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Butterfly Knife

junkie

Regular Member
Joined
Feb 6, 2010
Messages
65
Location
Menomonie, Wisconsin, USA
I got my permit yesterday and when I was reading the letter it said that I could carry a knife except for a switchblade (which includes a butterfly knife). Where does it say that butterfly knives are not allowed? I really don't understand this part. Butterfly knives are one of the safest styles to carry. Once you latch the handles shut, it will not accidentally open up and cut you like many other knives.
 

Interceptor_Knight

Regular Member
Joined
May 18, 2007
Messages
2,851
Location
Green Bay, Wisconsin, USA
...
941.24  Possession of switchblade knife.
(1) Whoever manufactures, sells or offers to sell, transports, purchases, possesses or goes armed with any knife having a blade which opens by pressing a button, spring or other device in the handle or by gravity or by a thrust or movement is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
 

junkie

Regular Member
Joined
Feb 6, 2010
Messages
65
Location
Menomonie, Wisconsin, USA
I see that part, but it is quite vague. Many knives can be opened with a thrust. A butterfly knife does not have a button to open it. I guess the part that I don't understand is that many knives are opened by pressing a button, spring or other device in the handle or by gravity or by a thrust or movement. About the only knife that doesn't apply here is my grandpa's old timer knife. Any new Benchmade knife could be considered illegal. So would everyone who has any style of new knife be charged with this? Or would just people with butterfly knives? What is the difference really? A knife is a knife in my book. It shouldn't really matter how it is opened. According to this, I would be allowed to carry a three foot sword but not a three inch butterfly knife. I guess I may be trying to understand a politician, which will never happen.
 

Nutczak

Regular Member
Joined
Dec 2, 2008
Messages
2,165
Location
The Northwoods, lakeland area, Wisconsin, USA
You need to understand that many lawmakers no little about anything

I am willing to bet that more than half of the people who are responsible for outlawing a butterfly knife do not even have a clue aas to what it is.

Case in point, a New York legislator who got her panties in a twist trying to outlaw "Barrel Shrouds" on long guns, yet she had no clue what a barrel shroud was, its purpose, or where it was even located, or attached to the firearm. When pressed to answer the question of "What is a barrel Shroud" her answer was "That thingy on the back that flips up"

So take a look at who authored, co-authored, sponsored, and voted on that bill, contact them and ask them what their reasoning is/was and ask them to describe a butterfly knife and why they are so evil. You will most likely be unpleasantly surprised at their answers. Then you know who to vote against during the next election cycle. We need legislators who are in touch with reality and not so damn ignorant if we ever want positive changes to happen.
 

junkie

Regular Member
Joined
Feb 6, 2010
Messages
65
Location
Menomonie, Wisconsin, USA
No where in Wisconsin law does it actually call out a butterfly knife, but in the letter it specifically names butterfly knives. I am not sure where to even begin with this because there is not an actual law against them.
 

BROKENSPROKET

Regular Member
Joined
Jan 5, 2010
Messages
2,199
Location
Trempealeau County
So baasically, any knife that can be opened with one hand is illegal. Being able to open my spring assisted that has a safety with one hand might save my life some day.

We need to get some of our freedom minded Legislators to take a look at Wisconsins knife laws and offering a bill that would clean them up to where they make sense.

What is the logic in allowing me to carry a .45 handgun and not a knife like this?
511817.jpg
 

protias

Regular Member
Joined
Dec 18, 2008
Messages
7,308
Location
SE, WI
So baasically, any knife that can be opened with one hand is illegal. Being able to open my spring assisted that has a safety with one hand might save my life some day.

We need to get some of our freedom minded Legislators to take a look at Wisconsins knife laws and offering a bill that would clean them up to where they make sense.

What is the logic in allowing me to carry a .45 handgun and not a knife like this?
View attachment 7601

I can flip open pretty much any folding knife. So by their reasoning, my Recon 1 would be illegal?
 

rcawdor57

Campaign Veteran
Joined
May 18, 2009
Messages
1,643
Location
Wisconsin, USA
What If A Person Has Only One Hand?

So baasically, any knife that can be opened with one hand is illegal. Being able to open my spring assisted that has a safety with one hand might save my life some day.

We need to get some of our freedom minded Legislators to take a look at Wisconsins knife laws and offering a bill that would clean them up to where they make sense.

