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Wikipedia

Switchblade

A switchblade (also known as switch knife, automatic knife, pushbutton knife, ejector knife, flick knife, Stiletto, flick blade, or spring knife. The switchblade is also known in Germany as the Springmesser (also called a Sprenger or[1] Springer[2][3])) is a pocketknife with a sliding or pivoting blade contained in the handle which is extended automatically by a spring when a button, lever, or switch on the handle or bolster is activated. Virtually all switchblades incorporate a locking blade, where the blade is locked against accidental closure when the blade is in the open position. It is unlocked by a mechanism that allows the blade to be folded and locked in the closed position.

A folding switchblade

During the 1950s, US newspapers as well as the tabloid press promoted the image of a new violent crime wave caused by young male delinquents with a stiletto, switchblade, or flick knife, based mostly on anecdotal evidence.[4][5] In 1954, Democratic Rep. James J. Delaney of New York authored the first bill submitted to the U.S. Congress banning the manufacture and sale of switchblades, beginning a wave of legal restrictions worldwide and a consequent decline in their popularity.

Method of operation edit

 
A side opening (left) and out the front (OTF) knife

Side-opening edit

 
Benchmade 4300 CLA Composite Lite Auto. Auto knife push button operation with side mounted safety, reversible clip. Length 7.85 in (19.9 cm) Blade length 3.4 in (8.6 cm). Blade Material CM154.

The most common type of switchblade is the side-opening or out-the-side (OTS) knife. These resemble traditional manually-operated folding knives, but feature a coil or leaf spring which powers a blade that is released when the activation button is pressed. Side-opening knives may feature a safety mechanism that prevent the accidental actuation of the blade release mechanism. Manipulation of a lever, slide button, bolster, or picklock releases the blade for closure.

Out the front (OTF) knives edit

Double action OTF knives edit

 
Schematic of double action out the front automatic knife

A double action out the front knife is so-called because the blade emerges from the front of the handle and the thumb stud can be moved forwards or backwards to extend or retract the knife respectively.

The knife blade (dark grey) is locked in position by a spring-loaded restraining pin (yellow and red) fitting into a notch in the blade at position 1. The two spring carriers (green) fit into the spaces on the slide (blue) and this assembly rests to the side of the blade. The right spring carrier is restrained by a tab at position 2 that fits over the end of the blade. Tension on the main spring (red zig-zag) holds the other spring carrier, slide and thumb stud (light grey) to the right.

When the thumb stud is pushed forward the slide and left spring carrier are free to travel. This increases tension on the main spring as the blade and right spring carrier are locked. A ramp on the slide impinges on the lower pin. When the pin evacuates the notch, the blade and right spring carrier are free to move. The right spring carrier moves only a short distance before it comes to rest in the slide. Momentum carries the blade further before flanges (not shown) retard its motion.

Another restraining pin at position 3 fits into a notch and locks the blade in the extended position. A tab on the left spring carrier fits into a hole in the blade at position 4 which restrains the left spring carrier. This allows reverse force on the thumb stud to increase tension in the main spring before the upper restraining pin releases and the blade and carrier can return to the closed position.

The small restraining pin at 3 is the only thing holding the blade open and is prone to failure if abused. The whole slide assembly moves only a short distance, exactly as far as the thumb stud moves. The force that causes the blade to extend or retract is equal to the force applied by the user on the thumb stud to stretch the main spring before it releases. For this reason the tip of the blade is unlikely to even break skin and is entirely incapable of causing significant injury when released though the edge of the blade may still cut as it moves as with any knife. Any object in the path of the extending blade may cause the blade to stop before it can lock in position. This is easily remedied by either pulling the blade out so that it locks or pushing it in till it locks and then redeploying.

Double-action knives have the advantages of being able to automatically retract the blade, as well as allowing the main spring to be in the "at rest" position whenever the knife is fully open or closed. However, because they have more complicated mechanisms, double-action OTFs will tend to be more expensive, have a weaker firing action, and a less-solid lockup than comparable single-action OTFs.

Single action OTF knives edit

 
Schematic of single action out the front automatic knife

A single action out the front knife operates under similar principles but will only automatically extend the blade which must then be manually retracted.

One spring post (green, left) is rigidly fixed to the handle (orange), the other spring post (green, right) is fastened to the base of the blade. The main spring (red) is under tension, but the blade cannot eject because the spring mounted button (light grey, its spring not shown) is resting in a notch in the blade. The cocking arm (blue) emerges through the base of the handle; friction with the handle holds it in place.

When the button is depressed (sideways into the handle or, as illustrated, into the page) a slot in it aligns with the blade and allows the blade to move forward. When the blade is fully extended flanges on the blade engage pins on the cocking arm retarding the blade's motion. The blade is locked in position when the rear notch of the blade allows the button to return to its rest position. Even if the button is pressed spring tension holds the knife open.

To retract the blade the button is again pressed so that its slot aligns with the blade. The cocking arm is pulled backwards which itself pulls the blade backward. When the blade is fully retracted the spring mounted button rests in the forward notch and again pops up and locks the blade in the cocked position. The cocking arm is then manually pushed forward to again sit flush with the handle.

Because the main spring is constantly acting on the blade and is extended by a far greater amount and is cocked by the whole hand and arm rather than by thumb the force it can exert on the blade is greater than with a double action knife. This will easily allow the tip of the blade to break skin when deployed and possibly penetrate a few millimetres or to pass through light clothing. While still not a hugely strong design, because it is more firmly attached a good quality single action out the front blade displays less wobble and play than its comparable quality double action counterpart.

Spring-assist knife vs. switchblade edit

While operationally identical (in terms of one-handed opening), the "spring-assist" or "assisted opening" knife is not a switchblade or automatic knife. A switchblade opens its blade from the handle automatically to the fully locked and open position with the single press of a button, lever, or switch that is remotely mounted in the knife handle or bolster. In contrast, a spring-assist design uses either 1) manual pressure upon a protrusion on the blade itself or 2) movement of a lever or switch directly linked to the blade to initiate partial opening of the blade, at which point an internal spring propels the blade into the fully open, locked position.

Despite this difference in function, the criminal codes of many nations treat the assisted opening knife as a prohibited weapon like the switchblade. In the US, persons have occasionally been arrested or prosecuted by state law enforcement authorities for carrying assisted-opening knives defined as an illegal switchblade.[6][7][8] An attempt to criminalize the sale of spring-assisted knives by federal law enforcement was forestalled by a US 2009 amendment (Amendment 1447) to 15 U.S.C. §1244. This amendment provides that the Switchblade Knife Act shall not apply to spring-assist or assisted-opening knives (i.e. knives with closure-biased springs that require physical force applied to the blade to assist in opening the knife).[9]

Legality edit

Austria edit

Beginning with the Austrian Arms Act of 1996[10] switchblades, like all other knives, are generally legal to buy, import, possess or carry, regardless of blade length or opening or locking mechanism.[11] The only exception are minors (defined as persons under the age of 18) and people who have been expressly banned from owning and carrying any weapon (Waffenverbot): both groups may only possess knives which are not considered "weapons" under the Arms Act, defined as "objects that by their very nature are intended to reduce or eliminate the defensive ability of a person through direct impact".[11] Switchblades usually fall under that definition.[11]

In Austria the regulatory laws of individual states and the Assembly Act prohibit switchblades and other knives from being carried into a public building, school, public assembly, or public event.[12]

Australia edit

In Australia, switchblades are banned by the Customs (Prohibited Imports) Regulations as a Prohibited Import. Australian customs refer to the automatic knife or switchblade as a flick knife. Australian law defines a flick knife as a knife that has a blade which opens automatically by gravity, by centrifugal force, or by any pressure applied to a button, spring or device in or attached to the handle of the knife, a definition that would cover not only switchblades and automatic-opening knives, but also gravity knives and balisongs.

At a state and local level, most jurisdictions declare flick knives to be prohibited weapons in their respective acts, codes and regulations. Persons residing in states that do not have specific weapons legislation covering switchblades (such as Tasmania) are still covered by Federal Customs legislation, but in conditions where the state has no legislation against such items, an exemption may be applied for and received if approved by the chief supervisory officer of the police service in that state.

Some states which have specific legislation against switchblades allow individuals to apply for an exemption from this legislation if they have a legitimate reason. For example, in the state of Victoria, a member of a bona fide knife-collectors' association, who is not a prohibited person (per the Firearms Act 1996), and meets other guidelines and conditions may apply to the Chief Commissioner of Police for a Prohibited Weapons Exemption to possess, carry, or otherwise own such a knife. This exemption may then, in turn, be used to apply to the Australian Customs Service for an import permit.[13]

Belgium edit

Article 3, §1 of the 2006 Weapons Act[14] lists the switchblade or automatic knife (couteaux à cran d'arrêt et à lame jaillissante) as a prohibited weapon.[15] In Belgium, the police and local jurisdictions are also allowed to prohibit the carrying or possession of a wide variety of knives, which are not explicitly banned by law, if the owner cannot establish a legitimate reason (motif légitime) for having that knife, particularly in urban areas or at public events.[16][14]

Canada edit

Under Part III of the Criminal Code a knife that has a blade that opens automatically by gravity or centrifugal force or by hand pressure applied to a button, spring or other device in or attached to the handle of the knife, is illegal to possess, import, sell, buy, trade, or carry on one's person. These are prohibited weapons (armes défendues).[17] While certain businesses can be granted a licence to acquire and possess prohibited weapons such as switchblades for use as props in movie productions, these exemptions do not apply to individuals.

Czech Republic edit

It is legal to carry and possess switchblades or automatic knives in the Czech Republic.[18]

Denmark edit

Any type of automatic-opening knife or bladed tool that can be opened using just one hand (this includes any one-handed knife that has been deactivated by removing its opening mechanism) is illegal to own or possess. Multi-tools featuring one-hand opening blades are also illegal to own or possess. Manually opened one-handed knives are legal.[16]

Finland edit

In Finland switchblade or automatic knives are legal to purchase or possess.[16] All knives are considered as dangerous weapons and it is forbidden to carry any knife without a proper cause.[19] The law forbids carrying or importing any automatic knife that has the blade completely hidden like OTF switchblades.[20] The restriction does not apply to importing historically significant knives or those with significant artistic value. The law requires that switchblades be cased and secured while being transported.[16]

France edit

French law defines switchblades as dangerous weapons, which may not be carried on one's person.[16] If carried in a vehicle, such knives must be placed in a secure, locked compartment not accessible to the vehicle occupants.[16] In addition, French law provides that authorities may classify any knife as a prohibited item depending upon circumstances and the discretion of the police or judicial authorities.[16]

Germany edit

All large side-opening switchblade knives (blade longer than 8.5 cm (3.3 in)), OTF switchblades, balisongs or butterfly knives (blade longer than 4 cm (1.6 in)), and gravity knives are illegal to own, import or export under German law. Side-opening switchblade knives with single-edged blades not longer than 8.5 cm (3.3 in) and incorporating a continuous spine are legal to own. Legal switchblades may be carried both open and concealed on one's person if there is a justified need for it ("berechtigtes Bedürfnis") or if the weapon cannot be accessed with less than 3 moves ("Transport in verschlossenem Behältnis"). Other laws or regulations may still prohibit the carrying of otherwise legal automatic or switchblade knives, particularly in certain situations or places (gatherings on public ground, check-in areas of airports).

Hungary edit

According to decree 175/2003. (X. 28.) of the Hungarian government a közbiztonságra különösen veszélyes eszközökről (about the instruments particularly hazardous to public safety), it is prohibited to possess a switchblade in public places or private places open to the public – that includes the inside of vehicles present there – and on public transport vehicles, except for filmmaking and theatrical performances. Members of the Hungarian Army, law enforcement, national security agencies and armed forces stationed in Hungary are exempt from this limitation together with those who are authorised to carry such instruments by legislation. Sale of a switchblade is authorised only to the persons and organizations above. Customs clearance of switchblades may not be performed for private individuals such as tourists.

Hong Kong edit

According to the Weapons Ordinance (Cap. 217), any person who has possession of any prohibited items (including Gravity Knife and Flick Knife) commits an offence.[21]

Ireland edit

Section 9 of the Firearms and Offensive Weapons Act 1990 makes it an offence to carry a "flick knife" in any public space without lawful authority or reasonable excuse. A summary conviction is punishable with either a €1000 fine, up to 12 months imprisonment or both but if indictable the penalty can be up to five years in prison.[22] The Act, which classifies a flick knife as an offensive weapon, also prohibits the manufacture, importation, sale, hire or loan of these knives. Conviction for any of these offences carries a sentence of up to seven years imprisonment.[23]

Italy edit

In Italy, the switchblade or automatic opening knife (coltello a scatto) is generally defined as an arma bianca (offensive weapon) rather than a tool. While legal for adults to purchase, such knives may not be transported outside of one's property nor carried on the person, either concealed or unconcealed, nor may it be carried in a motor vehicle where the knife may be accessed by driver or passengers.[24][25] The Italian Ministry of Interior has warned that switchblade knives will be considered offensive weapons in their own right.[26]

Japan edit

In Japan any switchblade over 5.6 centimetres (2.2 in) in blade length requires permission from the prefectural public safety commission in order to possess at home. However, switchblades and assisted open knives are prohibited from carry under any circumstances.[27][failed verification]

Lithuania edit

According to Lithuanian law it is illegal to carry or possess a switchblade if it meets one of the following criteria: the blade is longer than 8.5 cm (3.3 in); the width in the middle of the blade is less than 14% of its total length; the blade is double sided.[28]

Mexico edit

It is legal to carry and possess switchblades in Mexico.[29]

Netherlands edit

As of 2012, it is prohibited to own or possess, whether kept at home or not, any stilettos, switchblades, folding knives with more than one cutting edge, and throwing knives.[16]: 44–46 

New Zealand edit

The Customs Import Prohibition Order 2008 prohibits the importation of "any knife having a blade that opens automatically by hand pressure applied to a button, spring or other device in or attached to the handle of the knife (sometimes known as a 'flick-knife' or 'flick gun')".[30] The Summary Offences Act 1981[31] and the Crimes Act 1961 section 202A(4)(a) make it an offence to possess any weapon in a public place without reasonable excuse.

Norway edit

Switchblades or automatic knives (springkniver) may not be acquired, possessed, or carried in Norway "without justifiable purpose" and also assuming they "appear as products of violence".[16][32]

Poland edit

Knives, including switchblades, although regarded as dangerous tools, are not considered weapons under Polish law,[33] except for blades hidden in umbrellas, canes, etc. It is legal to sell, buy, trade and possess a switchblade, and Polish law does not prohibit carrying a knife in a public place. However, certain prohibitions may apply during mass events.[34]

Russia edit

In Russia, switchblades (rus. автоматический нож, выкидной нож, пружинный нож) are illegal only if their blade's length is more than 9 cm (3.5 in) - this is an illegal weapon, and there is a fine 500-2000 Russian rubles (about $8–30) and withdrawing of the knife only for carrying it (article 20.8 of Offences Code of Russia), but not for illegal purchasing and possession (keeping at home or somewhere else). Only self-making and selling white arms (rus. холодное оружие) is a crime in Russia (these two crimes are punished by: part 4 article 222 and part 4 article 223 of Russian Criminal Code). If the blade is shorter than 9 centimetres, anyone (even if people younger than 18 years old, having a criminal history or mental illness) can buy, own and concealed carry (open carry of any weapon or things that look like weapon at human settlements is forbidden in Russia; with the exception for policemen) such a switchblade without any license. But even in this case, it is recommended that people carry on their person an official certificate (type approval) (which is usually in a box with a purchased knife), which proves that it is not a melee weapon and not restricted to carry, in which case even knives longer than 9 cm are sometimes approved.[35][36][37][38]

Singapore edit

The importation and possession of switchblades are illegal in Singapore. It may not be also listed or sold in auctions in Singapore.[39]

Slovenia edit

Switchblades are specifically prohibited under Slovenian law.[16]

Slovakia edit

It is legal to carry and possess switchblade or automatic knives with no restriction to the length of the blade.[40]

South Africa edit

In South Africa, little to no laws exist on the possession, sale, manufacture, and carrying of weapons, other than firearms. Switchblades are legal for possession, sale, manufacture, and carrying.[citation needed]

South Korea edit

In South Korea, any knife that automatically opens wider than 45 degrees with the push of a button and has a blade that is longer than 5.5 cm (2.2 in) is subject to registration. In order to register the knife and legally possess it, one must be older than 20, have no previous criminal offences and be healthy both physically and psychologically. The registration process is carried out at nearby police stations. However, unless the owner of the knife has a hunting license, carrying the knife in public is generally prohibited.

Spain edit

Manufacture, importation, trade, use and possession of switchblade knives are prohibited in Spain.[41]

Sweden edit

In Sweden, the possession of any knife in a public place, at school, or public roads is prohibited.[16] Exceptions are made for those who carry knives for professional or otherwise justified reasons. Switchblades may not be possessed by individuals under 21 years of age.[42]

Switzerland edit

Knives whose blade can be opened with an automatic mechanism that can be operated with one hand are illegal to acquire (except with a special permit) in Switzerland under the Federal Weapons Act.[43] Butterfly knives, throwing knives and daggers with a symmetrical blade are banned likewise. Violations are punishable with imprisonment of up to three years or a fiscal penalty, as provided for by article 33 of the same act.

Turkey edit

Switchblades are illegal to buy, sell and carry in Turkey per the corresponding law 6136 (4) which includes an incarceration sentence of up to 1 year. However, due to the widespread use of switchblades and butterfly knives in the country, imprisoning is very rare and sentences are often converted to a fine when it is the only violation.

Ukraine edit

Under Article 263 of the Criminal Code, switchblades are not specifically prohibited; however, any knife definable as a 'dagger' may not be manufactured, sold, repaired for sale, nor carried on one's person without a valid permit.[44]

United Kingdom edit

On 12 May 1958, Parliament passed the Restriction of Offensive Weapons Act 1959,[45] which banned the manufacture, sale or offer to sell or hire any type of automatic-opening or switchblade knife. The law came in response to their perceived use by juvenile delinquents and gangs and associated media coverage, as well as by the 1958 passage of the Switchblade Knife Act in the United States. Indeed, much of the language in the Restriction of Offensive Weapons Act 1959 appears to be taken directly from the American law.

