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HOME HISTORY DIVISIONS ROSTER PROGRAMS FAQS LINKS FIREARMS SAFETY IN THE HOME
The decision to own a firearm assumes you are prepared to undertake
full-time responsibility for your weapon's safety and security. You must
protect yourself and your family members against misuse of the firearm by
anyone who is either incompetent or unqualified to handle the weapon. In
particular, you must secure your firearm from theft or misuse by children.
If you have a firearm, you must also personally assume full-time
responsibility for its safe handling and use, making sure you know how it
works and how to maintain it. You must also be aware of the circumstances
in which you may legally use a firearm for self-defense.
If you have a firearm you should understand that it is a lethal weapon,
capable of inflicting death or disabling injury on living targets. If not
treated with utmost caution and safety, it can accidentally discharge and
result in tragic consequences for you and your family. Studies show that
accidental firearm deaths in the home occur most often while playing with
the weapon, examining or demonstrating the firearm, or cleaning or
repairing the firearm.
Storage of Sporting Firearms
More than 30,000,000 Americans enjoy using rifles, shotguns and handguns
for hunting and target shooting. When these guns are not being used, they
must be safely and securely stored. This is where firearms safety in the
home begins -- and ends.
The rules for safe storage of sporting firearms in the home are few in
number and easy to follow:
1. Always unload sporting firearms carefully and completely before taking
them into the home. Never load a sporting firearm in the home.
2. Always make absolutely sure that firearms in your home are securely
stored in a location inaccessible to children. Ammunition should be stored
in a separate location, locked, and also inaccessible to children.
3. Always place firearms in their proper storage location immediately
after returning from a hunting trip or a day at the range.
4. Always recheck firearms carefully and completely to confirm that they
are "still" unloaded when you remove them from storage. Accidents have
occurred when a family member has borrowed or loaned a firearm and
returned it to storage while it was still loaded.
5. Always remember:
It is your responsibility to make certain the firearms in your home are
not casually accessible to anyone -- especially curious young people.
Firearms Kept for Home Security
If you feel the need for quick access to a loaded firearm in your home,
you need to take special safety measure. Keeping a gun to defend your
family makes no sense if that same gun puts your family members or
visitors to your home at risk.
In keeping a firearm for home security, your objective should be to create
a situation in which the firearm is readily available to you, yet
inaccessible or inoperative to others. Quick release trigger locks,
chamber/cylinder locks, or special locked cases that can only be opened by
authorized individuals are options to consider.
You must exercise full control and supervision over a loaded gun at all
times. This means the gun must be unloaded and placed in secure storage
whenever you leave your home.
Most fatal home firearms accidents occur when youngsters -- often children
who do not live in the home -- discover firearms that adults thought were
safely hidden or physically inaccessible.
Your most important responsibility is ensuring that children cannot encounter loaded firearms. The precautions you take must be completely effective. Anything less invites tragedy. Submitted by: Sgt. Steven Hoffman (Firearms Instructor) 2009 - Maywood Police Department - All Rights Reserved - All images and text protected by copyright |