The state of Maryland has one
set of laws governing knives. The city of Baltimore has its own rules.
Caught in the middle are people like Gray, who probably have no idea
whether carrying a legally purchased knife can lead to criminal charges.
A
conflict between laws about knives is not unique to Maryland.
Nationwide, knife laws vary in neighboring towns, counties, cities and
states. This mishmash makes it difficult for citizens to comply.
"How's
a person supposed to know what the law is, and how are they supposed to
know that there's a difference in the law" between jurisdictions, said
Jan Billeb, executive director of the American Knife & Tool
Institute, which advocates for greater knife rights in the United
States.Between 2012 and 2014, Baltimore averaged four homicides and 183 aggravated assaults "with edged weapons," which would include knives, compared with 23 homicides and 109 aggravated assaults with firearms, according to data posted by the city on its website.
During
encounters with police, civil rights activists say, black men tend to
fall victim to confusion over knife laws. In fact, Gray is among a
handful of African-Americans to die in Baltimore in recent years after a
police encounter that involved a knife or an edged weapon.
Others are:
—Sheron
Carter Jackson, 21, who wielded a folding knife during a March 2012
domestic disturbance and was shot by the police officer who responded to
a 911 call.—Rudolph Bell, 63, a homeless veteran who, police said, attacked them with a knife or bottle, cutting one officer, when they entered a vacant building in August 2012. A lawsuit complaining about the police treatment of Bell, who neighbors said had mental health issues, was thrown out of court.
—George Wells III, 25, who
was fatally shot six times in March 2012 during an altercation with a
police officer while armed with an edged weapon. Wells' family filed a
wrongful death lawsuit last year, saying he was shot in the back from 20
feet away. That case is supposed to go to trial in September.
Barbara
Arnwine, executive director of the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights
Under Law, said knife possession charges often amount to "packing the
case" against a suspect."We see it all the time," Arnwine said. "I've had all kinds of people being accused of having a dangerous weapon, and you go, 'What weapon?' And you look at what was classified as the weapon and you have to laugh."
Former
federal prosecutor and defense attorney Bill Thomas in Atlanta said
it's common for police to stop people first and then attempt to develop
probable cause for crimes. Thomas said Gray probably was in the wrong
place at the wrong time. "He ran. Cops chased him and when they caught
him he had to take a charge on the knife. Happens every day," Thomas
said.
Six Baltimore officers
have been charged in the death of Gray, 25, who died of a spinal cord
injury roughly a week after he was handcuffed and put in the back of a
police van. What was described as "a spring assisted, one hand-operated
knife" was found on Gray during a search. Authorities have not revealed a
detailed description of the knife publicly.
Baltimore's
top prosecutor, Marilyn Mosby, has said the knife in Gray's case is
considered legal. Under Maryland law, penknives without "switchblades"
are not considered weapons. But Maryland law does not specifically
define what a switchblade is, leaving courts to make that
interpretation. In Baltimore, it is illegal to "sell, carry, or possess
any knife with an automatic spring or other device for opening and/or
closing the blade."
Baltimore police have argued that Gray's knife
was illegal inside city limits. One of the officers' lawyers says the
knife may have been illegal under state law as well.
Doug
Ritter, founder and chair of Knife Rights Inc., said most knife experts
would disagree that Gray's knife was illegal, even under Baltimore law,
but there's no single definition. "It's ridiculous that someone
traveling through a metropolitan area can go through a dozen city lines
crossing a metropolitan lines and have to deal with a half a dozen law
regarding the knife in his pocket," Ritter said.
Knife
right groups are fighting for state pre-emption knife laws, which would
stop towns, cities and counties from enacting knife laws different from
what has been approved by the state. Currently, Alaska, Arizona,
Georgia, Kansas, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Utah have state
knife pre-emption laws. Colorado, New Mexico, South Dakota and Wyoming
also have laws that prevent local jurisdictions from going beyond state
knife laws, Billeb said.
Knife
Rights has been fighting in court with New York City over its knife
laws, saying police have arrested people for carrying common folding
knives by claiming they are illegal switchblade or gravity knives, whose
blade will fall into an open position if a button or switch is pressed.
In
2013, firearms were used in 69 percent of homicides nationally, while
knives or other cutting instruments were used only 12.2 percent of
homicide deaths, according to a national crime report from the Justice
Department and FBI.
Online:
List of state knife laws provided by the American Knife & Tool Institute: http://tinyurl.com/ohoe6l4
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