In 2019, parliamentary amendments to Section 43, 44, and 46 of The Restriction of Offensive Weapons Act 1959 make it illegal to own, possess, sell or transfer a switchblade or flick knife within the United Kingdom, including possession at home.[46][45] According to UK government websites, assisted-opening knives are included in the amended and expanded definition of a prohibited 'flick knife'.[47][48]

United States edit

Federal law edit

The Switchblade Knife Act (Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 85–623, 72 Stat. 562, aka SWA, enacted on August 12, 1958, and codified in 15 U.S.C. §§ 1241–1245), prohibits the manufacture, importation, distribution, transportation, and sale of switchblade knives in commercial transactions substantially affecting interstate commerce[49] between any state, territory, possession of the United States, or the District of Columbia, and any place outside that state, territory, U.S. possession, or the District of Columbia. The Act also prohibits possession of such knives on federal or Indian lands or on lands subject to federal jurisdiction. The federal SWA does not prohibit the ownership or carrying of automatic knives or switchblades inside state lines while not on federal property, nor does it prohibit the acquisition or disposition of such knives in an intrastate (in-state) transaction. Finally, the law does not prohibit interstate knife sales or transactions that are either noncommercial in nature, or which do not substantially affect interstate commerce (as defined by recent decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court).

U.S. Code Title 15, Sect. 1241 defines switchblade knives as any knives which open "1) by hand pressure applied to a button or other device in the handle of the knife, or any knife having a blade which opens automatically; (2) by operation of inertia, gravity, or both". The Act also prohibits the manufacture, sale, or possession of switchblade knives on any Federal lands, Native American reservations, military bases, and Federal maritime or territorial jurisdictions including the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and other territories.[50][51] The act was amended in 1986 to also prohibit the importation, sale, manufacture, or possession of ballistic knives in interstate commerce.

U.S.C. 1716 prohibits the mailing or transport of switchblades or automatic knives through the U.S. mails (U.S. Postal Service), with a few designated exceptions.[50] The act provides for a fine and/or imprisonment of not more than one year.[50] 18 U.S.C. § 1716(g)(2) provides:

  1. All knives having a blade which opens automatically (1) by hand pressure applied to a button or other device in the handle of the knife, or (2) by operation of inertia, gravity, or both, are nonmailable and shall not be deposited in or carried by the mails or delivered by any officer or employee of the Postal Service. Such knives may be conveyed in the mails, under such regulations as the Postal Service shall prescribe —
    1. to civilian or Armed Forces supply or procurement officers and employees of the Federal Government ordering, procuring, or purchasing such knives in connection with the activities of the Federal Government;
    2. to supply or procurement officers of the National Guard, the Air National guard, or militia of a state, territory or the District of Columbia ordering, procuring, or purchasing such knives in the connection with the activities of such organization;
    3. to supply or procurement officers or employees of the municipal government of the District of Columbia or the government of any State or Territory, or any county, city or other political subdivision of a State or Territory; procuring or purchasing such knives in connection with the activities of such government.
    4. to manufacturers of such knives or bona fide dealers therein in connection with any shipment made pursuant of an order from any person designated in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3).

15 U.S.C. § 1244 provides that the federal Switchblade Knife Act does 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) to 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 3 in (7.6 cm) or less in length by any individual who has only one arm, and 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".[50]

State laws edit

In addition to federal law, some U.S. states have laws restricting or prohibiting automatic knives or switchblades, sometimes as part of a catchall category of deadly weapons or prohibited weapons. A few states, among them Delaware, Hawaii, New Jersey, New Mexico, and New York, prohibit sale, transfer, ownership or possession of automatic knives or switchblades as deadly or prohibited weapons, while others such as New Hampshire and Arizona have no restrictions on sale, ownership, possession, or carry (with some location-specific exceptions). Other states allow purchase, possession, and carrying on one's person to a limited degree, sometimes with restrictions on blade length or location.

The negative public reputation of the switchblade as the tool of the juvenile delinquent, derived from sensational media coverage of the 1950s, was enshrined in many state's criminal codes, and some of these laws persist to this day. Thus in some states, the possession or carrying of an automatic-opening knife or switchblade may become illegal based solely on its design or aesthetic appearance, or simply its use as a weapon in a given circumstance.[52][53][54] For example, switchblade knives with blade shapes originally designed for the purpose of stabbing or thrusting, such as the dirk, dagger, poignard, or stiletto are automatically considered to be 'deadly weapons' (i.e. knives designed or specially adapted for use as a weapon to inflict death or serious bodily injury).[55]

Over the years, state judicial decisions have expanded the original reach of switchblade laws, either by reclassifying single-edged automatic pocket knives with short, general-purpose blades as illegal 'dirks or daggers', or by re-defining otherwise legal manually-operated lock-blade pocket knives as a prohibited gravity knife, flick knife, or switchblade.[56][57][58] Persons who used knives deemed prohibited as in their work or for self-defense, or who could not afford adequate legal representation, particularly racial minorities, have been disproportionately affected by the capricious enforcement of such laws.[59]

In response to complaints raised about the constitutionality and inconsistent application of existing statutes to modern knife designs, several states such as Alaska, Arkansas, Indiana, Kansas, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wisconsin have repealed older laws against possession or purchase of switchblade or automatic knives. Five states still prohibit anyone from selling, purchasing, owning or carrying a switchblade.

U.S. state laws regarding possession, concealed and non-concealed carry by adult age 21 or older
State Possession/Display/Purchase/Sale Carry in Public (on Person)
Alabama LegalState Code: Section 13A-11 Legal – Only Bowie knives or knives of "like kind or description" are restricted from carry in a vehicle or concealed about the person.[60] or outside of one's own property without good reason.[61]
Alaska Legal – became legal on September 16, 2013 – [15] Legal – became legal on September 16, 2013 -[16]
Arizona LegalS.B. 1108 Changes to Arizona Code: 13-3102, 13-3105, and 13-3112 LegalS.B. 1108 Changes to Arizona Code: 13-3102, 13-3105, and 13-3112. Knives prohibited in certain locations (schools, airports, hydroelectric facilities, nuclear facilities, polling places, and on the grounds of organized public events and gatherings. Persons under 21 may not carry a switchblade definable as a deadly weapon concealed on their person[62]
Arkansas LegalState Code: 5-73-120 Legal – Legal to carry concealed on one's person or in a vehicle in most circumstances unless with intent to harm.[63][64]
California Limited – Illegal to sell, transfer or manufacture, may possess at home only. State Code: California Penal Code 17235 and Penal Code 21510[65] Limited – Illegal to carry openly or concealed on one's person, or in a motor vehicle stationed in a public place or in a place open to public unless blade is under 2 in (5.1 cm)[66]Note: some city criminal codes, such as Oakland, are more restrictive and prohibit all switchblades regardless of blade length. See OMC 9-36.040
Colorado Legal* – Changed by SB17-008 (effective in August 2017); *However, the cities of Denver, Aurora, Boulder, Colorado Springs and Lakewood still ban the sale, display, possession or carrying of switchblades and gravity knives.[67][68] Limited – Open carry legal, except in Denver, Aurora, Boulder, Colorado Springs and Lakewood. Illegal to carry any knife concealed (including switchblade) having a blade length over 3.5 in (8.9 cm).
Connecticut LegalState Code: Sec. 53-206 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine Limited – Possession in vehicle prohibited; Illegal unless carried by person with a valid hunting, fishing, or trapping license while actively hunting, fishing or trapping; when moving one's possessions; when being transported for repair; when being used in an authorized historic reenactment; or if the blade of the switchblade is under 1.5 in (3.8 cm) – Knives Defined As Dangerous Weapons
Delaware IllegalState Code: Crimes & Criminal Procedure – Chapter 11 Section 1446 IllegalState Code: Chapter 11 Section 1446
District of Columbia Illegal – § 22–4514 Illegal – § 22-4504
Florida LegalState Code: 790.001 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine LegalState Code: 790.001 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
Georgia LegalO.C.G.A. § 16-11-126 Limited – legal if carried openly and legal if carried concealed when blade is less than 5 in (13 cm). Concealed carry of a blade greater than 5 in (13 cm) requires a "Weapons Carry License" O.C.G.A. § 16-11-126
Hawaii IllegalState Code: §134-52 IllegalState Code: §134-51 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
Idaho LegalState Code: 18-3302 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine Limited – Concealed carry allowed if not otherwise prohibited by local ordinance, but prohibited if possessor is intoxicated, exhibits an 'intent to assault another', or exhibits any deadly or dangerous weapon in a rude, angry or threatening manner – State Code: 18-3302 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
Illinois Limited – Allowed with valid Firearm Owner's Identification Card. -State Code:720 ILCS 5/24-1 Limited – Allowed with valid Firearm Owner's Identification Card. -State Code:720 ILCS 5/24-1
Indiana Legal (except on school property)State Code: IC 35-47-5 Legal (except on school property)[17]
Iowa LegalState Code: Crime Control and Criminal Acts – Definitions. 702.7 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine Limited – illegal if carried concealed without "Iowa Permit to Carry Weapons", legal to carry openly – Iowa Department of Public Safety SF2379 Frequently Asked QuestionsState Code: 724.4 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine
Kansas LegalSession of 2013 amending K.S.A. 2012 Supp. 21-6301 LegalSession of 2013 amending K.S.A. 2012 Supp. 21-6302
Kentucky LegalState Code: 500.080 Definitions for Kentucky Penal Code 2008-05-13 at the Wayback MachineState Code: 527.020 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine Limited – concealed carry, even on one's own property, allowed only with "concealed deadly weapons permit" – State Code: 527.020 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
Louisiana Legal – Became Legal on August 1, 2018 Illegal- illegal to intentionally conceal a switchblade on one's person. R.S. 14:95
Maine Legal – No restrictions
Maryland LegalState Code:§ 4-105 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine Limited – legal to carry openly; illegal if carried concealed unless holder has a license to carry a handgun State Code: § 4-101 (a).(5).(ii) – definition § 4-101 (c).(1-2) 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine
Massachusetts Legal – Mass. Gen. Law Ch. 269 § 10 2008-08-09 at the Wayback Machine Limited – Legal if length of blade does not exceed 1.5", illegal otherwise – Mass. Gen. Law Ch. 269 § 10 2008-08-09 at the Wayback Machine
Michigan LegalState Code: 750.226a. 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine LegalState Code: 750.226a. repealed under Michigan Switchblade Ban Repeal bill, SB 245 went into effect 90 days after signing on October 10, 2017 May 9, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
Minnesota Limited – Illegal unless allowed under exceptions made for collectors and/or possession as curios or antiques – State Code: Section 609.66 Subdivision 1 2008-05-13 at the Wayback MachineState Code: Section 609.02 Subdivision 6 IllegalState Code: Section 609.66 Subdivision 1 2008-05-13 at the Wayback MachineState Code: Section 609.02 Subdivision 6
Mississippi LegalState Code: Crimes Section § 97-37-1 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine Limited – Illegal if carried concealed or when intoxicated – State Code: Crimes Section § 97-37-1 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
Missouri LegalSenate Bill 489 (2012), signed by Governor on 10 July 2012 with emergency clause. Legal – as long as possession is not against federal law – Senate Bill 489 (2012), signed by Governor on 10 July 2012 with emergency clause.
Montana LegalState Code: HB 155 repeal of Section 45-8-331 LegalState Code HB 251 amendment of Section 45-8-315
Nebraska LegalState Code: Crimes and Punishments. 28-1201 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine Limited – Illegal if carried concealed – State Code: Crimes and Punishments. 28-1201 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine
Nevada LegalState Code: NRS 202.355 Legal – Nevada Knife Law Reform Bill, SB 176 (effective July 1, 2015) – State Code: NRS 202.350 paragraph 8(h), State Code: NRS 202.355
New Hampshire Legal – HB 1665-FN (2010) Legal – HB 1665-FN (2010)
New Jersey Limited – Ownership, display, or possession unlawful unless possessor has an "explainable lawful purpose" for possession and then only if possessor used knife for lawful purpose, and not under circumstances "not manifestly appropriate for such lawful use[s]".[69][70][71] Illegal – Carrying openly or concealed illegal except for members of armed forces, National Guard, or law enforcement officials authorized to carry such weapons[72]
New Mexico IllegalState Code: Criminal Offenses – 30-1-12 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine IllegalState Code: Criminal Offenses – 30-1-12 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine
New York Limited – Possession illegal except for holders of valid hunting, fishing, or fur-trapping licenses – State Code: Penal Law Section 265.01, 265.20(6) 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine Limited – Carrying open or concealed illegal except for holders of valid hunting, fishing, or fur-trapping license actually engaging in said activity – State Code: Penal Law Section 265.01, 265.20(6) 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine Note: several NY cities and the New York Transit Authority have additional criminal codes restricting or prohibiting the carrying of automatic knives.
North Carolina Legal – Ownership or possession legal except "on campus or other educational property", as defined in NC General Statutes Chap. 14, Article 35, §14-269.2 Limited – Concealed carry illegal except when on one's own property; open carry legal unless with the intent "to terrify or alarm the public", or if on a school campus, state property, or into a Courthouse or at a parade, funeral procession, picket line, or demonstration upon any private health care facility. – NC General Statutes Chapter 14, Article 35, §14-269;
North Dakota LegalState Code: Criminal Code – Weapons – 62.1-04-02 Legal – Concealed carry permitted only with dangerous weapons permit – State Code: Criminal Code – Weapons – 62.1-04-02
Ohio LegalState Code: § 2923.12 State Code: § 2923.20 Limited – Open or concealed carry legal with the exception of any knife that is 1) capable of inflicting death and designed or specially adapted for use as a weapon, or 2) is possessed, carried, or used as a weapon. Carry also prohibited at certain location-specific areas i.e. defined school safety zones including school activities, premises and school buses, and courthouses. Note: possession or carry may still be unlawful under various city ordinances. State Code § 2923.11State Code: § 2923.12 State Code: § 2923.20
Oklahoma LegalState Code: §21-1272. 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine Legal – HB 1911 (effective November 1, 2015) amends Title 21 O.S. § 1272 (unlawful carry). [18] 2015-12-08 at the Wayback Machine
Oregon LegalState Code: 166.240 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine Limited – Illegal if carried concealed State Code: 166.240 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
Pennsylvania Legal – Legal as of January 2, 2023 [House Bill 1929 amendment to State Code: Pa. C.S.A. 18.908][73] Limited – Carry legal except "concealed carry of an automatic knife "…with the intent therewith unlawfully and maliciously to do injury to any other person…" remains illegal in Pennsylvania."[74]State Code: Pa. C.S.A. 18.907]
Puerto Rico IllegalTitle 15, Ch. 29, Sec. 1243 United States Code IllegalTitle 15, Ch. 29, Sec. 1243 United States Code
Rhode Island LegalState Code: 11-47-42 Limited – legal to carry concealed unless blade is a dagger, dirk, or stiletto or concealed while containing a blade length of over 3 in (7.6 cm) State Code: 11-47-42
South Carolina LegalState Code: 16-23-460 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine LegalState Code: 16-23-460 2010-06-21 at the Wayback Machine
South Dakota LegalState Code: 22-14-19 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine LegalState Code: 22-14-19 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine Note: The City of Sioux Falls prohibits concealed carry of switchblades definable as a dirk, dagger, or other dangerous or deadly weapon or any instrument or device which when used is likely to produce death or great bodily harm, a definition which in practice appears to cover all switchblade knives.[75][76]
Tennessee LegalState Code: 39-17-1302 (c) (1) 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine Legal – Effective July 1, 2014 – State Code: 39-17-1302 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
Texas Legal – Effective 9/1/13 – HB 1862 Limited – Effective September 1, 2013 – Legal for adults and minors to carry a switchblade (or any knife) with a blade length of less than 5.5 in (14 cm) (measuring the non-handle portion) HB 1862. Switchblades with blades 5.5 in (14 cm) or more are prohibited in certain locations listed in the Texas Penal Code.[77][78]
U.S. Virgin Islands IllegalTitle 14 Chapter 119 § 2251 V.I.C. IllegalTitle 14 Chapter 119 § 2251 V.I.C.
Utah LegalState Code: Offenses Against Public Health and Safety – 76-10-504 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine Limited – Allowed if not concealed; concealed carry allowed with permit or license – State Code: Offenses Against Public Health and Safety – 76-10-504 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine
Vermont LegalState Code: Ch. 85 Weapons – T.13-4003 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine Legal – As long as blade is less than 3 in (7.6 cm) – State Code: Ch. 85 Weapons – T.13-4003 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
Virginia Legal – possession and sale legal as of 1 July 2022 per recent legislation.[79][80] Illegal – (i.e. illegal to carry concealed, legal to carry switchblade in open view): "If any person carries about his person, hidden from common observation, (i) any dirk, bowie knife, switchblade knife, ballistic knife, machete, razor, ... State Code: 18.2-308 – 18.2-311 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
Washington Illegal – Only legal for possession by on/off-duty police officers and paramedics State Code: RCW 9.41.250 HB 2346 IllegalState Code: RCW 9.41.250 HB 2346
West Virginia LegalState Code: §61-7-2 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine Limited – Legal to carry concealed if 21 years of age or older. Illegal if carried concealed by a person under 21 years of age without a state license. – State Code: §61-7-2 2008-05-09 at the Wayback MachineW. Va. Code § 61-7-7 (2016)
Wisconsin Legal – For adults not convicted of a felony. – State Code: 941.24 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine[81] Legal – Legal unless possessed or carried by a felon or on government property and other weapon-free zones. – State Code: 941.24 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine[81]
Wyoming LegalState Code: Statutes 6-8-104 Limited – Illegal to carry switchblade definable as dangerous weapon concealed unless carrier meets eligibility requirements for a WY concealed carry permit. – State Code: Statutes 6-8-104

City and county ordinances edit

Unless preempted by state law, various county, city, or other local jurisdictions may also have their own codes or ordinances further restricting or prohibiting switchblade possession or use, for example Sioux Falls, South Dakota, or Oakland, California.

History edit

Switchblades date from the mid-18th century.[82] The development of the first automatic knife was made possible by the invention of small tempered springs by the clockmaker Benjamin Huntsman in 1742.[83]

The first spring-fired switchblade that can be authenticated appeared in the late 1700s, probably constructed by a craftsman in Italy.[83] After 1816, no automatic knives were produced in Italy for 50 years due to laws passed by the Austro-Hungarian Empire.[83] By 1900, Italy had resumed production of automatic knives of the [stiletto] pattern, all hand-crafted by individual cutlers or small knife forges. Most of these knifemakers were concentrated in the towns of Maniago, Frosolone, Campobasso, and Scarperia.

