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Gun-rights advocates protest New Mexico governor’s order suspending right to bear arms in public

Customers filed out and in of Mark Abramson’s gun shop on the outskirts of Albuquerque as outrage grew over the governor’s order to suspend the best to hold firearms to handle what she said is an epidemic of gun violence.

Abramson agreed that a debate is long overdue on how one can tackle irresponsible, unjustified shootings akin to those in Albuquerque that led to the deaths of an 11-year-old and a teen.

“But to ban the biggest city and essentially the most populous county within the state just because bad people engaged in bad behavior seems overkill,” said Abramson, who can be a lawyer. “It’s not the law-abiding citizen that’s the problem.”

Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham issued the order Friday, saying she felt compelled to act due to recent killings, including the death of an 11-year-old outside a minor league baseball stadium last week and the August shooting death of 13-year-old Amber Archuleta in Taos County.

She has since ignited a firestorm, with calls for more protests Tuesday against her order to suspend the open and concealed carry of guns in most public places.

Several lawsuits have been filed, together with requests to dam the order. No hearings have been scheduled yet in U.S. District Court in Albuquerque.

The sheriff who oversees Bernalillo County and the police chief in Albuquerque said they won’t implement the governor’s order since it violates constitutional rights. State Police spokesman Ray Wilson said late Monday that no citations had been issued by his agency.

Republican lawmakers railed against the order, called on the governor to rescind it and threatened impeachment proceedings. Even some influential Democrats and civil rights leaders typically aligned with the governor’s progressive political agenda warned that her well-intended move could do more harm than good to overall efforts to stem gun violence.

Gun-rights advocates planned one other day of protests Tuesday with a downtown rally.

Mike Leathers, a neighborhood businessman who was at a Sunday rally in Albuquerque’s Old Town, said having more law-abiding residents carrying firearms acts as a deterrent for crime. He faulted the governor for taking away that deterrent and for enacting policies that led to less accountability for criminals.

“Now she’s punishing us for the issue she created,” he said, adding that the perpetual violence in Albuquerque has left residents scared to walk to their cars to go to work within the mornings.

Lujan Grisham defended her order as needed, and rebuffed any calls for impeachment.

“As governor, it’s my job to take motion and put New Mexicans’ safety first — not complain about problems we’re elected to resolve,” she said in a social media post over the weekend on X, formerly generally known as Twitter.

Some critics have said it’s concerning that only those that need to curb gun rights have the Democratic governor’s ear. Top law enforcement officials and prosecutors have said they weren’t consulted before Lujan Grisham sprung on them an order that even she admits can be ignored by criminals. Bernalillo County Sheriff John Allen is amongst those anxious concerning the fallout.

“It is kind of irritating for me to see how this this 30-day ban completely overshadowed the robust conversations that we had with the governor and the office on what we’re going to do to curb gun violence,” Allen said. “We had arguments. But again, we had solutions.”

Still, Archuleta’s father applauded Lujan Grisham’s actions, saying his family was destroyed.

“We are on the lookout for answers and solutions to this issue,” Joshua Archuleta said in an announcement released Monday by his attorney.

The Catholic Church was among the many few who joined longtime gun-control advocates on Monday in support of the order. The Most Rev. John C. Wester, archbishop of the Diocese of Santa Fe, insisted the governor is “not attacking the Second Amendment.”

“I hope to listen to more of an outcry over an eleven-year-old boy killed by a bullet fired in a road rage incident than over the best to hold a gun,” he said. ___

Associated Press writers Terry Tang in Phoenix, Scott Sonner in Reno, Nevada, and Morgan Lee in Santa Fe, New Mexico, contributed to this story.

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