencer ownership are California, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, and Rhode Island.
Tennessee does not have much in common with the those eight, politically.

If SB291 / HB0011 makes it out of the subcommittee, it still has to pass the House and be signed by Governor Bill Haslam.  The bill has a fair chance of passage. If the Governor signs the bill into law, it will go into effect on 1 July, 2017.

2017 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice is included.

Link to Gun Watch

 

About Dean Weingarten:

Dean Weingarten has been a peace officer, a military officer, was on the University of Wisconsin Pistol Team for four years, and was first certified to teach firearms safety in 1973. He taught the Arizona concealed carry course for fifteen years until the goal of constitutional carry was attained. He has degrees in meteorology and mining engineering, and recently retired from the Department of Defense after a 30 year career in Army Research, Development, Testing, and Evaluation.

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Bob

Does this mean if Bill signs the bill, we can buy Silencers over the counter on July 1?

Wayne Clark

But there’s the rub. It has to be signed by the RINO Govenor Haslam! He killed our Constitutional Carry bill & the Open Carry w/out permit bill, after promising to sign them…if elected. I don’t trust him anymore than a fox guarding a hen house.

notalima

Good on you, TN!

Mick

Good for Tennessee