What is the logic in allowing me to carry a .45 handgun and not a knife like this?
View attachment 7601

We have quite a few Veterans that have lost the use of an arm that would need a knife that can be opened with only one hand. They legally cannot carry a knife that meets the description in Wisconsin statutes of a switchblade. Just another dumb law on the books.
 

Resdon111

Regular Member
Joined
Jan 27, 2011
Messages
48
Location
Sussex, WI
So take a look at who authored, co-authored, sponsored, and voted on that bill, contact them and ask them what their reasoning is/was and ask them to describe a butterfly knife and why they are so evil. You will most likely be unpleasantly surprised at their answers. Then you know who to vote against during the next election cycle. We need legislators who are in touch with reality and not so damn ignorant if we ever want positive changes to happen.

The whole banning of switchblades and whatnot was a result of fear mongering. It happened back in the sixties, I think, as a response to switchblades becoming a symbol of gang membership ( I always say that people were afraid of West Side Story). A lot of folks that worked to pass the bill probably aren't in office anymore.

That said, even though state law prohibits them they are still banned at the federal level. However "assisted opening" knives were specifically exempted from swithchblade laws in a homeland security bill last year.
 
H

Herr Heckler Koch

Guest
That said, even though state law prohibits them they are still banned at the federal level. However "assisted opening" knives were specifically exempted from swithchblade laws in a homeland security bill last year.
A citation please.

"Homeland security bill" turned my stomach and left bile in my mouth. Merry Christmas. A mountain of coal burning hellfire to Big Sis Incompetano and her enabling familiar.
 

Resdon111

Regular Member
Joined
Jan 27, 2011
Messages
48
Location
Sussex, WI
A citation please.

"Homeland security bill" turned my stomach and left bile in my mouth. Merry Christmas. A mountain of coal burning hellfire to Big Sis Incompetano and her enabling familiar.

US Code, Title 15, Chapter 29, §1243. Manufacture, sale, or possession within specific jurisdictions; penalty

Whoever, within any Territory or possession of the United States, within Indian country (as defined in section 1151 of title 18), or within the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States (as defined in section 7 of title 18), manufactures, sells, or possesses any switchblade knife, shall be fined not more than $2,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.

US Code, Title 15, Chapter 29, §1244. Exceptions

Sections 1242 and 1243 of this title shall not apply to—
(1) any common carrier or contract carrier, with respect to any switchblade knife shipped, transported, or delivered for shipment in interstate commerce in the ordinary course of business;
(2) the manufacture, sale, transportation, distribution, possession, or introduction into interstate commerce, of switchblade knives pursuant to contract with the Armed Forces;
(3) the Armed Forces or any member or employee thereof acting in the performance of his duty;
(4) the possession, and transportation upon his person, of any switchblade knife with a blade three inches or less in length by any individual who has only one arm; or
(5) a knife that contains a spring, detent, or other mechanism designed to create a bias toward closure of the blade and that requires exertion applied to the blade by hand, wrist, or arm to overcome the bias toward closure to assist in opening the knife.


Cited from the U.S House of Representatives U.S Code site
 

scorpio_vette

Regular Member
Joined
Aug 19, 2009
Messages
635
Location
nowhere

barrel+shroud.jpg
 
H

Herr Heckler Koch

Guest
(5) a knife that contains a spring, detent, or other mechanism designed to create a bias toward closure of the blade and that requires exertion applied to the blade by hand, wrist, or arm to overcome the bias toward closure to assist in opening the knife.
[A] knife that contains a spring,... designed to create a bias toward closure of the blade [. And] that requires exertion ... in opening the knife.

Thanks for the citation to a federal law concerning a knife that must be pulled open. Reading skills ...

ETA: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1211/70483.html
 
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junkie

Regular Member
Joined
Feb 6, 2010
Messages
65
Location
Menomonie, Wisconsin, USA
[A] knife that contains a spring,... designed to create a bias toward closure of the blade [. And] that requires exertion ... in opening the knife.

Thanks for the citation to a federal law concerning a knife that must be pulled open. Reading skills ...

ETA: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1211/70483.html


So I guess this brings me back to my originsl thought. A butterfly knife has no spring. So I don't think butterfly knives should even count here. But how do I change something that doesn't exist? Do I write to the DOJ and ask where they found the statute banning butterfly knives? I am pretty sure I will not get anywhere doing that.
 