Unknown artisans developed an automatic folding spike bayonet for use on flintlock pistols and coach guns.[1][82] Examples of steel automatic folding knives from Sheffield England have crown markings that date to 1840.[82] Cutlery makers such as Tillotson, A. Davey, Beever, Hobson, Ibbotson and others produced automatic-opening knives.[82] Some have simple iron bolsters and wooden handles, while others feature ornate, embossed silver alloy bolsters and stag handles.[82] English-made knives often incorporate a "pen release" instead of a central handle button, whereby the main spring activated larger blade is released by pressing down on the closed smaller pen blade.[82]

In France, 19th-century folding knives marked Châtellerault were available in both automatic and manually opened versions in several sizes and lengths.[82] Châtellerault switchblades have recognizable features such as "S" shaped cross guards, picklock type mechanisms and engraved decorative pearl and ivory handles.[82] In Spain, Admiral D'Estaing is attributed with a type of folding naval dirk that doubled as an eating utensil.[82] In closed (folded) position, the blade tip would extend beyond the handle to be used at the dining table. It could be spring activated to full length if needed as a side arm, by pressing a lever instead of a handle button.[82] By 1850, at least one American company offered a .22 rimfire single-shot pistol equipped with a spring-operated knife.[1] After the American Civil War (1865), knife production became industrialized.[82] The oldest American made mass-production automatic knife is the Korn Patent Knife, which used a rocking bolster release.[82]

The advent of mass production methods enabled folding knives with multiple components to be produced in large numbers at lower cost.[1] By 1890, US knife sales of all types were on the increase, buoyed by catalog mail order sales as well as mass marketing campaigns utilizing advertisements in periodicals and newspapers. In consequence, knife manufacturers began marketing new and much more affordable automatic knives to the general public. In Europe as well as the United States, automatic knife sales were never more than a fraction of sales generated by conventional folding knives, yet the type enjoyed consistent if modest sales from year to year.[1]

In 1892, George Schrade, a toolmaker and machinist from New York City developed and patented the first of several practical automatic knife designs.[1][84][85] The following year, Schrade founded the New York Press Button Knife Company to manufacture his switchblade knife pattern, which had a unique release button mounted in the knife bolster.[2] Schrade's company operated out of a small workshop in New York City and employed about a dozen workmen.[2][85]

1900–1945 edit

Swordmakers in Toledo, Spain, developed a market in the 1920s for gold plated automatic leverlock knives with pearl handles and enamel inlaid blades. Italian knifemakers had their own style of knives including both pushbutton and leverlock styles, some bearing design characteristics similar to the early French Châtellerault knife.[86] Prior to World War II, hand crafted automatic knives marked Campobasso or Frosolone were often called Flat Guards because of the two-piece top bolster design.[86] Some Italian switchblades incorporated a bayonet-type blade equipped with a blade lock release activated by prying up a locking flange at the hinge end, and were known as picklock models. These knives were later supplanted by newer designs which incorporated the blade lock release into a tilting bolster.[86]

In Italy, increased production of automatic knives resulted from the actions of German businessman Albert Marx, who owned two cutlery manufacturing concerns in Solingen, Germany.[83] After a trip to Maniago in 1907, Marx was convinced of the appeal of Italian style automatic knives, and duly took note of attempts by Maniago knifemakers to increase productivity using powered cutting tools.[83] Marx promptly introduced the Solingen methods of semi-mass production to the Maniago knife industry, increasing output and lowering individual costs.[83] While Italian automatic knives would remain hand-assembled and to some extent hand-crafted products, Marx's innovations did increase production, enabling exports to other parts of Italy and eventually throughout Europe and abroad.[83][87] Over time, Maniago became the central hub of automatic knife production in Italy.

In the United States, commercial development of the switchblade knife was primarily dominated by the inventions of George Schrade and his New York Press Button Knife Company,[1][85] though W.R. Case, Union Cutlery, Camillus Cutlery, and other U.S. knife manufacturers also marketed automatic knives of their own design.[1] Most of Schrade's switchblade patterns were automatic versions of utilitarian jackknives and pocket knives, as well as smaller penknife models designed to appeal to women buyers.[82] In 1903, Schrade sold his interest in the New York Press Button Knife Co. to the Walden Knife Co., and moved to Walden, New York, where he opened a new factory.[2][85] There Schrade became the company's production superintendent, establishing a production line to manufacture several patterns of Schrade-designed switchblade knives, ranging from a large folding hunter to a small pocket knife.[85] Walden Knife Co. would go on to sell thousands of copies of Schrade's original bolster button design.[2][85]

The advertising campaigns of the day by Schrade and other automatic knife manufacturers focused on marketing to farmers, ranchers, hunters, or outdoors men who needed a compact pocket knife that could be quickly brought into action when needed.[1] In rural areas of America, these campaigns were partially successful, particularly with younger buyers, who aspired to own the most modern tools at a time when new labor-saving inventions were constantly appearing on the market.[1] Most American-made switchblades made after 1900 were patterned after standard utilitarian pocketknives, though a few larger Bowie or Folding Hunter patterns were produced with blade shapes and lengths that could be considered useful as fighting knives. Most had flat or sabre-ground clip or spear-point blade profiles and single-sharpened edges.[2] Blade lengths rarely exceeded 5 in (13 cm).[82] A few manufacturers introduced the double switchblade, featuring two blades that could be automatically opened and locked with the push of a button.[85]

At the low end of the market, Shapleigh Hardware Company of St. Louis, Missouri contracted thousands of switchblades under the trademark Diamond Edge for distribution to dealers across the United States and Canada.[1] Most of these knives were novelty items, assembled at the lowest possible cost. Sold off display cards in countless hardware and general stores, many low-end Diamond Edge switchblades failed to last more than a few months in actual use.[1][88] Other companies such as Imperial Knife and Remington Arms paid royalties to Schrade in order to produce automatic "contract knives" for rebranding and sale by large mail-order catalog retailers such as Sears, Roebuck & Co.[1][82]

In 1904, in combination with his brothers Louis and William, George Schrade formed the Schrade Cutlery Co. in Walden, and began developing a new series of switchblades, which he patented in 1906–07.[2] Schrade's new Safety Pushbutton Knives incorporated several design improvements over his earlier work, and featured a handle-mounted operating button with a sliding safety switch.[85] A multi-blade operating button allowed the knife to operate with up to four automatic blades.[85] In successive patents from 1906 through 1916 Schrade would steadily improve this design, which would later become known as the Presto series.[2] With the Presto line, Schrade would largely dominate the automatic knife market in the United States for the next forty years. Schrade would go on to manufacture thousands of contract switchblade knives under several trademarks and brands, including E. Weck, Wade & Butcher, and Case XX, while other companies used Schrade's patent as the basis for their own switchblade patterns. Among these were pocket and folding hunter pattern switchblades bearing the name Keen Kutter, a trademark owned by E.C. Simmons Hardware Co. (later purchased by the Shapleigh Hardware Co.).

Having earned a handsome return from his work, Schrade traveled to Europe in 1911, first to Sheffield, England, where he assisted Thomas Turner & Company in expediting a wartime order from the British Navy.[85] He next moved to the knifemaking center of Solingen, Germany.[2][85] Schrade was aware of Solingen's reputation for having the best cutlery steel in Europe, and he opened a factory to produce his safety pushbutton switchblade knife there. In 1915 or 1916 Schrade sold his Solingen holdings (some sources state they were seized by the German government)[2] and returned to the United States.[2][85]

In 1918, Captain Rupert Hughes of the U.S. Army submitted a patent application for a specialized automatic-opening trench knife of his own design, the Hughes Trench Knife.[89] This was a curious device consisting of a folding spring-loaded knife blade attached to a handle which fastened to the back of the hand and was secured by a leather strap, leaving the palm and fingers free for grasping other objects.[90] Pressing a button on the handle automatically extended a knife blade into an open position and locked position, allowing the knife to be used as a stabbing weapon.[90] The Hughes Trench Knife was evaluated as a potential military arm by a panel of U.S. Army officers from the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) in June 1918.[91] Unfortunately, after testing the board found the Hughes design to be of no value, and it was never adopted.[92] Hughes went on to patent his automatic trench knife in 1919, though Hughes appears to have been unsuccessful in persuading a knife manufacturing company to produce his design.[90]

From 1923 to 1951, the Union Cutlery Co. of Olean, New York produced a series of lever-operated switchblades designed for the mid and upper end of the market, featuring celluloid, stag, or jigged bone handles, a bolster-mounted push-button, all featuring the company's KA-BAR trademark on the blade tang.[82] The line included the KA-BAR Grizzly, KA-BAR Baby Grizzly, and KA-BAR Model 6110 Lever Release knives.[93] The largest model was KA-BAR Grizzly, a folding hunter pattern with a broad bowie-type clip point blade.

 
Pocket knife made by Flylock Knife Company of Bridgeport, Connecticut with two spring-loaded, button activated blades. Scales are made of horn. Measures 3 3/8" (86mm) closed. These were manufactured from 1918 to 1929.

Upon returning to the United States, Schrade made a final improvement to his Presto series of switchblades, filing his patent application on June 6, 1916.[85] The next year, Schrade licensed a new flylock switchblade design to the Challenge Cutlery Company, which he then joined.[2] Under the trademark of Flylock Knife Co., Challenge made several patterns of the flylock switchblade, including a large 5 in (13 cm) folding hunter model with hinged floating guard and a small pen knife model designed to appeal to women buyers.[1][85] A Challenge Cutlery advertisement of the day depicted a female hand operating a fly-lock automatic pen knife, accompanied by a caption urging women to buy one for their sewing kit so as not to break a nail while attempting to open a normal pen knife.[1][82] Schrade pursued his knifemaking interests at both Challenge and at Schrade, where his brother George now managed one of the company's factories.[2]

With a few ex-Challenge employees Schrade formed a second company, the Geo. Schrade Knife Company, primarily to manufacture his Presto series of switchblade knives.[2] In 1937, Schrade came out with two more low-cost switchblade knives designed to appeal to youth, the Flying Jack and the Pull-Ball Knife.[85] The Flying Jack had a sliding operating latch and could be produced with one or more automatically opening blades. The Pull-Ball opened by pulling a ball located on the butt end of the handle.[94] Schrade would later manufacture alternative configurations to the ball operating handle, including dice, rings, eight balls, or different colors.[85] Unfortunately, the Pull-Ball required two hands to open, removing much of the switchblade's utility as a one-handed knife.[94] As the blade catch mechanism required a good deal of space within the handle, the knife's blade length was short relative to its handle length.[94] Schrade manufactured many pull-ball knives for sale under other brands, including Remington, Case, and the "J.C.N. Co." (Jewelry Cutlery Novelty Company of North Attleboro, Massachusetts)[85] Always looking for a new way to appeal to customers, Schrade continued to experiment with new forms of switchblade designs up to the time of his death in 1940.

In the late 1930s the German Luftwaffe began training a Fallschirmjäger or paratroop force, and as part of this effort developed specialized equipment for the airborne soldier, including the Fallschirmjäger-Messer (paratrooper's knife), which used a gravity-operated mechanism to deploy its sliding spearpoint blade from the handle. The German paratrooper knife, which featured a marlinspike in addition to the cutting blade, was used to cut rigging and unknot lines, though it could be employed as a weapon in an emergency. The U.S. Army in 1940 tasked the Geo. Schrade Knife Co. to produce a small single-edge switchblade for U.S. airborne troops, to be used similarly to the Fallschirmjäger-Messer.[85] The knife was not intended primarily as a fighting knife, but rather as a utility tool, to enable a paratrooper to rapidly cut himself out of his lines and harness in the event he could not escape them after landing.

The company's submission was approved by the U.S. Army Materiel Command in December 1940 as the Knife, Pocket, M2.[1] The M2 had a 3.125 in (7.94 cm) clip-point blade[95] and featured a carrying bail. Except for the bail, the M2 was for all intents and purposes a copy of George Schrade's popular Presto safety-button civilian model. The M-2 was issued primarily to U.S. Army paratroopers during the war, though some knives appear to have been distributed to crews and members of the Office of Strategic Services. When issued to paratroopers, the M2 was normally carried in the dual-zippered knife pocket on the upper chest of the M42 jump uniform jacket. After the war, the M2 was manufactured by Schrade (now Schrade-Walden, Inc.) as the Parachutist's Snap Blade Knife (MIL-K-10043) under a postwar military contract. In addition, other companies such as the Colonial Knife Co. made civilian versions of the M2 after the war.

Postwar usage and the Italian stiletto edit

 
Italian stiletto

From the end of World War II until 1958, most U.S.-manufactured switchblades were manufactured by Schrade (now Schrade-Walden, Inc., a division of Imperial Knife Co.), and the Colonial Knife Co.

Schrade-Walden Inc. made knives under the Schrade-Walden trademark, while Colonial made a number of mass-produced switchblade patterns during the 1950s under the trademark Shur Snap. Designed to a price point, Shur Snap switchblades feature stamped plated sheet-metal bolsters and plastic scales.

In 1956, the U.S. Air Force requested development for a new aircrew knife with several requirements, including the ability to be opened with one hand. The final result was the MC-1 Aircrew Survival Knife. A development of the WW2-era M2 Parachutist Snap Blade knife, the MC-1 featured twin blades, The main blade was a blunt line-cutting blade with a protected sharpened inside edge for severing parachute lines, while the secondary blade opened automatically with a push button in the event the crew member could use only one hand.[96] First issued in 1958, the MC-1 was restricted to U.S. military sales only, and was produced by the Camillus Cutlery Co., Logan/Smyth of Venice Florida, and Schrade-Walden Inc.. The last production contract for the MC-1 was cancelled in 1993.

After 1945, American soldiers returning home from Europe brought along individually purchased examples of the Italian style of stiletto pattern switchblade produced in Maniago and other cutlery towns.[86] Though undeniably limited in practical usefulness, the style and beauty of the so-called stiletto switchblade was a revelation to US buyers accustomed to the utilitarian nature of most U.S.-made automatic knives such as the Schrade Presto pocketknife.[86] Consumer demand for more of these knives resulted in the importation of large numbers of side-opening and telescoping blade switchblades, primarily from Italy. In the case of the switchblade, the name stiletto derives from the blade design, since most Italian designs incorporated a long, slender blade tapering to a needle-like point, together with a slim-profile handle and vestigial cross-guard reminiscent of the medieval weapon. The majority of these stiletto pattern switchblade knives used a now-iconic slender bayonet-style blade with a single sabre-ground edge and an opposing false edge. Other blade styles included the double-edged dagger and the curved-edge kris. Some were flimsy souvenirs made for tourists or novelty purchasers, while others were made with solid materials and workmanship.[1][86] Eventually, many thousands of Italian switchblades were exported to the US. Around this time, the traditional Italian switchblade 'picklock' method of blade release was largely replaced by the tilt bolster mechanism, ending the "Golden Age" of hand-crafted Italian switchblades.[86]

As with the medieval stiletto upon which it was based, the so-called stiletto switchblade was intended to be a concealable weapon optimized for thrusting rather than cutting or slashing (many imported stiletto switchblades had no sharpened cutting edge at all). These knives ranged in blade length from 2 to 18 in (5.1 to 45.7 cm).[1] As a weapon, the stiletto switchblade was much less effective than most fixed-blade hunting and military knives commonly available in the US, including the Bowie knife and dagger, which could inflict deep slashing cuts as well as stab wounds. However, its peculiar properties of easy concealment and rapid blade deployment appealed to some, and as with any other knife, the stiletto switchblade could inflict a severe wound, given sufficient blade length.

1950s gang usage and controversy edit

In 1950, an article titled The Toy That Kills appeared in the Women's Home Companion, a widely read U.S. periodical of the day. The article sparked a storm of controversy and a nationwide campaign that would eventually result in state and federal laws criminalizing the importation, sale, and possession of automatic-opening knives. In the article, author Jack Harrison Pollack assured the reader that the growing switchblade "menace" could have deadly consequence "as any crook can tell you".[97] Pollack, a former aide to Democratic Senator Harley M. Kilgore and a ghostwriter for then-Senator Harry S Truman, had authored a series of melodramatic magazine articles calling for new laws to address a variety of social ills. In The Toy That Kills, Pollack wrote that the switchblade was "Designed for violence, deadly as a revolver - that's the switchblade, the 'toy' youngsters all over the country are taking up as a fad. Press the button on this new version of the pocketknife and the blade darts out like a snake's tongue. Action against this killer should be taken now".[97] To back up his charges, Pollack quoted an unnamed juvenile court judge as saying: "It's only a short step from carrying a switchblade to gang warfare".[97]

During the 1950s, established U.S. newspapers as well as the sensationalist tabloid press joined forces in promoting the image of a young delinquent with a stiletto switchblade or flick knife. While the press focused on the switchblade as a symbol of youthful evil intent, the American public's attention was attracted by lurid stories of urban youth gang warfare and the fact that many gangs were composed of lower class youth and/or racial minorities.[4][98] The purported offensive nature of the stiletto switchblade combined with reports of knife fights, robberies, and stabbings by youth gangs and other criminal elements in urban areas of the United States generated continuing demands from newspaper editorial rooms and the public for new laws restricting the lawful possession and/or use of switchblade knives - with particular emphasis on racial minorities, especially African-American and Hispanic teens.[4][99] In 1954, the state of New York passed the first law banning the sale or distribution of switchblade knives in hopes of reducing gang violence. That same year, Democratic Rep. James J. Delaney of New York authored the first bill submitted to the U.S. Congress banning the manufacture and sale of switchblades.

Some U.S. congressmen saw the switchblade controversy as a political opportunity to capitalize on constant negative accounts of the switchblade knife and its connection to violence and youth gangs. This coverage included not only magazine articles but also highly popular films of the late 1950s including Rebel Without a Cause (1955), Blackboard Jungle (1955), Crime in the Streets (1956), 12 Angry Men (1957), The Delinquents (1957), High School Confidential (1958), and the 1957 Broadway musical West Side Story. Hollywood's fixation on the switchblade as the symbol of youth violence, sex, and delinquency resulted in renewed demands from the public and Congress to control the sale and possession of such knives.[100][101] State laws restricting or criminalizing switchblade possession and use were adopted by an increasing number of state legislatures.

In 1957, Senator Estes Kefauver (D) of Tennessee attempted unsuccessfully to pass a law restricting the importation and possession of switchblade knives. Opposition to the bill from the U.S. knife making industry was muted, with the exception of the Colonial Knife Co. and Schrade-Walden Inc., which were still manufacturing small quantities of pocket switchblades for the U.S. market.[1] Some in the industry even supported the legislation, hoping to gain market share at the expense of Colonial and Schrade.[1] However, the legislation failed to receive expected support from the U.S. Departments of Commerce and Justice, which considered the legislation unenforceable and an unwarranted intrusion into lawful sales in interstate commerce.[1][4]

While Kefauver's bill failed, a new U.S. Senate bill prohibiting the importation or possession of switchblade knives in interstate commerce was introduced the following year by Democratic Senator Peter F. Mack Jr. of Illinois in an attempt to reduce gang violence in Chicago and other urban centers in the state. With youth violence and delinquency aggravated by the severe economic recession, Mack's bill was enacted by Congress and signed into law as the Switchblade Knife Act of 1958.

