cadbrowser wrote:Why is there no mandate that specifies all toy guns (Airsoft is a plastic BB...so I would consider them toys; the ones that shoot the metal BBs you can actually do some small game hunting with and I'd not consider them toys per se) to be constructed in such a way as there is no mistake they are actually toys (Like Nerf does)?
This is similar to my feeling. You can't really mandate such a thing, but having a company manufacture ones for use by kids that don't look like *real* guns but still are attractive would be great. Unfortunately, you already need to be 18+ to buy them, and if the kid is into military-esque looking ones, his parents will just buy those instead of the ones that don't look real.
It's a community, public, and enforcement education problem. The airsoft community needs to be aware that these *look* like real firearms, and while the market the industry aims for usually is aware (adults looking to reenact or play a contact sport like paintball with safe replacements for real weapons) and treats them as such while in transport and use, kids aren't nearly as responsible. That's where parents need to be made aware - these 'toys' your kids want to play with look and largely act exactly the same as real-steel weapons, and will be treated as such by law enforcement. The law states that anyone found using or claiming to use a replica firearm (even a stick that *looks* like a firearm, IIRC) is guilty of the crime as though they'd used a real firearm. Now, the cops need to be aware that these things exist, but even the safeguards on one (orange tip) can be faked onto a real weapon and you sometimes can't tell even close up which is real and which isn't (We had a cop hold his sidearm next to one of our airsoft guns and they looked *identical* until you drop the mag).
It's a shame that this played out this way; I'm sure the cop wishes he'd done everything differently but he acted by the book for "some unidentified male in dark clothing carrying an assault rifle just turned to point it at me" - though 13 is a kid age, it's also the age that he could be adult-sized. It's a shame that it's any kid's instinct to turn to face someone shouting at them and not to immediately drop what is likely one of his favorite toys on the spot. It's a shame he wasn't traveling with a group of kids, which would have tipped off the officer that this wasn't a murderous crazy running around. It's a shame that the kid didn't have the rifle in a bag or on his back, where it wouldn't have been *immediately* dangerous if he had turned around.
What needs to happen as a result of this is that *anyone* who uses airsoft needs to treat their equipment as though it were real-steel when out and about, and parents of kids playing airsoft need to make sure their kids know how to treat their equipment and preferably only allow their kids to use obviously fake-looking equipment. And though open carry is legal
in some parts of the US (Not in CA IIRC, which has some of the strictest gun laws in the country; where I live it is legal), I've
never seen anyone do it with a rifle or shotgun; and anyone who is doing it with a pistol has it
holstered and isn't carrying it around drawn.
Lapel cams might be a good idea.