NRA Pushed ‘Stand Your Ground’ Laws Across the Nation
In 2004, the National Rifle Association honored Republican Florida state legislator Dennis Baxley with a plum endorsement: Its Defender of Freedom award.
The following year, Baxley, a state representative, worked closely with the NRA to push through Florida’s unprecedented “stand your ground” law, which allows citizens to use deadly force if they “reasonably believe” their safety is threatened in a public setting, like a park or a street.
People would no longer be restrained by a “duty to retreat” from a threat while out in public, and would be free from prosecution or civil liability if they acted in self-defense.
Florida’s law is now under a cloud as a result of the controversial February shooting of Trayvon Martin, 17, in Sanford, Fla. The 28-year-old shooter, George Zimmerman, who was licensed to carry a gun — and once had a brush — claims he acted in self-defense after a confrontation with Martin, and some legal experts say Florida’s law could protect Zimmerman, who has not been charged. The case has inflamed passions nationwide in part because Zimmerman is Hispanic and Martin was African-American. Baxley, whose state party has benefited from large NRA donations, contends his law shouldn’t shield Zimmerman at all because he pursued Martin.
The NRA has been curiously quiet on the matter since the shooting as the nation takes stock — in light of the Martin case and other similar examples — of whether “stand-your-ground” laws are more dangerous than useful to enhance public safety. The gun-rights organization did not respond to requests for comment. But the group’s silence contrasts sharply with its history of unabashed activism on stand-your-ground legislation. Since the Florida measure passed, the NRA has flexed its considerable muscle and played a crucial role in the passage of more than 20 similar laws nationwide.
Beginnings
The Florida law is rooted in the centuries-old English common law concept known as the “Castle Doctrine,” which holds that the right of self-defense is accepted in one’s home. But the Florida law and others like it expand that established right to venues beyond a home.
Since Florida adopted its law in 2005, the NRA has aggressively pursued adoption of stand-your-ground laws elsewhere as part of a broader agenda to increase gun-carrying rights it believes are rightly due citizens under the 2ndAmendment.
To gain attention and clout at the state level, the NRA has ponied up money and offers endorsements to legislators from both parties. The NRA and the NRA Political Victory Fund, its political action committee, have donated about $2.6 million to state-level political campaigns, committees, and individual politicians since 2003, according to records compiled by the National Institute on Money and State Politics.
And ambitious politicians take note that the NRA is heavily invested and involved in congressional races.
The organization showered the Florida Republican Party Committee with a total of $125,000 in donations between 2004 and 2010. That sum tops the list of all NRA donations to state party committees between 2003 and 2012, according to National Institute on Money in State Politics records. The Senate Republican Campaign Committee of New York was next with $119,700.
The NRA energetically monitors state elections, from governor’s races down to the most obscure special election for a state legislative seat — if the seat is considered crucial — and, as its legislative action website shows, it regularly mobilizes constituents to flood lawmakers with calls and e-mails.
Following the Florida victory, the “Stand Your Ground” movement accelerated. In July 2006, the NRA posted celebratory news on its website, noting that legislators in eight more states — Alabama, Arizona, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kentucky, Mississippi and South Dakota — had already followed Florida’s lead.
“This train keeps a rollin’ — Castle Doctrine Sweeps America,” the NRA’s 2006 message said. The campaign, the group said, “is turning focus from criminals’ rights to those of the law-abiding who are forced to protect themselves.”
Since then, a host of other states have passed various laws expanding the “Castle Doctrine.” Among them: Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee Texas, Utah, Washington and West Virginia.
To spread the word, the NRA said in an Aug. 12, 2005 website posting, it approached the conservative American Legislative Exchange Council, which drafts legislation for like-minded state lawmakers. ALEC, as it is known, adopted model stand-your-ground legislative language in 2005 after Florida’s top NRA representative made a presentation.
