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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR
Anderson
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/27/07
HB
288
SHORT TITLE
Allow Judges To Carry Firearms In Court
SB
ANALYST
C. Sanchez
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Bernalillo Metropolitan Court (BMC)
Department of Public Safety (DPS)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 288 amends NMSA 1978 30-7-2 by explicitly authorizing validly licensed judges to
carry concealed firearms in a courthouse. The bill further provides a statutory exception to
NMSA 1978 Section 29-19-11, which currently invalidates any and all concealed handgun li-
censes within a courthouse or courthouse facility, unless authorized by the presiding judicial of-
ficer of that courthouse or court facility.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Under the current statutory scheme a judge who is validly licensed to carry firearms is not abso-
lutely barred from carrying a concealed firearm in a courthouse, but rather must first be author-
ized to so act by the presiding or chief judge of that court. The LFC believes that the above stat-
utes, as currently enacted, are wholly consistent with Article 6, Section 38 of the New Mexico
Constitution and NMRA 23-109, which place the administrative responsibility for each judicial
district and metropolitan court district with the chief judge of that district. The amendments set
forth under House Bill 288 are thus both unnecessary and unwarranted.
pg_0002
House Bill 288 – Page
2
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
HB 288 amends NMSA 1978, Section 29-19-11, the statute that renders invalid in a courthouse
or court facility a concealed handgun license. HB 288 proposes to allow judges with a concealed
handgun license to carry concealed firearms as an exception to Section 29-19-11. In addition to
some language clarifications, HB 288 would add a provision to NMSC 1978, Section 30-7-2, to
allow a judge with a concealed carry firearms license to carry a concealed firearm in “the court-
house." HB 288 does not limit this provision to the judge’s courthouse, but provides a blanket
exception for all judges and courthouses.
HB 288 may threaten to violate the separation of powers doctrine. Under current court policy, a
licensed judge may carry a concealed weapon in the court where that judge presides if the chief
judge of the district approves. HB 288 would codify that policy while excluding the requirement
of chief judge approval and any change in court policy would potentially conflict with the pro-
posal in HB 288.
Other states have enacted legislation similar to the provisions in HB 288.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The Bernalillo Metropolitan Courthouse House believes Bill 288, as proposed, would diminish
the administrative responsibilities of the chief judge, who is best situated to determine the advis-
ability of permitting concealed firearms in his or her courthouse. Furthermore, House Bill 288
would have the potential effect of increasing by nineteen the number of firearms in the Bernalillo
County Metropolitan Courthouse, none of which would be required to be disclosed to either
court security or the chief judge. Accordingly, the bill, if enacted, will conceivably aggravate,
rather than alleviate, security concerns in courts.
CONFLICT
The proposed legislation conflicts with Article 6, Section 38 of the New Mexico Constitution
and NMRA 23-109, which places the administrative responsibility of each judicial district and
metropolitan court district with the chief judge of that district. It is this Constitutional provision
that authorizes the chief judge to make determinations such as whether or not to allow judges or
other individuals to carry concealed handguns in the courthouse.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
The present policy of permitting, with the consent of the chief judge, a judge with a license to
carry a concealed firearm will remain in place.
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
Does this bill threaten to violate the separation of powers doctrine.
CS/sb