The melodrama created by US media towards the stiletto switchblade had its effect in Canada and the United Kingdom. The US Switchblade Knife Act was closely followed by the UK Restriction of Offensive Weapons Act of 1959.[4] In Canada, Parliament amended the Criminal Code in 1959 to include all new-production automatic knives as prohibited weapons - banned from importation, sale or possession within that country.

The new laws treated all automatic-opening knives as a prohibited class, even knives with utility or general-purpose blades not generally used by criminals. Curiously, the sale and possession of stilettos and other 'offensive' knives with fixed or lockback blades were not prohibited. In other U.S. states, the sale and possession of switchblade knives remained legal, particularly in rural states where a significant proportion of the population possessed firearms. As late as 1968, Jack Pollack was still writing lurid articles demanding further federal legislation prohibiting the purchase or possession of switchblade knives. That same year, New York congressman Lester L. Wolff (D) even read one of Pollack's articles into the U.S. Congressional Record while introducing legislation to further restrict the sale and transportation of switchblades, arguing that 'switchblade knives have no redeeming social value and are restricted almost solely to violence'.[102][103][104][105]

As an anti-violence measure, legislation against switchblade sales or use clearly failed in the United States, as youth street gangs increasingly turned from bats and knives to handguns, MAC-10s, and AK-47s to settle their disputes over territory as well as income from prostitution, extortion, and illicit drug sales.[106][107][108] In fact, the U.S. murder rate using cutting or stabbing instruments of all types declined from 23% of all murders in 1965 to just 12% in 2012.[109]

1970-2000 edit

By the late 1960s, new production of switchblades in the United States was largely limited to military contract automatic knives such as the MC-1.[82]

In Italy, switchblades known among collectors as "Transitionals" were made with a mix of modern parts and leftover old style parts.[86]

Switchblade knives continued to be sold and collected in those states in which possession remained legal. In the 1980s, automatic knife imports to the U.S. resumed with the concept of kit knives, allowing the user to assemble a working switchblade from a parts kit with the addition of a mainspring or other key part (often sold separately). Since no law prohibited importation of switchblade parts or unassembled kits, all risk of prosecution was assumed by the assembling purchaser, not the importer. This loophole was eventually closed by new federal regulations.[110]

Present day edit

The ability to purchase or carry switchblades or automatic knives continues to be heavily restricted or prohibited throughout much of Europe, with some notable exceptions. In Britain, the folding type of switchblade is commonly referred to as a flick knife. In the UK, knives with an automated opening system are nearly impossible to acquire or carry legally; although they can legally be owned, it is illegal to manufacture, sell, hire, give, lend, or import such knives. This definition would nominally restrict lawful ownership to 'grandfathered' automatic knives already in possession by their owner prior to the enactment of the applicable law in 1959. Even when such a knife is legally owned, carrying it in public without good reason or lawful authority is also illegal under current UK laws.

Under US federal laws, switchblades remain illegal to import from abroad or to purchase through interstate commerce since 1958 under the old Switchblade Knife Act (15 U.S.C. §§1241-1245). In recent years, many U.S. states have repealed laws prohibiting the purchase or possession of automatic or switchblade knives in their entirety.

Modern-day Switchblade Development edit

Despite federal law, there are still a number of U.S. knife companies and custom makers who build automatic knives, primarily for use by the military and emergency personnel.[4] Some well known present-day automatic knife manufacturers include Buck Knives, Colonial Knife Co., Microtech Knives, Benchmade, Severtech, Gerber Legendary Blades, Mikov, Pro-Tech Knives, Dalton, Böker, Spyderco, Kershaw Knives, and Piranha.[4] Colonial currently manufactures the M724 Automatic Rescue Knife, which is currently being issued for use in all U.S. military aircraft ejection seat survival kits.

The classic Italian-style stiletto switchblade continues to be produced in Italy, Taiwan, and China. Automatic knife manufacture in Italy consists predominantly as a cottage industry of family-oriented businesses. These include Frank Beltrame and AGA Campolin, who have been making automatic knives using hand assembly techniques for more than half a century.[86] Since the late 1990s, the nations of Taiwan and China have emerged as large-scale producers of automatic knives.

Automatic or switchblade knives have been produced in the following countries: Argentina, China, Czech Republic, England, France, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Korea, Pakistan, Poland, Russia, Spain, Switzerland, Taiwan and U.S.A..[citation needed]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Benson, Ragnar (1989). Switchblade: The Ace of Blades. Paladin Press. pp. 1–14. ISBN 0-87364-500-6
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Shackleford, Steve (ed.) (2009). Blade's Guide To Knives And Their Values. Krause Publications. pp. 151–152 ISBN 978-1-4402-0387-9.
  3. ^ Schrade, George M. George Schrade and his accomplishments to the Knife Industry. George Schrade Knife Co. (1982). ASIN B00072P8NU.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Nappen, Evan(2003), "Are Switchblades Sporting Knives", Sporting Knives 2003: 60-65, ISBN 0-87349-430-X
  5. ^ Levine, Bernard, Switchblade Legacy, Knife World, August 1990, p. 27-29
  6. ^ "NY Court of Appeals Upholds 2017 Switchblade Verdict". Retrieved 2019-05-31.
  7. ^ UPDATE: Motion for Reargument in NY Assisted-Opener = Switchblade Case Denied, KnifeRights.org, 28 October 2018, retrieved 22 March 2022 [1]
  8. ^ Freddie Gray Falsely Arrested on Illegal Knife Charge – Update on the Freddie Gray Knife Arrest, KnifeRights.org, 1 May 2015, retrieved 28 March 2022 [2]
  9. ^ Amendment 1447 to 15 U.S.C. §1244 adds a fifth exception to the definition of a switchblade knife: Sections 1242 and 1243 of this title shall not apply to: 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.
  10. ^ Waffengesetz (1996): The 1996 version of the Waffengesetz appears to drop the switchblade from the category of prohibited weapons entirely, regardless of blade type: "Gegenüber der bisherigen Rechtslage sind nunmehr Waffen, mit denen ohne Verwendung von Patronen reizauslösende Mittel versprüht werden können, sowie Spring- und Fallmesser nicht mehr der Kategorie der verbotenen Waffen zuzurechnen ... Im Hinblick auf andere ebenso gefährliche Stichwaffen (z.B. Butterflymesser) und die Tatsache, dass Spring- und Fallmesser in den übrigen EU-Mitgliedstaaten keineswegs verboten sind und daher von Touristen und anderen Reisenden, in Unkenntnis des österreichischen Waffengesetzes, mitgebracht werden, ließ es zweckmäßig erscheinen, auch diese Waffen aus der Liste der verbotenen zu streichen."
  11. ^ a b c Waffengesetz (1996)
  12. ^ Jell, Sonja (Magistra) Weapons Law: Knives in Austria
  13. ^ "Australian Government Department of Immigration and Border Protection". www.customs.gov.au.
  14. ^ a b (PDF) (in French) (3rd ed.). Bruxelles. September 1, 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 1, 2011. Retrieved August 27, 2011.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  15. ^ Nouvelle Loi sur les Armes, retrieved 27 August 2011
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Lang, Oliver (March 2010). (in German). Archived from the original on November 20, 2014.
  17. ^ Pyzer, Jonathan, Possession of Prohibited Weapons- Pepper Spray/Nunchucks/ Switchblades, [3], 16 January 2021, retrieved 28 March 2022: Canada Criminal Code SOR/98-462, sections 84(1) and 94(3): "It is a criminal offence under Canadian law to possess any of the weapons listed in section s. 84(1) and the associated regulations. Possession refers to any situation where you have knowledge and control of the object. This includes owning the weapon, having it on your person, keeping it in your home, car, or storage facility, etc."
  18. ^ §1 zákona 119/2002 Sb., zdroj: SBÍRKA ZÁKONŮ ročník 2002, částka 52, ze dne 09.04.2002 (§1, Law No 119/2002, Collection of Laws vol.2002, sum 52, published 2002-04-09), Retrieved January 8, 2009
  19. ^ Suomen Järjestyslaki Ch. 3, Sec. 9§ Vaaralliset Esineet, 27 June 2003
  20. ^ Tulli, rajoituskäsikirja http://tulli.fi/documents/2912305/3048504/vaaralliset_esineet.pdf/a2b7b21d-ac1f-4317-b6aa-2a17d5fa91c0
  21. ^ Weapons Ordinance (Cap. 217) § 4, also refer to the Schedule
  22. ^ (eISB), electronic Irish Statute Book. "electronic Irish Statute Book (eISB)". www.irishstatutebook.ie.
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-02-25. Retrieved 2014-02-27.
  24. ^ Articolo 699 Codice Penale, ARMI - Porto Abusivo
  25. ^ Definizione Di Arma Impropria: Coltello a Scatto 2012-09-29 at the Wayback Machine, Tribunale di Gorizia, Sezione penale, 20 May 2009
  26. ^ Si segnala che con circolare 559C.7572.10179(17) 1 il Ministero dell'Interno ha avvertito che i coltelli a scatto sono da considerare armi proprie, con tutte le conseguenze in ordine al loro regime giuridico.
  27. ^ "Double-edged knives may be regulated by law". www.asiaone.com.
  28. ^ "Apie peilininkus, peilius ir viską, kas su tuo susiję... - knives.lt". knives.lt.
  29. ^ "Mexico knife laws". homesteadauthority.com. 13 March 2023.
  30. ^ "Prohibited offensive weapons imports", legislation.govt.nz
  31. ^ "Summary Offences Act 1981", legislation.govt.nz
  32. ^ ""Forskrift om skytevåpen, våpendeler og ammunisjon mv. (våpenforskriften) - Kapittel 2. Forbudte våpen og ammunisjon"".
  33. ^ Act of 21 May 1999 on weapons and ammunition 7 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine (Dz.U. 1999 nr 53 poz. 549)
  34. ^ Act of 20 March 2009 on the safety of the mass events 7 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine (Dz.U. 2009 nr 62 poz. 504)
  35. ^ "Статья 6 ограничения устанавливаемые на оборот гражданского и служебного оружия федеральный закон об оружии n 150-ФЗ (скачать) (2017). Актуально в 2017 году - ЗаконПрост!". zakonprost.ru.
  36. ^ ru:Холодное оружие#Ограничения гражданского оборота холодного оружия
  37. ^ ""Уголовный кодекс Российской Федерации" от 13.06.1996 N 63-ФЗ (ред. от 29.07.2017) (с изм. и доп., вступ. в силу с 26.08.2017) / КонсультантПлюс". www.consultant.ru.
  38. ^ ""Кодекс Российской Федерации об административных правонарушениях" от 30.12.2001 N 195-ФЗ (ред. от 29.07.2017) (с изм. и доп., вступ. в силу с 10.08.2017) / КонсультантПлюс". www.consultant.ru.
  39. ^ "Prohibited Goods and Controlled Goods". ICA.
  40. ^ Knife legislation
  41. ^ "Armas prohibidas". www.guardiacivil.es. Retrieved October 12, 2016. Bastones-estoque, los puñales de cualquier clase y las navajas llamadas automáticas. Se considerarán puñales a estos efectos las armas blancas de hoja menor de 11 centímetros, de dos filos y puntiaguda
  42. ^ Svensk Lag (1988:254) Om förbud Beträffande Knivar och andra Farliga Föremål, Justitiedepartementet L4, 5 May 1988
  43. ^ Bundesgesetz über Waffen, Waffenzubehör und Munition (Waffengesetz, WG) / Loi fédérale sur les armes, les accessoires d’armes et les munitions (Loi sur les armes, LArm) of 20 June 1997 (as amended), SR/RS 514.54 (D·F·I), art. 4 (D·F·I) par. 1 litt. c in conjunction with art. 5 par. 1 litt. c.
  44. ^ Article 263, Criminal Code of Ukraine [4]
  45. ^ a b Restriction of Offensive Weapons Bill 2012-04-02 at the Wayback Machine, New Statesman, retrieved 29 October 2011
  46. ^ Offensive Weapons, Knife Crime Practical Guidance, 10 September 2020 [5]
  47. ^ Offensive Weapons Act 2019, Part 4, Section 43-46, Legislation.gov.uk, retrieved 28 March 2022 [6]
  48. ^ Selling, Buying, and Carrying Knives, Crime, justice & the law, GOV.UK [7], retrieved 28 March 2022: See Banned Weapons/Flick Knife: "Also known as ‘switchblades’ or ‘automatic knives’. Folding knives where the blade opens automatically, by gravity or by pressing a button or something else on the knife".
  49. ^ In Gibbons v. Ogden, the U.S. Supreme Court first established the principle that Congress may regulate under the Commerce Clause of the Constitution only those activities within a state that arise out of or are connected with a commercial transaction, which viewed in the aggregate, substantially affect interstate commerce.
  50. ^ a b c d Walker, Greg (1993). Battle Blades: A Professional's Guide to Combat/Fighting Knives (Hardcover), pages 210 ISBN 0-87364-732-7
  51. ^ Title 15, Ch. 29, § 1241 United States Code (Definitions): The term “interstate commerce” means commerce between any State, Territory, possession of the United States, or the District of Columbia, and any place outside thereof.
  52. ^ New Jersey Code of Criminal Justice – 2C:39-3e, 39-3g(2), 39-5
  53. ^ See State of New Jersey v. Montalvo, 162 A.3d 270 (2017)
  54. ^ American Knife & Tool Institute, New Jersey Knife Laws At A Glance, akti.org, retrieved 22 March 2022 [8]
  55. ^ American Knife & Tool Institute, California Knife Laws At A Glance, akti.org, retrieved 22 March 2022 [9]
  56. ^ American Knife & Tool Institute, California Knife Laws At A Glance, akti.org, retrieved 22 March 2022 [10]
  57. ^ People v. Hester, 58 Cal.App.5th 630 (2020): In People v. Hester, a state appeals court went so far as to define an ordinary boxcutter utility knife with an exposed blade length of less than 1 in (2.5 cm) as a 'dirk or dagger' under the California Penal Code
  58. ^ KnifeRights.org, UPDATE: Motion for Reargument in NY Assisted-Opener = Switchblade Case Denied, October 28, 2018 retrieved 22 March 2022 [11]
  59. ^ Comstock, Paul, Knife laws: Companion bills Seek State Preemption of Municipal Ordinances, The Columbus Dispatch, 26 April 2021 [12] retrieved 22 March 2022
  60. ^ Alabama State Legislature. . Code of Alabama 1975. Section 13A-11-50. Archived from the original on 2012-08-21. Retrieved 2012-02-27.
  61. ^ Alabama State Legislature. . Code of Alabama 1975. Section 13A-11-55. Archived from the original on 2012-08-22. Retrieved 2012-02-27.
  62. ^ In 2010, Arizona law was changed to allow concealed carry of a knife such as a switchblade that might be defined by an Arizona court as a deadly weapon as long as the person is over 21 years of age; discloses the fact to a law enforcement officer upon questioning; is not carrying the deadly weapon in furtherance of a serious offense or felony, is not a prohibited possessor, is not carrying the deadly weapon in a listed prohibited area (schools, airports, power plants, polling places, etc.) or in furtherance of a terrorist act; is not carrying the deadly weapon into a public establishment or public event that bans carrying of a deadly weapon; and is not knowingly carrying a defaced deadly weapon.
  63. ^ Illegal to possess on one's person or in a vehicle or otherwise readily available a switchblade (or any knife) with a blade length exceeding 3 in (7.6 cm) capable of causing serious bodily injury by cutting or stabbing with a purpose to attempt to unlawfully employ the knife against a person. AR Code § 5-73-120 (2014)
  64. ^ "2014 Arkansas Code :: Title 5 - Criminal Offenses :: Subtitle 6 - Offenses Against Public Health, Safety, or Welfare :: Chapter 73 - Weapons :: Subchapter 1 - Possession and Use Generally :: § 5-73-120 - Carrying a weapon".
  65. ^ Note: Many California city criminal codes, such as Oakland, are more restrictive and prohibit possession or carry of all switchblades regardless of blade length. See OMC 9-36.040
  66. ^ CA Penal Code 653 Cal. Penal Code §653k
  67. ^ REVISED Municipal Code Code, City and County of Denver, Colorado Codified through Ordinance No. 0002-22, adopted January 18, 2022. (Supp. No. 143, Update 2), Ch. 38 Art. IV, Div. 2, §38-119: It shall be unlawful for any person to sell, display, use, possess, carry or transport any knife or instrument having the appearance of a pocket knife, the blade of which can be opened by a flick of a button, pressure on the handle, or other mechanical contrivance.
  68. ^ Simmons, Tommy, Here's What You Should Know About Colorado's New Switchblade Law, The Greeley Tribune, 2 November 2017: The cities of Denver, Aurora, Boulder, Colorado Springs and Lakewood all have switchblade ordinances.
  69. ^ New Jersey Code of Criminal Justice – 2C:39-3e, 39-3g(2), 39-5
  70. ^ See State of New Jersey v. Montalvo, 162 A.3d 270 (2017)
  71. ^ American Knife & Tool Institute, New Jersey Knife Laws At A Glance, akti.org, retrieved 22 March 2022 [13]
  72. ^ New Jersey Code of Criminal Justice – 2C:39-3e, 3g(2)
  73. ^ "Pennsylvania Knife Laws". 10 March 2014.
  74. ^ "Pennsylvania Switchblade Ban Repeal Signed! Effective 1/2/2023 – Knife Rights".
  75. ^ Sioux Falls § 133.001 (1957). There is an exemption for an "ordinary pocket knife" which does not include a switchblade: "An "ordinary pocket knife" means a small knife designed for carrying in a pocket or purse, that has its cutting edge and point entirely enclosed by its handle, and that may not be opened automatically by a throwing, explosive, or spring action."
  76. ^ Raposa, Megan, City: Don't Pocket Switchblades, Brass Knuckles, Argus Leader 13 Nov 2015
  77. ^ Texas Penal Code Title 10 Sect 46.02 (Places Weapons Prohibited): airports, amusement parks, churches, synagogues, or other places of religious worship, correctional facilities, courts, hospitals, nursing homes, racetracks, schools and colleges, on the physical premises of a school or educational institution, any grounds or building on which an activity sponsored by a school or educational institution is being conducted, any passenger transportation vehicle of a school or educational institution, polling places, on the premises where a high school, college, or professional sporting event is taking place, venues serving alcohol, and any area within 1000 feet of a designated execution site on execution day.
  78. ^ Texas Penal Code Title 10 Sect. 46.01 et seq
  79. ^ VA Senate Bill 758
  80. ^ §18.2-311. If any person sells or barters, or exhibits for sale or for barter, or gives or furnishes, or causes to be sold, bartered, given or furnished, or has in his possession, or under his control, with the intent of selling, bartering, giving or furnishing, any...switchblade knife, ballistic knife as defined in § 18.2-307.1, or like weapons, such person is guilty of a Class 4 misdemeanor. The having in one's possession of any such weapon shall be prima facie evidence, except in the case of a conservator of the peace, of his intent to sell, barter, give or furnish the same.
  81. ^ a b Amended on February 6th, 2016
  82. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Erickson, Mark (2004). Antique American Switchblades. Krause Publications, 0873497534, 9780873497534
  83. ^ a b c d e f g Zinser, Tim, Fuller, Dan, and Punchard, Neal, Switchblades of Italy, Nashville, TN: Turner Publishing Co. (2003), ISBN 1-56311933-1, pp. 7,9-11
  84. ^ Langston, Richard (2001). Collector's Guide to Switchblade Knives: An Illustrated Historical and Price Reference. Boulder, Colorado: Paladin Press. p. 224. ISBN 1-58160-283-9.
  85. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Schrade, George M. (1982). George Schrade and his accomplishments to the Knife Industry. George Schrade Knife Co., ASIN B00072P8NU
  86. ^ a b c d e f g h i Zinser, Fuller(2003) "Switchblades of Italy", Turner Publishing. ISBN 1-56311-933-1
  87. ^ History of Maniago, Italy, antiqueswitchbladeknives.com [14], retrieved 28 March 2022
  88. ^ Shackleford, p. 152: The name Diamond Edge would live on after Shapleigh Hardware went into bankruptcy in 1960. Its trademarks were purchased by Imperial Cutlery Company, who used the Diamond Edge trademark on a variety of knives.
  89. ^ Hughes, Rupert. Letters Patent No. 1,315,503 issued September 9, 1919 April 6, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, Washington, D.C.: United States Patent Office
  90. ^ a b c Hughes, Rupert, Letters Patent No. 1,315,503 issued September 9, 1919, Washington, D.C.: United States Patent Office
  91. ^ Crowell, Benedict (1919), America's Munitions 1917–1918, Report of Benedict Crowell, Assistant Secretary of War (Director of Munitions), U.S. War Department, Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, pp. 88, 228
  92. ^ Military affairs: journal of the American Military Institute, American Military History Foundation, American Military Institute, Kansas State University, Dept. of History (1937) Vol. I, p. 153
  93. ^ Erickson, Mark, Antique American Switchblades, Chapter 22: KA-BAR, a trademark of Union Cutlery Co., Olean, NY, Krause Publications, ISBN 0-87349-753-8 (2004)
  94. ^ a b c Benson, pp. 49-50
  95. ^ Some M2 knives featured a hawkbill blade
  96. ^ Trzaska, Frank, Misunderstood Switchblade, Tactical Knives (July 2013)
  97. ^ a b c Pollack, Jack H., The Toy That Kills, 77 Women's Home Companion Magazine 38, November 1950
  98. ^ Siler, Wes, Why Switchblades Are Banned, Gizmodo
  99. ^ Levine, Bernard, Switchblade Legacy, Knife World (August 1990), p. 24
  100. ^ Dick, Steven (1997), The Working Folding Knife, Stoeger Publishing Company, ISBN 978-0-88317-210-0
  101. ^ Levine, Bernard R., The Switchblade Menace, OKCA Newsletter (1993): Rep. Sidney R. Yates (D) of Illinois was convinced of a sadistic connection, proclaiming that "vicious fantasies of omnipotence, idolatry...barbaric and sadistic atrocities, and monstrous violations of accepted values spring from [switchblades] ... Minus switchblade knives and the distorted feeling of power they beget—power that is swaggering, reckless, and itching to express itself in violence—our delinquent adolescents would be shorn of one of their most potent means of incitement to crime".
  102. ^ Pollack, Jackson. "We Must Stop The Sale Of Switchblade Knives". Parade Magazine. May 26, 1968: "It could happen to you or any member of your family, any time, anywhere...Tempers flare. Suddenly a hand streaks toward a pocket. There Is a swift click. A hidden, dagger-tipped blade darts out like a snake's tongue. Clutched In a fist is a murderous "switchblade ... "
  103. ^ Wolff, Lester L., Speech to the House of Representatives, U.S. Congressional Record (House), May 27, 1968
  104. ^ UPI, The Salinas Californian, Salinas, CA: 27 May 1968: Rep. Lester L. Wolff, D-N. Y., said today he would introduce legislation shortly to restrict both the manufacture and sale of switchblade knives and similar weapons.
  105. ^ Wolff, Lester R., Prohibited Knife Act, HR8612, HR8613, HR8198, U.S. Congress, 1968, 1973-1974: In his bill's declaration, Rep. Wolff stated flatly that 'switchblade knives have no redeeming social value and are restricted almost solely to violence'. Wolff would continue his legislative attempts to ban switchblade sales and ownership until 1974.
  106. ^ Moore, Joan W., Going Down to the Barrio: Homeboys and Homegirls in Change, Philadelphia PA: Temple University Press, ISBN 0-87722-855-8, ISBN 978-0-87722-855-4 (1991), pp. 40, 59-60
  107. ^ McCorkle, Richard C. and Miethe, Terance D. (2001). Panic: The Social Construction of the Street Gang Problem. New York: Prentice-Hall. pp. 54, 214. ISBN 0-13-094458-0, ISBN 978-0-13-094458-0
  108. ^ Schneider, Eric C. (2001). Vampires, Dragons, and Egyptian Kings: Youth Gangs in Postwar New York. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, p. 242. ISBN 0-691-07454-2
  109. ^ Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Uniform Crime Reports for the United States, 1965; Crime in the United States (2012)
  110. ^ U.S. 19 CFR 12.95 (1990) Definitions: A 'switchblade knife' means any imported knife, or components thereof, or any class of imported knife...which has one or more of the following characteristics or identities: (3) Unassembled knife kits or knife handles without blades which, when fully assembled with added blades, springs, or other parts, are knives which open automatically by hand pressure applied to a button or device in the handle of the knife or by operation of inertia, gravity, or both.