H

Herr Heckler Koch

Guest
The DoJ crap that came with my license also suggested that I volunteer something to a cop. I will not and it is not law. We have the rights that we enforce.
 

DangerClose

Regular Member
Joined
Jun 12, 2011
Messages
570
Location
The mean streets of WI
We have quite a few Veterans that have lost the use of an arm that would need a knife that can be opened with only one hand. They legally cannot carry a knife that meets the description in Wisconsin statutes of a switchblade. Just another dumb law on the books.
I coulda sworn there was something in WI law that allowed disabled people to have assisted knives.

Butterfly knives are often considered gravity knives.

I think someone would have to try pretty hard to trump up a charge for a thumb-assisted or lever-assisted knife.
 

ccwinstructor

Centurion
Joined
Jul 11, 2008
Messages
919
Location
Yuma, Arizona, USA
Wisconsin simply needs to eliminate the switchblade law and enact knife preemption

So I guess this brings me back to my originsl thought. A butterfly knife has no spring. So I don't think butterfly knives should even count here. But how do I change something that doesn't exist? Do I write to the DOJ and ask where they found the statute banning butterfly knives? I am pretty sure I will not get anywhere doing that.

New Hampshire already did this. Arizona never had the switchblade law, and we enacted knife preemption last year.

Utah enacted knife preemption also.

We need to push for removal of these silly "copycat" laws that are based on fearmongering and old "progressive" mythologies. It can be done. New Hampshire and Arizona are good models.
 

Resdon111

Regular Member
Joined
Jan 27, 2011
Messages
48
Location
Sussex, WI
[A] knife that contains a spring,... designed to create a bias toward closure of the blade [. And] that requires exertion ... in opening the knife.

Thanks for the citation to a federal law concerning a knife that must be pulled open. Reading skills ...

ETA: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1211/70483.html

I think you should ponder that a little more analytically sir. I own my fair share of assisted opening knives. Every one of them fits the description of the exemption while all of my unassisted knives don't. A non assisted knife isn't biased towards closure; you unlock the blade and it moves limply into the handle. Close an AO knife and you have to apply pressure to the mechanism until the bias takes over and pulls the blade into the handle.

Also, think more carefully about the second part of that sentence. "...that requires exertion applied to the blade by hand, wrist, or arm to overcome the bias toward closure to assist in opening the knife." That second half isn't about the actual opening of the knife, its about how its opened. As in not by a button, gravity, inertia, etc but by applying force to the blade which would include something like a flipper or thumb stud. Example: A Microtech double action out the front knife is most positively a switchblade. It opens by the push of a button, but because it retracts back into the handle by power of a spring it is most certainly biased towards closure. If the exemption only said "a knife that contains a spring, detent, or other mechanism designed to create a bias toward closure of the blade", the Microtech wouldn't be considered a switchblade because of that spring loaded closure. Even though it opens by the push of a button, the exemption would have made it legal. The second half is about excluding push button, gravity, inertial, etc knives from the assisted open exemption while allowing knives that open by force applied to the actual blade (flippers, thumb studs, etc).

Stow the attitude.
 
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bluehighways

Regular Member
Joined
Jan 6, 2010
Messages
142
Location
wisconsin
The whole banning of switchblades and whatnot was a result of fear mongering. It happened back in the sixties, I think, as a response to switchblades becoming a symbol of gang membership ( I always say that people were afraid of West Side Story). A lot of folks that worked to pass the bill probably aren't in office anymore.

That said, even though state law prohibits them they are still banned at the federal level. However "assisted opening" knives were specifically exempted from swithchblade laws in a homeland security bill last year.

You are very close to being right on the money. Wisconsin's anti-switchblade law was enacted in 1958 as a knee-jerk response to Hollywood movies portraying biker gangs terrorizing small towns in rural america. In these low-budget films, the nasty biker gangs and individual derelicts often fought each other with switchblades.

The good politicians of Wisconsin used this "scary" situation to their benefit. They stumped around town and state using the "many" dangers of automatic knives to get elected into office. (Something all too familiar to participants on this board) This ridiculous antiquated law has been around for 53 years, and remains today.

Butterfly knives have apparently been relegated into the same taboo hall of shame as the automatic opening knife. Both kinds of knives are fun to have, BTW.
 
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