Current:Home > NewsVideo shows Indiana lawmaker showing holstered gun to students who were advocating for gun control -NextGenWealth
Video shows Indiana lawmaker showing holstered gun to students who were advocating for gun control
View
Date:2025-04-18 01:14:53
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A video taken by a high school student shows an Indiana lawmaker flash a gun to students who were visiting the statehouse to talk to legislators about gun control.
A student from Burris Laboratory School in Muncie told The Associated Press that she and four other students were at the state Capitol on Tuesday to participate in a day of advocacy with Students Demand Action, an arm of Everytown for Gun safety. Alana Trissel, 17, said state Rep. Jim Lucas asked the students what brought them to the Capitol and began to defend gun rights.
Lucas, a Republican from Seymour, and the group then conversed outside the elevator and one of the students filmed the interaction, as was first reported by the Statehouse File, a student journalism news site at Franklin College in Franklin, Indiana.
In the video, Lucas told the students that people have to protect themselves and referenced failures of law enforcement to prevent mass casualties during school shootings in Parkland, Florida, and Uvalde, Texas,
In discussing places where firearms are banned, Lucas said people aren’t “truly free” unless they can defend themselves. A student off camera asked Lucas if he means carrying a firearm. Just over six minutes into the 10-minute video, Lucas said “I’m carrying right now,” and holds open his suit jacket exposing a holstered handgun. It was not immediately clear what kind of gun Lucas was carrying.
“Nothing about someone carrying a gun makes me feel safe,” a student said off camera after Lucas lifted his jacket.
The Associated Press could not immediately reach Lucas on Wednesday and left messages with his press secretary and at his Facebook page. Phone numbers in public records listed with his name were not connected.
In public Facebook posts on Tuesday night and on Wednesday, Lucas didn’t describe his actions. He said the conversation “was respectful, but it was clearly facts, reason and logic vs. plain emotion.”
“I fear for, and pity those that are being indoctrinated to fear that which is their best means of self-defense,” he added in a post Wednesday, in which he also linked to news articles about the Parkland and Uvalde killings in the comments section. “People are also being indoctrinated to depend on government for their ‘safety,’ even when shown that government has clearly ruled that government doesn’t have the duty to protect us.”
Trissel said that the conversation took a “turn for the worst” after he showed the weapon. When asked by a student why he feels the need to carry a gun, Lucas said “to be able to defend myself.”
Trissel disputed Lucas’ claim that the group’s argument was based on emotion, and she said she felt talked over.
“Since a state legislator had shown a weapon, I felt all the more powerless,” she said. “I felt scared. I felt alone. I was timid and almost petrified with fear.”
Indiana lawmakers and their staff are allowed to carry handguns in the Capitol and on complex grounds. A bill introduced this year would extend that right to some statewide elected officials and their staff.
The video shows Lucas telling the students to go to a gun range and learn how to shoot, before Trissel interrupts him and asks if he has lost anyone to gun violence. Lucas said he has defended his family twice with a firearm and did not elaborate.
Lucas eventually begins to walk away and asked, “Anybody else have any rational concerns they’d like to address?” When the conversation began again, he walked away.
Trissel said after speaking to Lucas and other state representatives about gun control, she left the Capitol feeling unheard.
Lucas was in the news last summer when he pleaded guilty to misdemeanor drunken driving charges after police said he crashed his pickup truck through an interstate highway guardrail and drove away. Lucas, who was first elected to the Legislature in 2012, was allowed to keep his position; state law only prohibits those with felony convictions from holding elected office.
Lucas is a prominent supporter of loosening gun laws and sponsored a bill last year that established a state-funded handgun training program for teachers.
According to a report from the The Republic of Columbus, Indiana, Lucas told students at an event in 2020 that gun control laws won’t prevent mass killings at schools and that he was carrying at the moment. He then asked if that scares anyone in the audience, the report says.
He has faced controversy several times in the past for what critics called racist social media posts.
veryGood! (99)
Related
- Billy Bean was an LGBTQ advocate and one of baseball's great heroes
- Early Amazon Prime Day Deals 2024: Shop the Best Travel Deals for Easy Breezy Trips
- As Gunnar Henderson awaits All-Star turn, baseball world discovers his 'electric' talent
- Ranger injured and armed person making threats dies at Yellowstone, park says
- Elon Musk’s Daughter Vivian Calls Him “Absolutely Pathetic” and a “Serial Adulterer”
- Kris Jenner Shares Plans to Remove Ovaries After Tumor Diagnosis
- At half a mile a week, Texas border wall will take around 30 years and $20 billion to build
- Avian flu confirmed in a Colorado farmworker, marking fourth human case in U.S. since March
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- US ends legal fight against Titanic expedition. Battles over future dives are still possible
Ranking
- Tropical weather brings record rainfall. Experts share how to stay safe in floods.
- Massachusetts lawmakers seek to expand scope of certain sexual offenses
- Judge postpones trial on Alabama’s ban on gender-affirming care for transgender youth
- The dinosaurs died. And then came one of humanity's favorite fruits.
- Family of explorer who died in the Titan sub implosion seeks $50M-plus in wrongful death lawsuit
- 4 major takeaways from the Supreme Court's most consequential term in years
- Penn Badgley and Brittany Snow Weigh in on John Tucker Must Die Sequel Plans
- 'American Idol' judge Luke Bryan doesn't know if he or Lionel Richie will return
Recommendation
Breaking debut in Olympics raises question: Are breakers artists or athletes?
California man convicted of murder in 2018 stabbing death of gay University of Pennsylvania student
About the security and return rate of LANDUN FINANCIAL RESEARCH INSTITUTE LTD platform
When is the Part 1 finale of 'Power Book II: Ghost' Season 4? Date, time, cast, where to watch
PHOTO COLLECTION: AP Top Photos of the Day Wednesday August 7, 2024
2024 MLB Home Run Derby: Rumors, schedule, and participants
FACT FOCUS: Trump wasn’t exonerated by the presidential immunity ruling, even though he says he was
Christina Applegate Shares Her Top Bucket List Items Amid Battle With Multiple Sclerosis