Further reading edit

  • Aldighieri, Paolo, Coltello a scatto antico italiano - Italian Switchblade, self-publishing, ISBN 979-1220036887 (2018)
  • Benson, Ragnar, Switchblade: The Ace of Blades, Paladin Press, ISBN 1-58160-283-9 (1989)
  • Byrd, K.L., SwitchPix-.com
  • Erickson, Mark, Antique American Switchblades, Krause Publications, ISBN 0-87349-753-8 (2004)
  • Federico, Vincent, Foreign Spring Steel: Collectors Guide Vol. I, self-published (2003)
  • Langston, Richard, Collector's Guide to Switchblade Knives, Paladin Press ISBN 1-58160-283-9, ISBN 978-1-58160-283-8 (2001)
  • Meyers, Ben and Meyers, Lowell, An Introduction to Switchblade Knives, American Eagle Publishing (1982)
  • Shackleford, Steve, (ed.), Blade's Guide To Knives And Their Values, Krause Publications, ISBN 978-1-4402-0387-9 (1989)
  • Zinser, Tim, Fuller, Dan, and Punchard, Neal, Switchblades of Italy, Nashville, TN: Turner Publishing Co., ISBN 1-56311933-1 (2003)

External links edit

  • Netcom.com 2006-08-20 at the Wayback Machine, Bernard Levine - State Knife Laws
  • Police.govt.nz 2007-01-12 at the Wayback Machine, NZ Police: "Swords, Knives and Bayonets"
  • State laws map from AKTI