And along the way key lawmakers benefited from NRA support. In Indiana, for instance, GOP Gov. Mitch Daniels, who took office in 2005, received $12,400 in NRA donations between 2004 and 2008. Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue got $7,500 from the group between 2004 and 2006. Mark Shurtleff, Utah’s attorney general, received $22,500 between 2004 and 2008.
Case study
But it hasn’t been smooth sailing quite everywhere. An emotional debate in Minnesota this year resulted in passage of a proposal in both houses, which are GOP-controlled, but a veto just this month from Democratic Gov. Mark Dayton. A couple of GOP lawmakers changed their votes from no to yes in the course of the legislative process, state records show.
“We had a few people tell us apologetically and privately that they were afraid of the NRA,” said Joan Peterson, a Minnesota activist with the Northland chapter of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. Proponents didn’t get enough votes to override Dayton’s veto.
Heather Martens, executive director of Citizens for a Safer Minnesota, which opposed the proposal, said that a newly elected Democratic legislator who reluctantly voted yes had faced a tough special election campaign in 2011. At the center of the campaign were accusations that she would be anti-gun.
“Take your best shot,” a Minnesota Republican Party-sponsored mailer against Democrat Carly Melin said back then, urging voters to protect their gun rights from St. Paul liberals.
The Minnesota bill’s Republican sponsors, state Rep. Tony Cornish and state Sen. Gretchen Hoffman — who is now running for Congress against a Democrat who's had NRA support — did not respond to requests to discuss their proposal.
Fighting back
Opposition to the laws has gone beyond gun-control activists. Some of the staunchest critics the NRA has faced while promoting “stand your ground” laws have been state police chief’s and sheriffs’ associations and district attorneys’ groups.
In 2007, the Virginia-based National District Attorneys Association issued a report, “Expansions to the Castle Doctrine,” warning that the phenomenon “could have significant implications for public safety and the justice system’s ability to hold people accountable for violent acts.”
Scott Burns, the association’s executive director, said legislators’ decisions to buck law-enforcement officials on this issue can only be explained by “the volatile issue of guns rights and the 2nd Amendment.” He said many of these laws, in his opinion, have nothing to do with the true intent of the Castle Doctrine.
How can the Castle Doctrine apply, he said, seven miles from your home, at a shopping mall?
In Florida, the Tampa Bay Times reported that “justifiable homicides” in Florida spiked after the 2005 law, from an average of 34 yearly to more than 100 in 2007.
Prosecutors said the law permitted gang-related assailants from being prosecuted after a 2008 shoot-out in Tallahassee that killed a 15-year-old boy, the paper reported. A judge dismissed charges based on the “stand your ground” defense.
In 2010, Trevor Dooley, upset about a skateboarder on a Valrico, Fla., basketball court, marched into a park with a handgun, for which he was licensed and legally able to take into the park. Dooley ended up in a confrontation with David James, who was in the park with his young daughter. Dooley and James scuffled and Dooley shot James dead. In a case that is still pending, he was arrested for manslaughter but also claims he is protected by the “stand your ground” law.
Dan Gross, president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Violence, accuses the NRA of “feeding on fear and paranoia” to expand concepts such as the Castle Doctrine. His group’s research, he said, shows that politicians can survive an NRA stamp of approval more than they think, and that his priority is to convince more politicians the group is a “paper tiger.”
“We are behind closed doors with politicians all the time,” Gross said, “who say they want to do the right thing, but that the gun lobby will ruin them.”
Back in Florida, the soul-searching about the law has now extended to the legislature. Baxley, the sponsor, told CBS News that “sometimes the application or interpretation of its use is the problem.” He defended the law as important to “law-abiding citizens,” but suggested, according to other reports, that perhaps legislators should look at limiting crime-watch volunteers’ ability to pursue people and confront them.
“Nothing,” he said, “is ever finished in the legislature.”

