Posted November 6, 2017 10:30 am by Comments

By Christen Smith

Federal background checks tripled last month in the nation’s capitol after city officials said they wouldn’t appeal a circuit court ruling on its concealed carry law.
Some 217 Washington, D.C. residents submitted applications to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System in October. More than two-thirds sought concealed handgun licenses, according to federal data, compared with just one permit application the month before. In October 2016 — the busiest year on record for NICS, and by proxy, gun sales — no one applied for a license.
The explosion of background checks follows city council’s Oct.5 decision to drop its appeal in the ongoing legal battle of Wrenn v. District of Columbia, fearing a loss at the Supreme Court could further loosen gun regulations across the country — just as the landmark decision in District of Columbia v. Heller did a decade ago.
A U.S. District Court of Appeals panel said earlier this month it would not reconsider the July 2-1 decision in Wrenn blocking enforcement of the city’s requirement that residents demonstrate “a good reason” for needing a concealed handgun permit. The ruling deemed parts of Washington’s permitting system — one of the toughest in the nation — unconstitutional. The Washington Post reports the city denied  77 percent of permit applications based on the “good

Source: Guns.com

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