Ex-Turlock cop denied concealed carry request despite previous attackMatt Speckman, a former Turlock police sergeant, used to be in charge of processing concealed gun permits. Now retired, he'd like one himself.
"I'm not a gun nut," Speckman said. "But I've been involved in investigations of people now getting paroled who have probably been throwing darts at my picture in their cells."
Speckman, 49, attended the FBI academy, trained at a nationally recognized firearms course, earned an MBA, is studying for a Ph.D, toted a gun for 30 years and screened gun permit applicants for seven years.
Yet Turlock Police Chief Gary Hampton and Sheriff Adam Christianson, both of whom have approved gun permits for politicians and prominent businessmen, turned him down.
Speckman since has moved from Turlock and says he doesn't obsess about his safety. But reports about people who find favor with law enforcement executives despite relative lack of experience, he says, point up the arbitrary nature of concealed gun permits in California, where many agencies endure charges of political favoritism.
***snip***
Neither Christianson nor Hampton could be reached Friday, the same day a Bee article noted that Hampton takes political office into account when issuing permits. Two of seven he's approved are held by Turlock City Council members.
***snip***
Speckman said he knew nothing about Hampton's unique request in 2008 to the sheriff asking him not to issue permits to Turlock residents without first sending them to Turlock police, until reading about it in recent Bee stories. Hampton's request came about the time Speckman retired; Christianson this week indicated he respects the request but retains authority to ignore it.
Read more:
http://www.modbee.com/2010/04/09/1122196/ex-turlock-cop-denied-concealed.html#ixzz0kicH10Nt Guns in Turlock generally go to politicians, people with police tiesTURLOCK -- People in Turlock who want concealed weapon permits might consider running for office.
Of the seven permits issued by Turlock police, two belong to City Council members. And while Councilmen Ted Howze and Kurt Spycher don't feel they got preferential treatment, Police Chief Gary Hampton confirmed that they did.
"I do take into consideration people who hold political office," Hampton said Wednesday, adding that he licensed unnamed politicians when he was chief in Oakdale before going to Turlock in the summer of 2006. His reasoning includes "realizing there is a great potential for an act of violence committed against people who hold office," he said.
Hampton clarified his unique arrangement with the Stanislaus County Sheriff's Department, which has authority to issue concealed gun permits to any resident throughout the county. About two years ago, Hampton asked Sheriff Adam Christianson not to approve permits requested by Turlock residents without first sending them to Hampton's office, he said.
***snip***
That nearly 30 percent of police- issued permits belong to politicians is not "arbitrary or capricious," he said, citing a court-approved test of that standard.
Read more:
http://www.modbee.com/2010/04/08/1120691/guns-in-turlock-generally-go-to.html#ixzz0kidu8LLv Perhaps that's the reason people open carry unloaded handguns in California.