Reprinted by permission from iWatch News
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9 comments on "NRA Pushed ‘Stand Your Ground’ Laws Across the Nation"
March 27, 2012 12:38pm
The NRA makes Al-Qaida look like the Boy Scouts. We have 20,000 to 30, 000 gun deaths per year. When will we wake up to the fact that guns must be responsibly kept safe for hunting with strict laws. Get caught with a gun without license, you get 10 years in jail with absolutely no time off. If you Mom dies, tough luck, your not going to the funeral. We have been drawn down a path that is so wrong to American life that wants freedom without fear of violence and unnecessary deaths. There will be so many unwanted gun deaths that there will be a ban on guns, rightly so.
March 27, 2012 8:02pm
The NRA is a gun rights lobby, so of COURSE they support candidates who also support gun rights. Lest we forget, groups like the Brady Campaign and VPC send money to those who oppose them. This isn't sinister; it's what lobbies DO.
I'm an NRA member and know many others, and I can guarantee you that nobody is celebrating this horrible murder. We're as outraged as anyone! TRYDER has it right: this isn't how "Stand Your Ground" was EVER supposed to work. It's not a flaw in the law, but a flaw in the education of police who are charged with enforcing it. We need to stop blaming anyone but Zimmerman and not be so quick to accept what the media spoon feeds us; THEY don't understand this law anymore than the cops did! Plus, there's a political element. See my blog at: http://djstucrew.livejournal.com/ for in-depth details.
March 27, 2012 8:01pm
Blaming the NRA for "gun deaths" is like blaming AAA for drunk drivers. The NRA teaches safe and responsible gun use! The 2nd Amendment isn't about hunting; we have a right to keep and bear arms for our own self-defense as well. This law was misinterpreted; it was NEVER meant to shield murderers and you won't find an NRA member who is happy about this shooting. Seriously, you need to get educated: if you ban guns, all you'll do is disarm the law abiding. Think gangs and drug dealers will turn in their guns just because of a new law?
March 27, 2012 10:41am
The coverage this law has received has been a terrible distraction from what happened to young Mr. Martin. The left is usualy smarter than this, but, when it comes to gun law we just loose it. I thank the writer for the above article though, as it lays out the basic information. Yet how can anyone say that the "Stand Your Ground" law is responsible for Mr. Martins murder? By all acounts Zimmerman saw Mr. Martin, stalked him, then killed him. At no time was Zimmerman under threat. That sounds like premeditated murder based on race to me. What he, and, others who have invoked the "Stand your ground" law have done is an ABUSE of the law. Of course people should have the right to defend themselves from violence, wether in the home, or elsewhere, if the police or some other help is not present. No reasonable person wants such a thing to happen to them, but, it can, that is what the law is all about. This coverage from the left on this law needs a serious injection of reality and sense.
March 26, 2012 7:05pm
The NRA has as much to do with the 2nd Amendment as the KKK has to do with civil rights. Considering that the NRA is predominately white males should say it all.
March 26, 2012 2:00pm
The NRA and the State Politicains have finally made the mistake that will set them and their Agenda back 100 years. Finally we can find some who will have the GUTS to stand up to the NRA because the time is RIGHT and the SUPPORT is there ferom "We the People."
March 26, 2012 1:39pm
The NRA has lied to their members!
They lied about the President. They claimed the President was a threat to gun ownership. They claimed the President was a communist, a terrorist, a Muslim and not an American citizen.
They did this to strike fear in the hearts of the membership. This resulted in record gun sales. The gun manufacturers are laughing all the way to the bank.
If this was not bad enough the NRA used racism and fear to push through these 'stand your ground' laws.
Stand your ground laws usurp our system of justice, the system of law and order. They promote chaos.
You are no longer innocent until proven guilty. Now you are just plain guilty.
March 26, 2012 11:50am
How long before some NRA thug's relative is the victim? Will it have to come to that before sense prevails?
March 26, 2012 7:44pm
You're waiting for sense to prevail? Good luck with that! ;-)