NRA Leaders

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Member Profile

Sean Maloney

Former Board Member

Sean Maloney

Former Board Member

Biography

Sean Maloney is an attorney and the legislative director of Buckeye Firearms Association. He is the NRA’s Election Volunteer Coordinator for Ohio’s 8th Congressional District and a certified NRA firearms instructor. Maloney serves on the NRA’s Grassroots Development Committee and was inducted into the NRA-ILA Election Volunteer Coordinator Hall of Fame in 2011. He lives in West Chester, Ohio.

 


All Statements (4 total)

Statements by Category (4 total)

  • Vigilantism

    Sources [1]

  • Education
    On May 17, 2015, Maloney expressed his support for Ohio HB 48 in an interview with the Record-Courier. HB 48 would allow the carrying of concealed firearms into churches, daycare centers, private aircraft, college campuses and government buildings. "By allowing a potential victim to defend their own life in more places, it makes law-abiding citizens safer, deters would-be mass murderers and protects the public in general," Maloney told the Courier.

    Sources [1]

  • Religion
    On May 17, 2015, Maloney expressed his support for Ohio HB 48 in an interview with the Record-Courier. HB 48 would allow the carrying of concealed firearms into churches, daycare centers, private aircraft, college campuses and government buildings. "By allowing a potential victim to defend their own life in more places, it makes law-abiding citizens safer, deters would-be mass murderers and protects the public in general," Maloney told the Courier.

    Sources [1]

  • Vigilantism
    On May 17, 2015, Maloney expressed his support for Ohio HB 48 in an interview with the Record-Courier. HB 48 would allow the carrying of concealed firearms into churches, daycare centers, private aircraft, college campuses and government buildings. "By allowing a potential victim to defend their own life in more places, it makes law-abiding citizens safer, deters would-be mass murderers and protects the public in general," Maloney told the Courier.

    Sources [1]

  • Lobbying Activity
    On May 17, 2015, Maloney expressed his support for Ohio HB 48 in an interview with the Record-Courier. HB 48 would allow the carrying of concealed firearms into churches, daycare centers, private aircraft, college campuses and government buildings. "By allowing a potential victim to defend their own life in more places, it makes law-abiding citizens safer, deters would-be mass murderers and protects the public in general," Maloney told the Courier.

    Sources [1]

  • Race
    On July 18, 2013, the Buckeye Firearms Association launched a fundraiser in support of George Zimmerman, the Florida resident who shot and killed unarmed African-American teenager Trayvon Martin on February 26, 2012 and was later acquitted in a controversial "Stand Your Ground" case. "Whatever you might think about the Zimmerman verdict, the fact remains that we are a nation of laws, not mob justice," the association's website read. "George Zimmerman was tried in a court of law and found not guilty, and that entitles him to continue exercising all his rights, including his Second Amendment right to own a firearm." The donations collected by Buckeye Firearms were to be used to replace Zimmerman's gun, holster and "other gear." Maloney told U.S. News & World Report: "Since [Zimmerman] was acquitted he should have the ability to protect himself and his life and to be an American citizen."

    Sources [1]

  • Vigilantism
    On July 18, 2013, the Buckeye Firearms Association launched a fundraiser in support of George Zimmerman, the Florida resident who shot and killed unarmed African-American teenager Trayvon Martin on February 26, 2012 and was later acquitted in a controversial "Stand Your Ground" case. "Whatever you might think about the Zimmerman verdict, the fact remains that we are a nation of laws, not mob justice," the association's website read. "George Zimmerman was tried in a court of law and found not guilty, and that entitles him to continue exercising all his rights, including his Second Amendment right to own a firearm." The donations collected by Buckeye Firearms were to be used to replace Zimmerman's gun, holster and "other gear." Maloney told U.S. News & World Report: "Since [Zimmerman] was acquitted he should have the ability to protect himself and his life and to be an American citizen."

    Sources [1]

  • Freedom of Speech
    On June 28, 2007, Buckeye Firearms published personal information about Matt Westerhold, the managing editor of the Sandusky Register, on its website. Specifically, Buckeye Firearms published "Westerhold's auto records, a traffic citation, a partial Social Security number, an address for property he owned, and details about his divorce and ex-wife. It also included information on how one might find out which public school Westerhold's 12-year-old daughter attended, which bus she took there, and how a photo of the girl from her school yearbook could probably be found in the local library." They did this because the Sandusky Register published a list of the names and birth dates of some 2,500 concealed carry permit holders in Ohio on the newspaper's website. Westerhold stated that he had been getting calls from readers following the adoption of Ohio's concealed carry law in 2004 who wanted to know if their neighbors had guns. He decided to publish the information "as a public service."

    Sources [1]