New York Subway Attack Underscores the Failure of ‘Sensitive Places’ Gun Bans

The Grand Central machete attack is exactly the kind of real-world example gun owners should point to when anti-gun politicians insist that “sensitive places” laws make the public safer.

On Saturday morning, April 11, police say 44-year-old Anthony Griffin randomly attacked three people with a machete inside the 42nd Street–Grand Central subway station before NYPD officers shot and killed him when he refused repeated commands to drop the weapon and advanced toward them. By the time police stopped the threat, an 84-year-old man, a 65-year-old man, and a 70-year-old woman had already been badly injured. AP reported the victims’ injuries were serious but not believed to be life-threatening.

That is the ugly truth behind New York’s so-called “sensitive places” regime. New York and other anti-gun states can put all the signs they want on the wall and write all the criminal statutes they want into the books, but violent criminals do not care. They do not stop and think, “This subway station is a prohibited area, so I guess I won’t carry a weapon today.” Criminals do not reconsider because Albany declared a crowded public space off-limits to concealed carry permit holders. They simply go where people are vulnerable and do what they were already planning to do. Meanwhile, the people who actually obey the law are the ones forced to go unarmed.

New York’s Concealed Carry Improvement Act explicitly treats public transportation and transit facilities as “sensitive locations.” The law covers not just subway cars and train cars, but also stations and other transit facilities connected to passenger transportation. State guidance is even clearer: licensed citizens cannot legally carry firearms in “public transportation and transit facilities,” even if they have a concealed carry license.

That means ordinary, law-abiding New Yorkers are expected to enter one of the most crowded and unpredictable environments in the country without the most effective means of self-defense, all because the state has decided that being around a lot of people somehow makes your right to bear arms disappear.

A New York City subway station is not a courtroom. It is not a secure screening zone at an airport checkpoint. It is a public thoroughfare used by working people, families, the elderly, tourists, and commuters who have no choice but to pass through confined spaces, blind corners, stairwells, platforms, and rail cars with strangers every single day. If anything, that environment strengthens the case for lawful concealed carry. It does not weaken it.

Grand Central just proved the point again.

The only thing that stopped the attacker was armed law enforcement. The officers involved deserve credit for ending the attack before even more people were hurt. But it also highlights the deeper problem with “sensitive places” laws. Police did not prevent the attack. Police responded to it. They arrived in time to end it, but not before three innocent people had already been cut up by a man carrying a machete in a place where the law had already ensured the decent people around him were unlikely to be armed.

Anti-gun lawmakers always want the public to imagine an idealized version of these laws where everyone dangerous is disarmed and everyone harmless is protected. In reality, it works the other way around. The violent criminal ignores the law. The intended victim obeys it. The government then congratulates itself for preserving a “gun-free zone” after the blood is already on the floor.

Gun owners have been told that certain places are simply too crowded, too sensitive, too emotionally important, or too administratively complicated to allow lawful carry. But none of those labels changes the basic constitutional question. The right to bear arms does not evaporate whenever politicians decide a place has excessive foot traffic. And from a practical standpoint, density is not an argument against self-defense. It is often the reason self-defense matters more.

The state’s job should not be to monopolize self-defense in places where police, no matter how professional or well-intentioned, will almost always arrive after the violence has started. A constitutional system worthy of the name should trust law-abiding adults with the means to protect themselves, especially in the kinds of public places where random violence can erupt without warning.

That is why the Grand Central attack should not just be treated as another ugly crime story. It should be seen for what it is: a direct indictment of the “sensitive places” mindset that has spread through blue-state gun control regimes. These laws do not create safety. They create victim zones. They disarm the very people most likely to follow the rules and leave them dependent on a government response that, by definition, comes after the attack begins.

New York can keep calling the subway a “sensitive place” if it wants. But words do not stop machetes. Signs do not stop psychopaths. And criminal statutes do not stop men who are already willing to butcher strangers in public. What stops that kind of violence is immediate force.

In Grand Central, that force came from armed police, but only after three innocent people were already bleeding. Law-abiding citizens should not be forced to wait helplessly for that moment to arrive. They should have the right to defend themselves before the damage is done.

SCOTUS Lets Illinois Public Transit Carry Ban Stand, Leaving a Dangerous “Sensitive Places” Theory in Place


About Duncan Johnson:

Duncan Johnson is a lifelong firearms enthusiast and unwavering defender of the Second Amendment—where “shall not be infringed” means exactly what it says. A graduate of George Mason University, he enjoys competing in local USPSA and multi-gun competitions whenever he’s not covering the latest in gun rights and firearm policy. Duncan is a regular contributor to AmmoLand News and serves as part of the editorial team responsible for AmmoLand’s daily gun-rights reporting and industry coverage.


AmmoLand Editor Duncan Johnson

AmmoLand Editor Duncan Johnson

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