Another 16,205 Ohioans were legally authorized to carry a
concealed weapon during the first three months of this year; a huge drop from
2013’s same three-month period.
Meanwhile, 15,832 dually licensed Ohioans renewed their
permits during this year’s first three months. That figure is more than
twice the number of renewals issued in the first quarter of 2013.
All statistics are gleaned from Ohio Attorney General Mike
DeWine’s First Quarter report on concealed carry permit activity. The report is
required by Ohio law and the latest accounting is for the months January
through March.
Every one of Ohio’s 88 counties registered the issuance of new
concealed carry licenses during the first three months of this year while only
one -Champaign County – failed to record any renewals.
By comparison, during the first three months of 2013 the
state’s 88 county sheriffs processed and approved a whopping 31,407 concealed
carry permits and renewed 6,354 concealed carry permits.
For 2012 the number of new concealed carry permits issued
was more in line with the number for the first three months of this year:
16,823. And another 1,300 concealed carry holders saw their permits reissued
for the same period in 2012.
In terms of which county issued the greatest number of new
concealed carry permits during this year’s first quarter, that honor goes to
Lake County. Here Lake County Sherriff Dan Dunlap’s team approved 1,122 new
concealed carry permits during the first three months of this year.
Lake County often leads in this category, with prospective
candidates from this and adjacent counties often citing Dunlap’s methodical and
efficient issuing process as the main reason they chose Lake.
Among other Ohio counties that issued substantial numbers of
new permits during the first quarter of 2014 were Montgomery County (773),
Mahoning County (551), Summit County (484), Hamilton County (780), and Franklin
County (780).
At the other end of the number of new permits issued during
the first three months of 2014 were such counties as Monroe County (33), Noble
County (32), Defiance and Harrison counties (each 29), Perry County (24), and
lastly, Perry County (14).
All that being said, Lake County did not claim title to the most
renewals issued, however. Butler County is credited with this title, issuing
762 renewal concealed carry permits during the first three months of 2014.
To illustrate the growing number of permit holders seeking
to renew their permits, fully 38 of Ohio’s 88 county sheriffs approved more
renewals than they issued permits to first-time applicants during the first
three months of this year.
And one – Ashtabula County - recorded an identical 76 new as well as
renewed concealed carry permits during the first quarter of this year.
The next required reporting quarter for Attorney General
DeWine will cover the months April, May and June. Likely this report will become
available around the middle of August.
During both 2012 and 2013, both more new and renewal concealed
carry permits were processed during their respective second quarters than during their
respective first quarters.
- Jeffrey L. Frischkorn
JFrischk@Ameritech.net
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