switchblade, this, article, about, type, knife, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, assisted, opening, knife, switchblade, also, known, switch, knife, automatic, knife, pushbutton, knife, ejector, knife, flick, knife, stiletto, flick, blade, spring, k. This article is about a type of knife For other uses see Switchblade disambiguation Not to be confused with Assisted opening knife A switchblade also known as switch knife automatic knife pushbutton knife ejector knife flick knife Stiletto flick blade or spring knife The switchblade is also known in Germany as the Springmesser also called a Sprenger or 1 Springer 2 3 is a pocketknife with a sliding or pivoting blade contained in the handle which is extended automatically by a spring when a button lever or switch on the handle or bolster is activated Virtually all switchblades incorporate a locking blade where the blade is locked against accidental closure when the blade is in the open position It is unlocked by a mechanism that allows the blade to be folded and locked in the closed position A folding switchbladeDuring the 1950s US newspapers as well as the tabloid press promoted the image of a new violent crime wave caused by young male delinquents with a stiletto switchblade or flick knife based mostly on anecdotal evidence 4 5 In 1954 Democratic Rep James J Delaney of New York authored the first bill submitted to the U S Congress banning the manufacture and sale of switchblades beginning a wave of legal restrictions worldwide and a consequent decline in their popularity Contents 1 Method of operation 1 1 Side opening 1 2 Out the front OTF knives 1 2 1 Double action OTF knives 1 2 2 Single action OTF knives 2 Spring assist knife vs switchblade 3 Legality 3 1 Austria 3 2 Australia 3 3 Belgium 3 4 Canada 3 5 Czech Republic 3 6 Denmark 3 7 Finland 3 8 France 3 9 Germany 3 10 Hungary 3 11 Hong Kong 3 12 Ireland 3 13 Italy 3 14 Japan 3 15 Lithuania 3 16 Mexico 3 17 Netherlands 3 18 New Zealand 3 19 Norway 3 20 Poland 3 21 Russia 3 22 Singapore 3 23 Slovenia 3 24 Slovakia 3 25 South Africa 3 26 South Korea 3 27 Spain 3 28 Sweden 3 29 Switzerland 3 30 Turkey 3 31 Ukraine 3 32 United Kingdom 3 33 United States 3 33 1 Federal law 3 33 2 State laws 3 33 3 City and county ordinances 4 History 4 1 1900 1945 4 2 Postwar usage and the Italian stiletto 4 3 1950s gang usage and controversy 4 3 1 1970 2000 4 3 2 Present day 4 3 3 Modern day Switchblade Development 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Further reading 8 External linksMethod of operation edit nbsp A side opening left and out the front OTF knifeSide opening edit nbsp Benchmade 4300 CLA Composite Lite Auto Auto knife push button operation with side mounted safety reversible clip Length 7 85 in 19 9 cm Blade length 3 4 in 8 6 cm Blade Material CM154 The most common type of switchblade is the side opening or out the side OTS knife These resemble traditional manually operated folding knives but feature a coil or leaf spring which powers a blade that is released when the activation button is pressed Side opening knives may feature a safety mechanism that prevent the accidental actuation of the blade release mechanism Manipulation of a lever slide button bolster or picklock releases the blade for closure Out the front OTF knives edit See also Sliding knife Double action OTF knives edit nbsp Schematic of double action out the front automatic knifeA double action out the front knife is so called because the blade emerges from the front of the handle and the thumb stud can be moved forwards or backwards to extend or retract the knife respectively The knife blade dark grey is locked in position by a spring loaded restraining pin yellow and red fitting into a notch in the blade at position 1 The two spring carriers green fit into the spaces on the slide blue and this assembly rests to the side of the blade The right spring carrier is restrained by a tab at position 2 that fits over the end of the blade Tension on the main spring red zig zag holds the other spring carrier slide and thumb stud light grey to the right When the thumb stud is pushed forward the slide and left spring carrier are free to travel This increases tension on the main spring as the blade and right spring carrier are locked A ramp on the slide impinges on the lower pin When the pin evacuates the notch the blade and right spring carrier are free to move The right spring carrier moves only a short distance before it comes to rest in the slide Momentum carries the blade further before flanges not shown retard its motion Another restraining pin at position 3 fits into a notch and locks the blade in the extended position A tab on the left spring carrier fits into a hole in the blade at position 4 which restrains the left spring carrier This allows reverse force on the thumb stud to increase tension in the main spring before the upper restraining pin releases and the blade and carrier can return to the closed position The small restraining pin at 3 is the only thing holding the blade open and is prone to failure if abused The whole slide assembly moves only a short distance exactly as far as the thumb stud moves The force that causes the blade to extend or retract is equal to the force applied by the user on the thumb stud to stretch the main spring before it releases For this reason the tip of the blade is unlikely to even break skin and is entirely incapable of causing significant injury when released though the edge of the blade may still cut as it moves as with any knife Any object in the path of the extending blade may cause the blade to stop before it can lock in position This is easily remedied by either pulling the blade out so that it locks or pushing it in till it locks and then redeploying Double action knives have the advantages of being able to automatically retract the blade as well as allowing the main spring to be in the at rest position whenever the knife is fully open or closed However because they have more complicated mechanisms double action OTFs will tend to be more expensive have a weaker firing action and a less solid lockup than comparable single action OTFs Single action OTF knives edit nbsp Schematic of single action out the front automatic knifeA single action out the front knife operates under similar principles but will only automatically extend the blade which must then be manually retracted One spring post green left is rigidly fixed to the handle orange the other spring post green right is fastened to the base of the blade The main spring red is under tension but the blade cannot eject because the spring mounted button light grey its spring not shown is resting in a notch in the blade The cocking arm blue emerges through the base of the handle friction with the handle holds it in place When the button is depressed sideways into the handle or as illustrated into the page a slot in it aligns with the blade and allows the blade to move forward When the blade is fully extended flanges on the blade engage pins on the cocking arm retarding the blade s motion The blade is locked in position when the rear notch of the blade allows the button to return to its rest position Even if the button is pressed spring tension holds the knife open To retract the blade the button is again pressed so that its slot aligns with the blade The cocking arm is pulled backwards which itself pulls the blade backward When the blade is fully retracted the spring mounted button rests in the forward notch and again pops up and locks the blade in the cocked position The cocking arm is then manually pushed forward to again sit flush with the handle Because the main spring is constantly acting on the blade and is extended by a far greater amount and is cocked by the whole hand and arm rather than by thumb the force it can exert on the blade is greater than with a double action knife This will easily allow the tip of the blade to break skin when deployed and possibly penetrate a few millimetres or to pass through light clothing While still not a hugely strong design because it is more firmly attached a good quality single action out the front blade displays less wobble and play than its comparable quality double action counterpart Spring assist knife vs switchblade editWhile operationally identical in terms of one handed opening the spring assist or assisted opening knife is not a switchblade or automatic knife A switchblade opens its blade from the handle automatically to the fully locked and open position with the single press of a button lever or switch that is remotely mounted in the knife handle or bolster In contrast a spring assist design uses either 1 manual pressure upon a protrusion on the blade itself or 2 movement of a lever or switch directly linked to the blade to initiate partial opening of the blade at which point an internal spring propels the blade into the fully open locked position Despite this difference in function the criminal codes of many nations treat the assisted opening knife as a prohibited weapon like the switchblade In the US persons have occasionally been arrested or prosecuted by state law enforcement authorities for carrying assisted opening knives defined as an illegal switchblade 6 7 8 An attempt to criminalize the sale of spring assisted knives by federal law enforcement was forestalled by a US 2009 amendment Amendment 1447 to 15 U S C 1244 This amendment provides that the Switchblade Knife Act shall not apply to spring assist or assisted opening knives i e knives with closure biased springs that require physical force applied to the blade to assist in opening the knife 9 Legality editAustria edit Beginning with the Austrian Arms Act of 1996 10 switchblades like all other knives are generally legal to buy import possess or carry regardless of blade length or opening or locking mechanism 11 The only exception are minors defined as persons under the age of 18 and people who have been expressly banned from owning and carrying any weapon Waffenverbot both groups may only possess knives which are not considered weapons under the Arms Act defined as objects that by their very nature are intended to reduce or eliminate the defensive ability of a person through direct impact 11 Switchblades usually fall under that definition 11 In Austria the regulatory laws of individual states and the Assembly Act prohibit switchblades and other knives from being carried into a public building school public assembly or public event 12 Australia edit In Australia switchblades are banned by the Customs Prohibited Imports Regulations as a Prohibited Import Australian customs refer to the automatic knife or switchblade as a flick knife Australian law defines a flick knife as a knife that has a blade which opens automatically by gravity by centrifugal force or by any pressure applied to a button spring or device in or attached to the handle of the knife a definition that would cover not only switchblades and automatic opening knives but also gravity knives and balisongs At a state and local level most jurisdictions declare flick knives to be prohibited weapons in their respective acts codes and regulations Persons residing in states that do not have specific weapons legislation covering switchblades such as Tasmania are still covered by Federal Customs legislation but in conditions where the state has no legislation against such items an exemption may be applied for and received if approved by the chief supervisory officer of the police service in that state Some states which have specific legislation against switchblades allow individuals to apply for an exemption from this legislation if they have a legitimate reason For example in the state of Victoria a member of a bona fide knife collectors association who is not a prohibited person per the Firearms Act 1996 and meets other guidelines and conditions may apply to the Chief Commissioner of Police for a Prohibited Weapons Exemption to possess carry or otherwise own such a knife This exemption may then in turn be used to apply to the Australian Customs Service for an import permit 13 Belgium edit Article 3 1 of the 2006 Weapons Act 14 lists the switchblade or automatic knife couteaux a cran d arret et a lame jaillissante as a prohibited weapon 15 In Belgium the police and local jurisdictions are also allowed to prohibit the carrying or possession of a wide variety of knives which are not explicitly banned by law if the owner cannot establish a legitimate reason motif legitime for having that knife particularly in urban areas or at public events 16 14 Canada edit Under Part III of the Criminal Code a knife that has a blade that opens automatically by gravity or centrifugal force or by hand pressure applied to a button spring or other device in or attached to the handle of the knife is illegal to possess import sell buy trade or carry on one s person These are prohibited weapons armes defendues 17 While certain businesses can be granted a licence to acquire and possess prohibited weapons such as switchblades for use as props in movie productions these exemptions do not apply to individuals Czech Republic edit It is legal to carry and possess switchblades or automatic knives in the Czech Republic 18 Denmark edit Any type of automatic opening knife or bladed tool that can be opened using just one hand this includes any one handed knife that has been deactivated by removing its opening mechanism is illegal to own or possess Multi tools featuring one hand opening blades are also illegal to own or possess Manually opened one handed knives are legal 16 Finland edit In Finland switchblade or automatic knives are legal to purchase or possess 16 All knives are considered as dangerous weapons and it is forbidden to carry any knife without a proper cause 19 The law forbids carrying or importing any automatic knife that has the blade completely hidden like OTF switchblades 20 The restriction does not apply to importing historically significant knives or those with significant artistic value The law requires that switchblades be cased and secured while being transported 16 France edit French law defines switchblades as dangerous weapons which may not be carried on one s person 16 If carried in a vehicle such knives must be placed in a secure locked compartment not accessible to the vehicle occupants 16 In addition French law provides that authorities may classify any knife as a prohibited item depending upon circumstances and the discretion of the police or judicial authorities 16 Germany edit All large side opening switchblade knives blade longer than 8 5 cm 3 3 in OTF switchblades balisongs or butterfly knives blade longer than 4 cm 1 6 in and gravity knives are illegal to own import or export under German law Side opening switchblade knives with single edged blades not longer than 8 5 cm 3 3 in and incorporating a continuous spine are legal to own Legal switchblades may be carried both open and concealed on one s person if there is a justified need for it berechtigtes Bedurfnis or if the weapon cannot be accessed with less than 3 moves Transport in verschlossenem Behaltnis Other laws or regulations may still prohibit the carrying of otherwise legal automatic or switchblade knives particularly in certain situations or places gatherings on public ground check in areas of airports Hungary edit According to decree 175 2003 X 28 of the Hungarian government a kozbiztonsagra kulonosen veszelyes eszkozokrol about the instruments particularly hazardous to public safety it is prohibited to possess a switchblade in public places or private places open to the public that includes the inside of vehicles present there and on public transport vehicles except for filmmaking and theatrical performances Members of the Hungarian Army law enforcement national security agencies and armed forces stationed in Hungary are exempt from this limitation together with those who are authorised to carry such instruments by legislation Sale of a switchblade is authorised only to the persons and organizations above Customs clearance of switchblades may not be performed for private individuals such as tourists Hong Kong edit According to the Weapons Ordinance Cap 217 any person who has possession of any prohibited items including Gravity Knife and Flick Knife commits an offence 21 Ireland edit Section 9 of the Firearms and Offensive Weapons Act 1990 makes it an offence to carry a flick knife in any public space without lawful authority or reasonable excuse A summary conviction is punishable with either a 1000 fine up to 12 months imprisonment or both but if indictable the penalty can be up to five years in prison 22 The Act which classifies a flick knife as an offensive weapon also prohibits the manufacture importation sale hire or loan of these knives Conviction for any of these offences carries a sentence of up to seven years imprisonment 23 Italy edit In Italy the switchblade or automatic opening knife coltello a scatto is generally defined as an arma bianca offensive weapon rather than a tool While legal for adults to purchase such knives may not be transported outside of one s property nor carried on the person either concealed or unconcealed nor may it be carried in a motor vehicle where the knife may be accessed by driver or passengers 24 25 The Italian Ministry of Interior has warned that switchblade knives will be considered offensive weapons in their own right 26 Japan edit In Japan any switchblade over 5 6 centimetres 2 2 in in blade length requires permission from the prefectural public safety commission in order to possess at home However switchblades and assisted open knives are prohibited from carry under any circumstances 27 failed verification Lithuania edit According to Lithuanian law it is illegal to carry or possess a switchblade if it meets one of the following criteria the blade is longer than 8 5 cm 3 3 in the width in the middle of the blade is less than 14 of its total length the blade is double sided 28 Mexico edit It is legal to carry and possess switchblades in Mexico 29 Netherlands edit As of 2012 it is prohibited to own or possess whether kept at home or not any stilettos switchblades folding knives with more than one cutting edge and throwing knives 16 44 46 New Zealand edit The Customs Import Prohibition Order 2008 prohibits the importation of any knife having a blade that opens automatically by hand pressure applied to a button spring or other device in or attached to the handle of the knife sometimes known as a flick knife or flick gun 30 The Summary Offences Act 1981 31 and the Crimes Act 1961 section 202A 4 a make it an offence to possess any weapon in a public place without reasonable excuse Norway edit Switchblades or automatic knives springkniver may not be acquired possessed or carried in Norway without justifiable purpose and also assuming they appear as products of violence 16 32 Poland edit Knives including switchblades although regarded as dangerous tools are not considered weapons under Polish law 33 except for blades hidden in umbrellas canes etc It is legal to sell buy trade and possess a switchblade and Polish law does not prohibit carrying a knife in a public place However certain prohibitions may apply during mass events 34 Russia edit In Russia switchblades rus avtomaticheskij nozh vykidnoj nozh pruzhinnyj nozh are illegal only if their blade s length is more than 9 cm 3 5 in this is an illegal weapon and there is a fine 500 2000 Russian rubles about 8 30 and withdrawing of the knife only for carrying it article 20 8 of Offences Code of Russia but not for illegal purchasing and possession keeping at home or somewhere else Only self making and selling white arms rus holodnoe oruzhie is a crime in Russia these two crimes are punished by part 4 article 222 and part 4 article 223 of Russian Criminal Code If the blade is shorter than 9 centimetres anyone even if people younger than 18 years old having a criminal history or mental illness can buy own and concealed carry open carry of any weapon or things that look like weapon at human settlements is forbidden in Russia with the exception for policemen such a switchblade without any license But even in this case it is recommended that people carry on their person an official certificate type approval which is usually in a box with a purchased knife which proves that it is not a melee weapon and not restricted to carry in which case even knives longer than 9 cm are sometimes approved 35 36 37 38 Singapore edit The importation and possession of switchblades are illegal in Singapore It may not be also listed or sold in auctions in Singapore 39 Slovenia edit Switchblades are specifically prohibited under Slovenian law 16 Slovakia edit It is legal to carry and possess switchblade or automatic knives with no restriction to the length of the blade 40 South Africa edit In South Africa little to no laws exist on the possession sale manufacture and carrying of weapons other than firearms Switchblades are legal for possession sale manufacture and carrying citation needed South Korea edit In South Korea any knife that automatically opens wider than 45 degrees with the push of a button and has a blade that is longer than 5 5 cm 2 2 in is subject to registration In order to register the knife and legally possess it one must be older than 20 have no previous criminal offences and be healthy both physically and psychologically The registration process is carried out at nearby police stations However unless the owner of the knife has a hunting license carrying the knife in public is generally prohibited Spain edit Manufacture importation trade use and possession of switchblade knives are prohibited in Spain 41 Sweden edit In Sweden the possession of any knife in a public place at school or public roads is prohibited 16 Exceptions are made for those who carry knives for professional or otherwise justified reasons Switchblades may not be possessed by individuals under 21 years of age 42 Switzerland edit Knives whose blade can be opened with an automatic mechanism that can be operated with one hand are illegal to acquire except with a special permit in Switzerland under the Federal Weapons Act 43 Butterfly knives throwing knives and daggers with a symmetrical blade are banned likewise Violations are punishable with imprisonment of up to three years or a fiscal penalty as provided for by article 33 of the same act Turkey edit Switchblades are illegal to buy sell and carry in Turkey per the corresponding law 6136 4 which includes an incarceration sentence of up to 1 year However due to the widespread use of switchblades and butterfly knives in the country imprisoning is very rare and sentences are often converted to a fine when it is the only violation Ukraine edit Under Article 263 of the Criminal Code switchblades are not specifically prohibited however any knife definable as a dagger may not be manufactured sold repaired for sale nor carried on one s person without a valid permit 44 United Kingdom edit On 12 May 1958 Parliament passed the Restriction of Offensive Weapons Act 1959 45 which banned the manufacture sale or offer to sell or hire any type of automatic opening or switchblade knife The law came in response to their perceived use by juvenile delinquents and gangs and associated media coverage as well as by the 1958 passage of the Switchblade Knife Act in the United States Indeed much of the language in the Restriction of Offensive Weapons Act 1959 appears to be taken directly from the American law In 2019 parliamentary amendments to Section 43 44 and 46 of The Restriction of Offensive Weapons Act 1959 make it illegal to own possess sell or transfer a switchblade or flick knife within the United Kingdom including possession at home 46 45 According to UK government websites assisted opening knives are included in the amended and expanded definition of a prohibited flick knife 47 48 United States edit Main article Knife legislation United States Federal law edit The Switchblade Knife Act Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 85 623 72 Stat 562 aka SWA enacted on August 12 1958 and codified in 15 U S C 1241 1245 prohibits the manufacture importation distribution transportation and sale of switchblade knives in commercial transactions substantially affecting interstate commerce 49 between any state territory possession of the United States or the District of Columbia and any place outside that state territory U S possession or the District of Columbia The Act also prohibits possession of such knives on federal or Indian lands or on lands subject to federal jurisdiction The federal SWA does not prohibit the ownership or carrying of automatic knives or switchblades inside state lines while not on federal property nor does it prohibit the acquisition or disposition of such knives in an intrastate in state transaction Finally the law does not prohibit interstate knife sales or transactions that are either noncommercial in nature or which do not substantially affect interstate commerce as defined by recent decisions of the U S Supreme Court U S Code Title 15 Sect 1241 defines switchblade knives as any knives which open 1 by hand pressure applied to a button or other device in the handle of the knife or any knife having a blade which opens automatically 2 by operation of inertia gravity or both The Act also prohibits the manufacture sale or possession of switchblade knives on any Federal lands Native American reservations military bases and Federal maritime or territorial jurisdictions including the District of Columbia Puerto Rico and other territories 50 51 The act was amended in 1986 to also prohibit the importation sale manufacture or possession of ballistic knives in interstate commerce U S C 1716 prohibits the mailing or transport of switchblades or automatic knives through the U S mails U S Postal Service with a few designated exceptions 50 The act provides for a fine and or imprisonment of not more than one year 50 18 U S C 1716 g 2 provides All knives having a blade which opens automatically 1 by hand pressure applied to a button or other device in the handle of the knife or 2 by operation of inertia gravity or both are nonmailable and shall not be deposited in or carried by the mails or delivered by any officer or employee of the Postal Service Such knives may be conveyed in the mails under such regulations as the Postal Service shall prescribe to civilian or Armed Forces supply or procurement officers and employees of the Federal Government ordering procuring or purchasing such knives in connection with the activities of the Federal Government to supply or procurement officers of the National Guard the Air National guard or militia of a state territory or the District of Columbia ordering procuring or purchasing such knives in the connection with the activities of such organization to supply or procurement officers or employees of the municipal government of the District of Columbia or the government of any State or Territory or any county city or other political subdivision of a State or Territory procuring or purchasing such knives in connection with the activities of such government to manufacturers of such knives or bona fide dealers therein in connection with any shipment made pursuant of an order from any person designated in paragraphs 1 2 and 3 15 U S C 1244 provides that the federal Switchblade Knife Act does 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 to 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 3 in 7 6 cm or less in length by any individual who has only one arm and 