
DENVER, Jan. 22 (UPI) -- Felons in Colorado can get hunting licenses but may not possess firearms, and gun advocates say there should be an exception for non-violent felons.
Law enforcement officials say there's no reason for felons to get hunting licenses because they are legally prohibited from possessing even a bow and arrows. Still Colorado Parks and Wildlife officers report contacts every year with felons in possession of guns, The Denver Post reported Tuesday.
Dave Kopel, research director at the Independence Institute -- a libertarian think tank in Denver -- says non-violent felons should be permitted to possess weapons and hunt.
"If there is not a problem in practice, don't legislators and law enforcement have more serious problems to worry about in real life?" he said.
Gary Ellis, owner of the hunting-themed website thecoloradohunter.com, said a distinction should be drawn between violent and non-violent felons.
"Some people just screwed up," he said. "No one is perfect."
Kopel said some felons "like some other hunters, don't have enough money to put food on the table without hunting."
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Additional U.S. News Stories | |
MAYS LANDING, N.J., May 18 (UPI) --
A New Jersey woman was charged with murder Friday after police found her husband's body in a closet six years after he supposedly ran off with a girlfriend.
|
HOLLYWOOD, May 18 (UPI) --
Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez could be dating again after photos surfaced of their side-by-side seating at the Billboard Music Awards, TMZ reported.
|
BRUSSELS, May 18 (UPI) --
The European Commission is changing its rules on olive oil served in restaurants to safeguard the consumer, a spokesman said.
|
CHENGDU, China, May 18 (UPI) --
Twin giant pandas born in Spain arrived in their ancestral homeland of China Saturday, officials at a breeding research center in Chengdu confirmed.
|
| Stories | Photos | Comments |
View Caption