University Regulation Concerning Weapons on Campus
Updated: August 15, 20221. Introduction
- 1.1. All university constituents, including students, faculty, staff, and visitors, should respect the institutional mission and help to ensure that a safe and secure environment, which is conducive to learning, is present at all times. Therefore, each constituent should respect and obey the following rules and regulations pertaining to weapons on university property.
- 1.2. This policy does not apply to an individual’s legal right to possess or own a weapon off campus.
- 1.3. Any employee, student, or other member of the university community who violates North Carolina General Statute 14-269.2, “Weapons on Campus or other educational property,” may be subject both to prosecution and punishment in accordance with state criminal law and criminal procedures and to disciplinary proceedings by the university.
2. Weapons on Campus or Other Educational Property
- 2.1. With only limited, expressly stated exceptions, G.S. 14-269.2 makes it unlawful, and in some circumstances felonious, conduct “for any person to possess or carry, whether openly or concealed, any gun, rifle, pistol, or other firearm of any kind, or any dynamite cartridge, bomb, grenade, mine, or powerful explosive on educational property.”
- 2.2. With only limited, expressly stated exceptions, the statute makes it a misdemeanor “for any person to possess or carry, whether openly or concealed, any BB gun, air rifle, air pistol, bowie knife, dirk, dagger, slingshot, leaded cane, switchblade knife, blackjack, metallic knuckles, razors and razor blades (except solely for personal shaving), firework or any sharp pointed or edged instrument except instructional supplies, unaltered nail files, and clips and tools used solely for the preparation of food, instruction, and maintenance on educational property.”
- 2.3. Exceptions within the statute include:
- 2.3.1. A weapon used solely for educational or school-sanctioned ceremonial purposes or used in a school-approved program conducted under the supervision of an adult whose supervision has been approved by the school authority.
- 2.3.2. Armed forces personnel, officers and soldiers of the militia and national guard, law enforcement personnel, any private police employed by an educational institution, when acting in the discharge of the official duties, and armed armored car or courier service guards or hospital or health care facility guards acting in the discharge of the guard’s duties and with the permission of the University.
- 2.3.3. A person who has a concealed handgun permit issued in accordance with Article 54B of this Chapter, or who is exempt from obtaining a permit pursuant to that Article, if any of the following conditions are met:
- (1) The person has a handgun in a closed compartment or container within the person’s locked vehicle or in a locked container securely affixed to the person’s vehicle and only unlocks the vehicle to enter or exit the vehicle while the firearm remains in the closed compartment at all times and immediately locks the vehicle following the entrance or exit;
- (2) The person has a handgun concealed on the person and the person remains in the locked vehicle and only unlocks the vehicle to allow the entrance or exit of another person; or
- (3) The person is within a locked vehicle and removes the handgun from concealment only for the amount of time reasonably necessary to do either of the following:
- a. Move the handgun from concealment on the person to a closed compartment or container within the vehicle.
- b. Move the handgun from within a closed compartment or container within the vehicle to concealment on the person.
- 2.3.4. It is an affirmative defense to university violation if a person, who is otherwise in compliance with 2.3.3 (above), and removed the handgun from the vehicle only in response to a threatening situation in which deadly force was justified pursuant to G.S. 14-51.3.
- 2.3.5. An employee of the University who resides on the campus of the institution at which the person is employed when the employee’s residence is a detached, single-family dwelling in which only the employee and the employee’s immediate family reside, the weapon is a handgun and it is possessed in accordance with appropriate statutory criteria 14-269.2 (i) and (j).
- 2.4. The Chief of the ECU Police Department is responsible for authorizing weapons on campus that meet either 2.3.1. or 2.3.2.
3. Penalties
- 3.1. The university process is a separate and independent process from the criminal justice system. It is not unusual for both the criminal law enforcement authorities and the university to proceed against and punish a person for the same specified conduct.
- 3.1.1. The university will initiate its own disciplinary proceedings against a student, faculty member, administrator, or other employee when the alleged conduct is deemed to affect the interest of the university.
- 3.1.2. A resident student should also understand that he or she may be removed from the residence hall for violating the housing contract regulation pertaining to the possession or use of a weapon in the residence halls (see East Carolina University Campus Living Contract).
- 3.2. Penalties will be imposed by the university in accordance with procedural safeguards applicable to disciplinary actions against students, faculty members, administrators, and other employees. These safeguards are found in the East Carolina University Faculty Manual, the Board of Governors’ policies applicable to employees exempt from the State Human Resources, the policies and procedures of the East Carolina University Student Judicial System, and by the regulations of the State Human Resources.
- 3.3. Unless one of the exceptions enumerated in section 2.3, above, applies, the penalties to be imposed by the university may range from written warnings to expulsions from enrollment and discharge/dismissal/separation from employment. All mitigating and aggravating circumstances associated with an incident involving weapons, including threatening to use a weapon, will be taken into account when considering an appropriate penalty.
- 3.4. In certain instances, established penalties may be reduced due to mitigating circumstances. The established penalty, however, may not be reduced if the violation involves use of a weapon in a manner where bodily harm or injury occurs or where the weapon was involved in another violation of university regulations. In cases where the penalty is reduced, the person should expect some penalty which may include probation, counseling, community service, or loss of certain privileges. A subsequent violation of this policy will result in a progressively more severe penalty, which includes suspension or expulsion of students and discharge/dismissal/separation of a faculty member, administrator, or other employee.
* This PRR is not intended to be an inclusive list of all items that would be considered weapons and, therefore, prohibited by the university.