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 50 State laws edit In addition to federal law some U S states have laws restricting or prohibiting automatic knives or switchblades sometimes as part of a catchall category of deadly weapons or prohibited weapons A few states among them Delaware Hawaii New Jersey New Mexico and New York prohibit sale transfer ownership or possession of automatic knives or switchblades as deadly or prohibited weapons while others such as New Hampshire and Arizona have no restrictions on sale ownership possession or carry with some location specific exceptions Other states allow purchase possession and carrying on one s person to a limited degree sometimes with restrictions on blade length or location The negative public reputation of the switchblade as the tool of the juvenile delinquent derived from sensational media coverage of the 1950s was enshrined in many state s criminal codes and some of these laws persist to this day Thus in some states the possession or carrying of an automatic opening knife or switchblade may become illegal based solely on its design or aesthetic appearance or simply its use as a weapon in a given circumstance 52 53 54 For example switchblade knives with blade shapes originally designed for the purpose of stabbing or thrusting such as the dirk dagger poignard or stiletto are automatically considered to be deadly weapons i e knives designed or specially adapted for use as a weapon to inflict death or serious bodily injury 55 Over the years state judicial decisions have expanded the original reach of switchblade laws either by reclassifying single edged automatic pocket knives with short general purpose blades as illegal dirks or daggers or by re defining otherwise legal manually operated lock blade pocket knives as a prohibited gravity knife flick knife or switchblade 56 57 58 Persons who used knives deemed prohibited as in their work or for self defense or who could not afford adequate legal representation particularly racial minorities have been disproportionately affected by the capricious enforcement of such laws 59 In response to complaints raised about the constitutionality and inconsistent application of existing statutes to modern knife designs several states such as Alaska Arkansas Indiana Kansas Michigan Missouri Montana Tennessee Texas Virginia West Virginia and Wisconsin have repealed older laws against possession or purchase of switchblade or automatic knives Five states still prohibit anyone from selling purchasing owning or carrying a switchblade U S state laws regarding possession concealed and non concealed carry by adult age 21 or older State Possession Display Purchase Sale Carry in Public on Person Alabama Legal State Code Section 13A 11 Legal Only Bowie knives or knives of like kind or description are restricted from carry in a vehicle or concealed about the person 60 or outside of one s own property without good reason 61 Alaska Legal became legal on September 16 2013 15 Legal became legal on September 16 2013 16 Arizona Legal S B 1108 Changes to Arizona Code 13 3102 13 3105 and 13 3112 Legal S B 1108 Changes to Arizona Code 13 3102 13 3105 and 13 3112 Knives prohibited in certain locations schools airports hydroelectric facilities nuclear facilities polling places and on the grounds of organized public events and gatherings Persons under 21 may not carry a switchblade definable as a deadly weapon concealed on their person 62 Arkansas Legal State Code 5 73 120 Legal Legal to carry concealed on one s person or in a vehicle in most circumstances unless with intent to harm 63 64 California Limited Illegal to sell transfer or manufacture may possess at home only State Code California Penal Code 17235 and Penal Code 21510 65 Limited Illegal to carry openly or concealed on one s person or in a motor vehicle stationed in a public place or in a place open to public unless blade is under 2 in 5 1 cm 66 Note some city criminal codes such as Oakland are more restrictive and prohibit all switchblades regardless of blade length See OMC 9 36 040Colorado Legal Changed by SB17 008 effective in August 2017 However the cities of Denver Aurora Boulder Colorado Springs and Lakewood still ban the sale display possession or carrying of switchblades and gravity knives 67 68 Limited Open carry legal except in Denver Aurora Boulder Colorado Springs and Lakewood Illegal to carry any knife concealed including switchblade having a blade length over 3 5 in 8 9 cm Connecticut Legal State Code Sec 53 206 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Limited Possession in vehicle prohibited Illegal unless carried by person with a valid hunting fishing or trapping license while actively hunting fishing or trapping when moving one s possessions when being transported for repair when being used in an authorized historic reenactment or if the blade of the switchblade is under 1 5 in 3 8 cm Knives Defined As Dangerous WeaponsDelaware Illegal State Code Crimes amp Criminal Procedure Chapter 11 Section 1446 Illegal State Code Chapter 11 Section 1446District of Columbia Illegal 22 4514 Illegal 22 4504Florida Legal State Code 790 001 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Legal State Code 790 001 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback MachineGeorgia Legal O C G A 16 11 126 Limited legal if carried openly and legal if carried concealed when blade is less than 5 in 13 cm Concealed carry of a blade greater than 5 in 13 cm requires a Weapons Carry License O C G A 16 11 126Hawaii Illegal State Code 134 52 Illegal State Code 134 51 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback MachineIdaho Legal State Code 18 3302 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Limited Concealed carry allowed if not otherwise prohibited by local ordinance but prohibited if possessor is intoxicated exhibits an intent to assault another or exhibits any deadly or dangerous weapon in a rude angry or threatening manner State Code 18 3302 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback MachineIllinois Limited Allowed with valid Firearm Owner s Identification Card State Code 720 ILCS 5 24 1 Limited Allowed with valid Firearm Owner s Identification Card State Code 720 ILCS 5 24 1Indiana Legal except on school property State Code IC 35 47 5 Legal except on school property 17 Iowa Legal State Code Crime Control and Criminal Acts Definitions 702 7 Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback Machine Limited illegal if carried concealed without Iowa Permit to Carry Weapons legal to carry openly Iowa Department of Public Safety SF2379 Frequently Asked Questions State Code 724 4 Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback MachineKansas Legal Session of 2013 amending K S A 2012 Supp 21 6301 Legal Session of 2013 amending K S A 2012 Supp 21 6302Kentucky Legal State Code 500 080 Definitions for Kentucky Penal Code Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback MachineState Code 527 020 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Limited concealed carry even on one s own property allowed only with concealed deadly weapons permit State Code 527 020 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback MachineLouisiana Legal Became Legal on August 1 2018 Illegal illegal to intentionally conceal a switchblade on one s person R S 14 95Maine Legal No restrictionsMaryland Legal State Code 4 105 Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback Machine Limited legal to carry openly illegal if carried concealed unless holder has a license to carry a handgun State Code 4 101 a 5 ii definition 4 101 c 1 2 Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback MachineMassachusetts Legal Mass Gen Law Ch 269 10 Archived 2008 08 09 at the Wayback Machine Limited Legal if length of blade does not exceed 1 5 illegal otherwise Mass Gen Law Ch 269 10 Archived 2008 08 09 at the Wayback MachineMichigan Legal State Code 750 226a Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback Machine Legal State Code 750 226a repealed under Michigan Switchblade Ban Repeal bill SB 245 went into effect 90 days after signing on October 10 2017 Archived May 9 2008 at the Wayback MachineMinnesota Limited Illegal unless allowed under exceptions made for collectors and or possession as curios or antiques State Code Section 609 66 Subdivision 1 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback MachineState Code Section 609 02 Subdivision 6 Illegal State Code Section 609 66 Subdivision 1 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback MachineState Code Section 609 02 Subdivision 6Mississippi Legal State Code Crimes Section 97 37 1 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Limited Illegal if carried concealed or when intoxicated State Code Crimes Section 97 37 1 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback MachineMissouri Legal Senate Bill 489 2012 signed by Governor on 10 July 2012 with emergency clause Legal as long as possession is not against federal law Senate Bill 489 2012 signed by Governor on 10 July 2012 with emergency clause Montana Legal State Code HB 155 repeal of Section 45 8 331 Legal State Code HB 251 amendment of Section 45 8 315Nebraska Legal State Code Crimes and Punishments 28 1201 Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback Machine Limited Illegal if carried concealed State Code Crimes and Punishments 28 1201 Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback MachineNevada Legal State Code NRS 202 355 Legal Nevada Knife Law Reform Bill SB 176 effective July 1 2015 State Code NRS 202 350 paragraph 8 h State Code NRS 202 355New Hampshire Legal HB 1665 FN 2010 Legal HB 1665 FN 2010 New Jersey Limited Ownership display or possession unlawful unless possessor has an explainable lawful purpose for possession and then only if possessor used knife for lawful purpose and not under circumstances not manifestly appropriate for such lawful use s 69 70 71 Illegal Carrying openly or concealed illegal except for members of armed forces National Guard or law enforcement officials authorized to carry such weapons 72 New Mexico Illegal State Code Criminal Offenses 30 1 12 Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback Machine Illegal State Code Criminal Offenses 30 1 12 Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback MachineNew York Limited Possession illegal except for holders of valid hunting fishing or fur trapping licenses State Code Penal Law Section 265 01 265 20 6 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Limited Carrying open or concealed illegal except for holders of valid hunting fishing or fur trapping license actually engaging in said activity State Code Penal Law Section 265 01 265 20 6 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Note several NY cities and the New York Transit Authority have additional criminal codes restricting or prohibiting the carrying of automatic knives North Carolina Legal Ownership or possession legal except on campus or other educational property as defined in NC General Statutes Chap 14 Article 35 14 269 2 Limited Concealed carry illegal except when on one s own property open carry legal unless with the intent to terrify or alarm the public or if on a school campus state property or into a Courthouse or at a parade funeral procession picket line or demonstration upon any private health care facility NC General Statutes Chapter 14 Article 35 14 269 North Dakota Legal State Code Criminal Code Weapons 62 1 04 02 Legal Concealed carry permitted only with dangerous weapons permit State Code Criminal Code Weapons 62 1 04 02Ohio Legal State Code 2923 12 State Code 2923 20 Limited Open or concealed carry legal with the exception of any knife that is 1 capable of inflicting death and designed or specially adapted for use as a weapon or 2 is possessed carried or used as a weapon Carry also prohibited at certain location specific areas i e defined school safety zones including school activities premises and school buses and courthouses Note possession or carry may still be unlawful under various city ordinances State Code 2923 11State Code 2923 12 State Code 2923 20Oklahoma Legal State Code 21 1272 Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback Machine Legal HB 1911 effective November 1 2015 amends Title 21 O S 1272 unlawful carry 18 Archived 2015 12 08 at the Wayback MachineOregon Legal State Code 166 240 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Limited Illegal if carried concealed State Code 166 240 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback MachinePennsylvania Legal Legal as of January 2 2023 House Bill 1929 amendment to State Code Pa C S A 18 908 73 Limited Carry legal except concealed carry of an automatic knife with the intent therewith unlawfully and maliciously to do injury to any other person remains illegal in Pennsylvania 74 State Code Pa C S A 18 907 Puerto Rico Illegal Title 15 Ch 29 Sec 1243 United States Code Illegal Title 15 Ch 29 Sec 1243 United States CodeRhode Island Legal State Code 11 47 42 Limited legal to carry concealed unless blade is a dagger dirk or stiletto or concealed while containing a blade length of over 3 in 7 6 cm State Code 11 47 42South Carolina Legal State Code 16 23 460 Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback Machine Legal State Code 16 23 460 Archived 2010 06 21 at the Wayback MachineSouth Dakota Legal State Code 22 14 19 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Legal State Code 22 14 19 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Note The City of Sioux Falls prohibits concealed carry of switchblades definable as a dirk dagger or other dangerous or deadly weapon or any instrument or device which when used is likely to produce death or great bodily harm a definition which in practice appears to cover all switchblade knives 75 76 Tennessee Legal State Code 39 17 1302 c 1 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Legal Effective July 1 2014 State Code 39 17 1302 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback MachineTexas Legal Effective 9 1 13 HB 1862 Limited Effective September 1 2013 Legal for adults and minors to carry a switchblade or any knife with a blade length of less than 5 5 in 14 cm measuring the non handle portion HB 1862 Switchblades with blades 5 5 in 14 cm or more are prohibited in certain locations listed in the Texas Penal Code 77 78 U S Virgin Islands Illegal Title 14 Chapter 119 2251 V I C Illegal Title 14 Chapter 119 2251 V I C Utah Legal State Code Offenses Against Public Health and Safety 76 10 504 Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback Machine Limited Allowed if not concealed concealed carry allowed with permit or license State Code Offenses Against Public Health and Safety 76 10 504 Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback MachineVermont Legal State Code Ch 85 Weapons T 13 4003 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Legal As long as blade is less than 3 in 7 6 cm State Code Ch 85 Weapons T 13 4003 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback MachineVirginia Legal possession and sale legal as of 1 July 2022 per recent legislation 79 80 Illegal i e illegal to carry concealed legal to carry switchblade in open view If any person carries about his person hidden from common observation i any dirk bowie knife switchblade knife ballistic knife machete razor State Code 18 2 308 18 2 311 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback MachineWashington Illegal Only legal for possession by on off duty police officers and paramedics State Code RCW 9 41 250 HB 2346 Illegal State Code RCW 9 41 250 HB 2346West Virginia Legal State Code 61 7 2 Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback Machine Limited Legal to carry concealed if 21 years of age or older Illegal if carried concealed by a person under 21 years of age without a state license State Code 61 7 2 Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback MachineW Va Code 61 7 7 2016 Wisconsin Legal For adults not convicted of a felony State Code 941 24 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine 81 Legal Legal unless possessed or carried by a felon or on government property and other weapon free zones State Code 941 24 Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine 81 Wyoming Legal State Code Statutes 6 8 104 Limited Illegal to carry switchblade definable as dangerous weapon concealed unless carrier meets eligibility requirements for a WY concealed carry permit State Code Statutes 6 8 104City and county ordinances edit Unless preempted by state law various county city or other local jurisdictions may also have their own codes or ordinances further restricting or prohibiting switchblade possession or use for example Sioux Falls South Dakota or Oakland California History editSwitchblades date from the mid 18th century 82 The development of the first automatic knife was made possible by the invention of small tempered springs by the clockmaker Benjamin Huntsman in 1742 83 The first spring fired switchblade that can be authenticated appeared in the late 1700s probably constructed by a craftsman in Italy 83 After 1816 no automatic knives were produced in Italy for 50 years due to laws passed by the Austro Hungarian Empire 83 By 1900 Italy had resumed production of automatic knives of the stiletto pattern all hand crafted by individual cutlers or small knife forges Most of these knifemakers were concentrated in the towns of Maniago Frosolone Campobasso and Scarperia Unknown artisans developed an automatic folding spike bayonet for use on flintlock pistols and coach guns 1 82 Examples of steel automatic folding knives from Sheffield England have crown markings that date to 1840 82 Cutlery makers such as Tillotson A Davey Beever Hobson Ibbotson and others produced automatic opening knives 82 Some have simple iron bolsters and wooden handles while others feature ornate embossed silver alloy bolsters and stag handles 82 English made knives often incorporate a pen release instead of a central handle button whereby the main spring activated larger blade is released by pressing down on the closed smaller pen blade 82 In France 19th century folding knives marked Chatellerault were available in both automatic and manually opened versions in several sizes and lengths 82 Chatellerault switchblades have recognizable features such as S shaped cross guards picklock type mechanisms and engraved decorative pearl and ivory handles 82 In Spain Admiral D Estaing is attributed with a type of folding naval dirk that doubled as an eating utensil 82 In closed folded position the blade tip would extend beyond the handle to be used at the dining table It could be spring activated to full length if needed as a side arm by pressing a lever instead of a handle button 82 By 1850 at least one American company offered a 22 rimfire single shot pistol equipped with a spring operated knife 1 After the American Civil War 1865 knife production became industrialized 82 The oldest American made mass production automatic knife is the Korn Patent Knife which used a rocking bolster release 82 The advent of mass production methods enabled folding knives with multiple components to be produced in large numbers at lower cost 1 By 1890 US knife sales of all types were on the increase buoyed by catalog mail order sales as well as mass marketing campaigns utilizing advertisements in periodicals and newspapers In consequence knife manufacturers began marketing new and much more affordable automatic knives to the general public In Europe as well as the United States automatic knife sales were never more than a fraction of sales generated by conventional folding knives yet the type enjoyed consistent if modest sales from year to year 1 In 1892 George Schrade a toolmaker and machinist from New York City developed and patented the first of several practical automatic knife designs 1 84 85 The following year Schrade founded the New York Press Button Knife Company to manufacture his switchblade knife pattern which had a unique release button mounted in the knife bolster 2 Schrade s company operated out of a small workshop in New York City and employed about a dozen workmen 2 85 1900 1945 edit Swordmakers in Toledo Spain developed a market in the 1920s for gold plated automatic leverlock knives with pearl handles and enamel inlaid blades Italian knifemakers had their own style of knives including both pushbutton and leverlock styles some bearing design characteristics similar to the early French Chatellerault knife 86 Prior to World War II hand crafted automatic knives marked Campobasso or Frosolone were often called Flat Guards because of the two piece top bolster design 86 Some Italian switchblades incorporated a bayonet type blade equipped with a blade lock release activated by prying up a locking flange at the hinge end and were known as picklock models These knives were later supplanted by newer designs which incorporated the blade lock release into a tilting bolster 86 In Italy increased production of automatic knives resulted from the actions of German businessman Albert Marx who owned two cutlery manufacturing concerns in Solingen Germany 83 After a trip to Maniago in 1907 Marx was convinced of the appeal of Italian style automatic knives and duly took note of attempts by Maniago knifemakers to increase productivity using powered cutting tools 83 Marx promptly introduced the Solingen methods of semi mass production to the Maniago knife industry increasing output and lowering individual costs 83 While Italian automatic knives would remain hand assembled and to some extent hand crafted products Marx s innovations did increase production enabling exports to other parts of Italy and eventually throughout Europe and abroad 83 87 Over time Maniago became the central hub of automatic knife production in Italy In the United States commercial development of the switchblade knife was primarily dominated by the inventions of George Schrade and his New York Press Button Knife Company 1 85 though W R Case Union Cutlery Camillus Cutlery and other U S knife manufacturers also marketed automatic knives of their own design 1 Most of Schrade s switchblade patterns were automatic versions of utilitarian jackknives and pocket knives as well as smaller penknife models designed to appeal to women buyers 82 In 1903 Schrade sold his interest in the New York Press Button Knife Co to the Walden Knife Co and moved to Walden New York where he opened a new factory 2 85 There Schrade became the company s production superintendent establishing a production line to manufacture several patterns of Schrade designed switchblade knives ranging from a large folding hunter to a small pocket knife 85 Walden Knife Co would go on to sell thousands of copies of Schrade s original bolster button design 2 85 The advertising campaigns of the day by Schrade and other automatic knife manufacturers focused on marketing to farmers ranchers hunters or outdoors men who needed a compact pocket knife that could be quickly brought into action when needed 1 In rural areas of America these campaigns were partially successful particularly with younger buyers who aspired to own the most modern tools at a time when new labor saving inventions were constantly appearing on the market 1 Most American made switchblades made after 1900 were patterned after standard utilitarian pocketknives though a few larger Bowie or Folding Hunter patterns were produced with blade shapes and lengths that could be considered useful as fighting knives Most had flat or sabre ground clip or spear point blade profiles and single sharpened edges 2 Blade lengths rarely exceeded 5 in 13 cm 82 A few manufacturers introduced the double switchblade featuring two blades that could be automatically opened and locked with the push of a button 85 At the low end of the market Shapleigh Hardware Company of St Louis Missouri contracted thousands of switchblades under the trademark Diamond Edge for distribution to dealers across the United States and Canada 1 Most of these knives were novelty items assembled at the lowest possible cost Sold off display cards in countless hardware and general stores many low end Diamond Edge switchblades failed to last more than a few months in actual use 1 88 Other companies such as Imperial Knife and Remington Arms paid royalties to Schrade in order to produce automatic contract knives for rebranding and sale by large mail order catalog retailers such as Sears Roebuck amp Co 1 82 In 1904 in combination with his brothers Louis and William George Schrade formed the Schrade Cutlery Co in Walden and began developing a new series of switchblades which he patented in 1906 07 2 Schrade s new Safety Pushbutton Knives incorporated several design improvements over his earlier work and featured a handle mounted operating button with a sliding safety switch 85 A multi blade operating button allowed the knife to operate with up to four automatic blades 85 In successive patents from 1906 through 1916 Schrade would steadily improve this design which would later become known as the Presto series 2 With the Presto line Schrade would largely dominate the automatic knife market in the United States for the next forty years Schrade would go on to manufacture thousands of contract switchblade knives under several trademarks and brands including E Weck Wade amp Butcher and Case XX while other companies used Schrade s patent as the basis for their own switchblade patterns Among these were pocket and folding hunter pattern switchblades bearing the name Keen Kutter a trademark owned by E C Simmons Hardware Co later purchased by the Shapleigh Hardware Co Having earned a handsome return from his work Schrade traveled to Europe in 1911 first to Sheffield England where he assisted Thomas Turner amp Company in expediting a wartime order from the British Navy 85 He next moved to the knifemaking center of Solingen Germany 2 85 Schrade was aware of Solingen s reputation for having the best cutlery steel in Europe and he opened a factory to produce his safety pushbutton switchblade knife there In 1915 or 1916 Schrade sold his Solingen holdings some sources state they were seized by the German government 2 and returned to the United States 2 85 In 1918 Captain Rupert Hughes of the U S Army submitted a patent application for a specialized automatic opening trench knife of his own design the Hughes Trench Knife 89 This was a curious device consisting of a folding spring loaded knife blade attached to a handle which fastened to the back of the hand and was secured by a leather strap leaving the palm and fingers free for grasping other objects 90 Pressing a button on the handle automatically extended a knife blade into an open position and locked position allowing the knife to be used as a stabbing weapon 90 The Hughes Trench Knife was evaluated as a potential military arm by a panel of U S Army officers from the American Expeditionary Force AEF in June 1918 91 Unfortunately after testing the board found the Hughes design to be of no value and it was never adopted 92 Hughes went on to patent his automatic trench knife in 1919 though Hughes appears to have been unsuccessful in persuading a knife manufacturing company to produce his design 90 From 1923 to 1951 the Union Cutlery Co of Olean New York produced a series of lever operated switchblades designed for the mid and upper end of the market featuring celluloid stag or jigged bone handles a bolster mounted push button all featuring the company s KA BAR trademark on the blade tang 82 The line included the KA BAR Grizzly KA BAR Baby Grizzly and KA BAR Model 6110 Lever Release knives 93 The largest model was KA BAR Grizzly a folding hunter pattern with a broad bowie type clip point blade nbsp Pocket knife made by Flylock Knife Company of Bridgeport Connecticut with two spring loaded button activated blades Scales are made of horn Measures 3 3 8 86mm closed These were manufactured from 1918 to 1929 Upon returning to the United States Schrade made a final improvement to his Presto series of switchblades filing his patent application on June 6 1916 85 The next year Schrade licensed a new flylock switchblade design to the Challenge Cutlery Company which he then joined 2 Under the trademark of Flylock Knife Co Challenge made several patterns of the flylock switchblade including a large 5 in 13 cm folding hunter model with hinged floating guard and a small pen knife model designed to appeal to women buyers 1 85 A Challenge Cutlery advertisement of the day depicted a female hand operating a fly lock automatic pen knife accompanied by a caption urging women to buy one for their sewing kit so as not to break a nail while attempting to open a normal pen knife 1 82 Schrade pursued his knifemaking interests at both Challenge and at Schrade where his brother George now managed one of the company s factories 2 With a few ex Challenge employees Schrade formed a second company the Geo Schrade Knife Company primarily to manufacture his Presto series of switchblade knives 2 In 1937 Schrade came out with two more low cost switchblade knives designed to appeal to youth the Flying Jack and the Pull Ball Knife 85 The Flying Jack had a sliding operating latch and could be produced with one or more automatically opening blades The Pull Ball opened by pulling a ball located on the butt end of the handle 94 Schrade would later manufacture alternative configurations to the ball operating handle including dice rings eight balls or different colors 85 Unfortunately the Pull Ball required two hands to open removing much of the switchblade s utility as a one handed knife 94 As the blade catch mechanism required a good deal of space within the handle the knife s blade length was short relative to its handle length 94 Schrade manufactured many pull ball knives for sale under other brands including Remington Case and the J C N Co Jewelry Cutlery Novelty Company of North Attleboro Massachusetts 85 Always looking for a new way to appeal to customers Schrade continued to experiment with new forms of switchblade designs up to the time of his death in 1940 In the late 1930s the German Luftwaffe began training a Fallschirmjager or paratroop force and as part of this effort developed specialized equipment for the airborne soldier including the Fallschirmjager Messer paratrooper s knife which used a gravity operated mechanism to deploy its sliding spearpoint blade from the handle The German paratrooper knife which featured a marlinspike in addition to the cutting blade was used to cut rigging and unknot lines though it could be employed as a weapon in an emergency The U S Army in 1940 tasked the Geo Schrade Knife Co to produce a small single edge switchblade for U S airborne troops to be used similarly to the Fallschirmjager Messer 85 The knife was not intended primarily as a fighting knife but rather as a utility tool to enable a paratrooper to rapidly cut himself out of his lines and harness in the event he could not escape them after landing The company s submission was approved by the U S Army Materiel Command in December 1940 as the Knife Pocket M2 1 The M2 had a 3 125 in 7 94 cm clip point blade 95 and featured a carrying bail Except for the bail the M2 was for all intents and purposes a copy of George Schrade s popular Presto safety button civilian model The M 2 was issued primarily to U S Army paratroopers during the war though some knives appear to have been distributed to crews and members of the Office of Strategic Services When issued to paratroopers the M2 was normally carried in the dual zippered knife pocket on the upper chest of the M42 jump uniform jacket After the war the M2 was manufactured by Schrade now Schrade Walden Inc as the Parachutist s Snap Blade Knife MIL K 10043 under a postwar military contract In addition other companies such as the Colonial Knife Co made civilian versions of the M2 after the war Postwar usage and the Italian stiletto edit nbsp Italian stilettoFrom the end of World War II until 1958 most U S manufactured switchblades were manufactured by Schrade now Schrade Walden Inc a division of Imperial Knife Co and the Colonial Knife Co Schrade Walden Inc made knives under the Schrade Walden trademark while Colonial made a number of mass produced switchblade patterns during the 1950s under the trademark Shur Snap Designed to a price point Shur Snap switchblades feature stamped plated sheet metal bolsters and plastic scales In 1956 the U S Air Force requested development for a new aircrew knife with several requirements including the ability to be opened with one hand The final result was the MC 1 Aircrew Survival Knife A development of the WW2 era M2 Parachutist Snap Blade knife the MC 1 featured twin blades The main blade was a blunt line cutting blade with a protected sharpened inside edge for severing parachute lines while the secondary blade opened automatically with a push button in the event the crew member could use only one hand 96 First issued in 1958 the MC 1 was restricted to U S military sales only and was produced by the Camillus Cutlery Co Logan Smyth of Venice Florida and Schrade Walden Inc The last production contract for the MC 1 was cancelled in 1993 After 1945 American soldiers returning home from Europe brought along individually purchased examples of the Italian style of stiletto pattern switchblade produced in Maniago and other cutlery towns 86 Though undeniably limited in practical usefulness the style and beauty of the so called stiletto switchblade was a revelation to US buyers accustomed to the utilitarian nature of most U S made automatic knives such as the Schrade Presto pocketknife 86 Consumer demand for more of these knives resulted in the importation of large numbers of side opening and telescoping blade switchblades primarily from Italy In the case of the switchblade the name stiletto derives from the blade design since most Italian designs incorporated a long slender blade tapering to a needle like point together with a slim profile handle and vestigial cross guard reminiscent of the medieval weapon The majority of these stiletto pattern switchblade knives used a now iconic slender bayonet style blade with a single sabre ground edge and an opposing false edge Other blade styles included the double edged dagger and the curved edge kris Some were flimsy souvenirs made for tourists or novelty purchasers while others were made with solid materials and workmanship 1 86 Eventually many thousands of Italian switchblades were exported to the US Around this time the traditional Italian switchblade picklock method of blade release was largely replaced by the tilt bolster mechanism ending the Golden Age of hand crafted Italian switchblades 86 As with the medieval stiletto upon which it was based the so called stiletto switchblade was intended to be a concealable weapon optimized for thrusting rather than cutting or slashing many imported stiletto switchblades had no sharpened cutting edge at all These knives ranged in blade length from 2 to 18 in 5 1 to 45 7 cm 1 As a weapon the stiletto switchblade was much less effective than most fixed blade hunting and military knives commonly available in the US including the Bowie knife and dagger which could inflict deep slashing cuts as well as stab wounds However its peculiar properties of easy concealment and rapid blade deployment appealed to some and as with any other knife the stiletto switchblade could inflict a severe wound given sufficient blade length 1950s gang usage and controversy edit In 1950 an article titled The Toy That Kills appeared in the Women s Home Companion a widely read U S periodical of the day The article sparked a storm of controversy and a nationwide campaign that would eventually result in state and federal laws criminalizing the importation sale and possession of automatic opening knives In the article author Jack Harrison Pollack assured the reader that the growing switchblade menace could have deadly consequence as any crook can tell you 97 Pollack a former aide to Democratic Senator Harley M Kilgore and a ghostwriter for then Senator Harry S Truman had authored a series of melodramatic magazine articles calling for new laws to address a variety of social ills In The Toy That Kills Pollack wrote that the switchblade was Designed for violence deadly as a revolver that s the switchblade the toy youngsters all over the country are taking up as a fad Press the button on this new version of the pocketknife and the blade darts out like a snake s tongue Action against this killer should be taken now 97 To back up his charges Pollack quoted an unnamed juvenile court judge as saying It s only a short step from carrying a switchblade to gang warfare 97 During the 1950s established U S newspapers as well as the sensationalist tabloid press joined forces in promoting the image of a young delinquent with a stiletto switchblade or flick knife While the press focused on the switchblade as a symbol of youthful evil intent the American public s attention was attracted by lurid stories of urban youth gang warfare and the fact that many gangs were composed of lower class youth and or racial minorities 4 98 The purported offensive nature of the stiletto switchblade combined with reports of knife fights robberies and stabbings by youth gangs and other criminal elements in urban areas of the United States generated continuing demands from newspaper editorial rooms and the public for new laws restricting the lawful possession and or use of switchblade knives with particular emphasis on racial minorities especially African American and Hispanic teens 4 99 In 1954 the state of New York passed the first law banning the sale or distribution of switchblade knives in hopes of reducing gang violence That same year Democratic Rep James J Delaney of New York authored the first bill submitted to the U S Congress banning the manufacture and sale of switchblades Some U S congressmen saw the switchblade controversy as a political opportunity to capitalize on constant negative accounts of the switchblade knife and its connection to violence and youth gangs This coverage included not only magazine articles but also highly popular films of the late 1950s including Rebel Without a Cause 1955 Blackboard Jungle 1955 Crime in the Streets 1956 12 Angry Men 1957 The Delinquents 1957 High School Confidential 1958 and the 1957 Broadway musical West Side Story Hollywood s fixation on the switchblade as the symbol of youth violence sex and delinquency resulted in renewed demands from the public and Congress to control the sale and possession of such knives 100 101 State laws restricting or criminalizing switchblade possession and use were adopted by an increasing number of state legislatures In 1957 Senator Estes Kefauver D of Tennessee attempted unsuccessfully to pass a law restricting the importation and possession of switchblade knives Opposition to the bill from the U S knife making industry was muted with the exception of the Colonial Knife Co and Schrade Walden Inc which were still manufacturing small quantities of pocket switchblades for the U S market 1 Some in the industry even supported the legislation hoping to gain market share at the expense of Colonial and Schrade 1 However the legislation failed to receive expected support from the U S Departments of Commerce and Justice which considered the legislation unenforceable and an unwarranted intrusion into lawful sales in interstate commerce 1 4 While Kefauver s bill failed a new U S Senate bill prohibiting the importation or possession of switchblade knives in interstate commerce was introduced the following year by Democratic Senator Peter F Mack Jr of Illinois in an attempt to reduce gang violence in Chicago and other urban centers in the state With youth violence and delinquency aggravated by the severe economic recession Mack s bill was enacted by Congress and signed into law as the Switchblade Knife Act of 1958 The melodrama created by US media towards the stiletto switchblade had its effect in Canada and the United Kingdom The US Switchblade Knife Act was closely followed by the UK Restriction of Offensive Weapons Act of 1959 4 In Canada Parliament amended the Criminal Code in 1959 to include all new production automatic knives as prohibited weapons banned from importation sale or possession within that country The new laws treated all automatic opening knives as a prohibited class even knives with utility or general purpose blades not generally used by criminals Curiously the sale and possession of stilettos and other offensive knives with fixed or lockback blades were not prohibited In other U S states the sale and possession of switchblade knives remained legal particularly in rural states where a significant proportion of the population possessed firearms As late as 1968 Jack Pollack was still writing lurid articles demanding further federal legislation prohibiting the purchase or possession of switchblade knives That same year New York congressman Lester L Wolff D even read one of Pollack s articles into the U S Congressional Record while introducing legislation to further restrict the sale and transportation of switchblades arguing that switchblade knives have no redeeming social value and are restricted almost solely to violence 102 103 104 105 As an anti violence measure legislation against switchblade sales or use clearly failed in the United States as youth street gangs increasingly turned from bats and knives to handguns MAC 10s and AK 47s to settle their disputes over territory as well as income from prostitution extortion and illicit drug sales 106 107 108 In fact the U S murder rate using cutting or stabbing instruments of all types declined from 23 of all murders in 1965 to just 12 in 2012 109 1970 2000 edit By the late 1960s new production of switchblades in the United States was largely limited to military contract automatic knives such as the MC 1 82 In Italy switchblades known among collectors as Transitionals were made with a mix of modern parts and leftover old style parts 86 Switchblade knives continued to be sold and collected in those states in which possession remained legal In the 1980s automatic knife imports to the U S resumed with the concept of kit knives allowing the user to assemble a working switchblade from a parts kit with the addition of a mainspring or other key part often sold separately Since no law prohibited importation of switchblade parts or unassembled kits all risk of prosecution was assumed by the assembling purchaser not the importer This loophole was eventually closed by new federal regulations 110 Present day edit The ability to purchase or carry switchblades or automatic knives continues to be heavily restricted or prohibited throughout much of Europe with some notable exceptions In Britain the folding type of switchblade is commonly referred to as a flick knife In the UK knives with an automated opening system are nearly impossible to acquire or carry legally although they can legally be owned it is illegal to manufacture sell hire give lend or import such knives This definition would nominally restrict lawful ownership to grandfathered automatic knives already in possession by their owner prior to the enactment of the applicable law in 1959 Even when such a knife is legally owned carrying it in public without good reason or lawful authority is also illegal under current UK laws Under US federal laws switchblades remain illegal to import from abroad or to purchase through interstate commerce since 1958 under the old Switchblade Knife Act 15 U S C 1241 1245 In recent years many U S states have repealed laws prohibiting the purchase or possession of automatic or switchblade knives in their entirety Modern day Switchblade Development edit Despite federal law there are still a number of U S knife companies and custom makers who build automatic knives primarily for use by the military and emergency personnel 4 Some well known present day automatic knife manufacturers include Buck Knives Colonial Knife Co Microtech Knives Benchmade Severtech Gerber Legendary Blades Mikov Pro Tech Knives Dalton Boker Spyderco Kershaw Knives and Piranha 4 Colonial currently manufactures the M724 Automatic Rescue Knife which is currently being issued for use in all U S military aircraft ejection seat survival kits The classic Italian style stiletto switchblade continues to be produced in Italy Taiwan and China Automatic knife manufacture in Italy consists predominantly as a cottage industry of family oriented businesses These include Frank Beltrame and AGA Campolin who have been making automatic knives using hand assembly techniques for more than half a century 86 Since the late 1990s the nations of Taiwan and China have emerged as large scale producers of automatic knives Automatic or switchblade knives have been produced in the following countries Argentina China Czech Republic England France Germany Hong Kong India Italy Japan Mexico Korea Pakistan Poland Russia Spain Switzerland Taiwan and U S A citation needed See also editAssisted opening knife Ballistic knife Butterfly knife Gravity knifeNotes edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Benson Ragnar 1989 Switchblade The Ace of Blades Paladin Press pp 1 14 ISBN 0 87364 500 6 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Shackleford Steve ed 2009 Blade s Guide To Knives And Their Values Krause Publications pp 151 152 ISBN 978 1 4402 0387 9 Schrade George M George Schrade and his accomplishments to the Knife Industry George Schrade Knife Co 1982 ASIN B00072P8NU a b c d e f g Nappen Evan 2003 Are Switchblades Sporting Knives Sporting Knives 2003 60 65 ISBN 0 87349 430 X Levine Bernard Switchblade Legacy Knife World August 1990 p 27 29 NY Court of Appeals Upholds 2017 Switchblade Verdict Retrieved 2019 05 31 UPDATE Motion for Reargument in NY Assisted Opener Switchblade Case Denied KnifeRights org 28 October 2018 retrieved 22 March 2022 1 Freddie Gray Falsely Arrested on Illegal Knife Charge Update on the Freddie Gray Knife Arrest KnifeRights org 1 May 2015 retrieved 28 March 2022 2 Amendment 1447 to 15 U S C 1244 adds a fifth exception to the definition of a switchblade knife Sections 1242 and 1243 of this title shall not apply to 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 Waffengesetz 1996 The 1996 version of the Waffengesetz appears to drop the switchblade from the category of prohibited weapons entirely regardless of blade type Gegenuber der bisherigen Rechtslage sind nunmehr Waffen mit denen ohne Verwendung von Patronen reizauslosende Mittel verspruht werden konnen sowie Spring und Fallmesser nicht mehr der Kategorie der verbotenen Waffen zuzurechnen Im Hinblick auf andere ebenso gefahrliche Stichwaffen z B Butterflymesser und die Tatsache dass Spring und Fallmesser in den ubrigen EU Mitgliedstaaten keineswegs verboten sind und daher von Touristen und anderen Reisenden in Unkenntnis des osterreichischen Waffengesetzes mitgebracht werden liess es zweckmassig erscheinen auch diese Waffen aus der Liste der verbotenen zu streichen a b c Waffengesetz 1996 Jell Sonja Magistra Weapons Law Knives in Austria Australian Government Department of Immigration and Border Protection www customs gov au a b La loi sur les armes a ete modifiee quelles sont les nouveautes PDF in French 3rd ed Bruxelles September 1 2008 Archived from the original PDF on October 1 2011 Retrieved August 27 2011 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Nouvelle Loi sur les Armes retrieved 27 August 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k Lang Oliver March 2010 Messer in Europa Mit Dem Messer Auf Reisen Ubersicht Messer amp Recht im Ausland Messer Magasin in German Archived from the original on November 20 2014 Pyzer Jonathan Possession of Prohibited Weapons Pepper Spray Nunchucks Switchblades 3 16 January 2021 retrieved 28 March 2022 Canada Criminal Code SOR 98 462 sections 84 1 and 94 3 It is a criminal offence under Canadian law to possess any of the weapons listed in section s 84 1 and the associated regulations Possession refers to any situation where you have knowledge and control of the object This includes owning the weapon having it on your person keeping it in your home car or storage facility etc 1 zakona 119 2002 Sb zdroj SBIRKA ZAKONU rocnik 2002 castka 52 ze dne 09 04 2002 1 Law No 119 2002 Collection of Laws vol 2002 sum 52 published 2002 04 09 Retrieved January 8 2009 Suomen Jarjestyslaki Ch 3 Sec 9 Vaaralliset Esineet 27 June 2003 Tulli rajoituskasikirja http tulli fi documents 2912305 3048504 vaaralliset esineet pdf a2b7b21d ac1f 4317 b6aa 2a17d5fa91c0 Weapons Ordinance Cap 217 4 also refer to the Schedule eISB electronic Irish Statute Book electronic Irish Statute Book eISB www irishstatutebook ie The Department of Justice and Equality FAQ Archived from the original on 2014 02 25 Retrieved 2014 02 27 Articolo 699 Codice Penale ARMI Porto Abusivo Definizione Di Arma Impropria Coltello a Scatto Archived 2012 09 29 at the Wayback Machine Tribunale di Gorizia Sezione penale 20 May 2009 Si segnala che con circolare 559C 7572 10179 17 1 il Ministero dell Interno ha avvertito che i coltelli a scatto sono da considerare armi proprie con tutte le conseguenze in ordine al loro regime giuridico Double edged knives may be regulated by law www asiaone com Apie peilininkus peilius ir viska kas su tuo susije knives lt knives lt Mexico knife laws homesteadauthority com 13 March 2023 Prohibited offensive weapons imports legislation govt nz Summary Offences Act 1981 legislation govt nz Forskrift om skytevapen vapendeler og ammunisjon mv vapenforskriften Kapittel 2 Forbudte vapen og ammunisjon Act of 21 May 1999 on weapons and ammunition Archived 7 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Dz U 1999 nr 53 poz 549 Act of 20 March 2009 on the safety of the mass events Archived 7 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Dz U 2009 nr 62 poz 504 Statya 6 ogranicheniya ustanavlivaemye na oborot grazhdanskogo i sluzhebnogo oruzhiya federalnyj zakon ob oruzhii n 150 FZ skachat 2017 Aktualno v 2017 godu ZakonProst zakonprost ru ru Holodnoe oruzhie Ogranicheniya grazhdanskogo oborota holodnogo oruzhiya Ugolovnyj kodeks Rossijskoj Federacii ot 13 06 1996 N 63 FZ red ot 29 07 2017 s izm i dop vstup v silu s 26 08 2017 KonsultantPlyus www consultant ru Kodeks Rossijskoj Federacii ob administrativnyh pravonarusheniyah ot 30 12 2001 N 195 FZ red ot 29 07 2017 s izm i dop vstup v silu s 10 08 2017 KonsultantPlyus www consultant ru Prohibited Goods and Controlled Goods ICA Knife legislation Armas prohibidas www guardiacivil es Retrieved October 12 2016 Bastones estoque los punales de cualquier clase y las navajas llamadas automaticas Se consideraran punales a estos efectos las armas blancas de hoja menor de 11 centimetros de dos filos y puntiaguda Svensk Lag 1988 254 Om forbud Betraffande Knivar och andra Farliga Foremal Justitiedepartementet L4 5 May 1988 Bundesgesetz uber Waffen Waffenzubehor und Munition Waffengesetz WG Loi federale sur les armes les accessoires d armes et les munitions Loi sur les armes LArm of 20 June 1997 as amended SR RS 514 54 D F I art 4 D F I par 1 litt c in conjunction with art 5 par 1 litt c Article 263 Criminal Code of Ukraine 4 a b Restriction of Offensive Weapons Bill Archived 2012 04 02 at the Wayback Machine New Statesman retrieved 29 October 2011 Offensive Weapons Knife Crime Practical Guidance 10 September 2020 5 Offensive Weapons Act 2019 Part 4 Section 43 46 Legislation gov uk retrieved 28 March 2022 6 Selling Buying and Carrying Knives Crime justice amp the law GOV UK 7 retrieved 28 March 2022 See Banned Weapons Flick Knife Also known as switchblades or automatic knives Folding knives where the blade opens automatically by gravity or by pressing a button or something else on the knife In Gibbons v Ogden the U S Supreme Court first established the principle that Congress may regulate under the Commerce Clause of the Constitution only those activities within a state that arise out of or are connected with a commercial transaction which viewed in the aggregate substantially affect interstate commerce a b c d Walker Greg 1993 Battle Blades A Professional s Guide to Combat Fighting Knives Hardcover pages 210 ISBN 0 87364 732 7 Title 15 Ch 29 1241 United States Code Definitions The term interstate commerce means commerce between any State Territory possession of the United States or the District of Columbia and any place outside thereof New Jersey Code of Criminal Justice 2C 39 3e 39 3g 2 39 5 See State of New Jersey v Montalvo 162 A 3d 270 2017 American Knife amp Tool Institute New Jersey Knife Laws At A Glance akti org retrieved 22 March 2022 8 American Knife amp Tool Institute California Knife Laws At A Glance akti org retrieved 22 March 2022 9 American Knife amp Tool Institute California Knife Laws At A Glance akti org retrieved 22 March 2022 10 People v Hester 58 Cal App 5th 630 2020 In People v Hester a state appeals court went so far as to define an ordinary boxcutter utility knife with an exposed blade length of less than 1 in 2 5 cm as a dirk or dagger under the California Penal Code KnifeRights org UPDATE Motion for Reargument in NY Assisted Opener Switchblade Case Denied October 28 2018 retrieved 22 March 2022 11 Comstock Paul Knife laws Companion bills Seek State Preemption of Municipal Ordinances The Columbus Dispatch 26 April 2021 12 retrieved 22 March 2022 Alabama State Legislature Carrying concealed weapons Code of Alabama 1975 Section 13A 11 50 Archived from the original on 2012 08 21 Retrieved 2012 02 27 Alabama State Legislature Indictment for carrying weapons unlawfully proof Code of Alabama 1975 Section 13A 11 55 Archived from the original on 2012 08 22 Retrieved 2012 02 27 In 2010 Arizona law was changed to allow concealed carry of a knife such as a switchblade that might be defined by an Arizona court as a deadly weapon as long as the person is over 21 years of age discloses the fact to a law enforcement officer upon questioning is not carrying the deadly weapon in furtherance of a serious offense or felony is not a prohibited possessor is not carrying the deadly weapon in a listed prohibited area schools airports power plants polling places etc or in furtherance of a terrorist act is not carrying the deadly weapon into a public establishment or public event that bans carrying of a deadly weapon and is not knowingly carrying a defaced deadly weapon Illegal to possess on one s person or in a vehicle or otherwise readily available a switchblade or any knife with a blade length exceeding 3 in 7 6 cm capable of causing serious bodily injury by cutting or stabbing with a purpose to attempt to unlawfully employ the knife against a person AR Code 5 73 120 2014 2014 Arkansas Code Title 5 Criminal Offenses Subtitle 6 Offenses Against Public Health Safety or Welfare Chapter 73 Weapons Subchapter 1 Possession and Use Generally 5 73 120 Carrying a weapon Note Many California city criminal codes such as Oakland are more restrictive and prohibit possession or carry of all switchblades regardless of blade length See OMC 9 36 040 CA Penal Code 653 Cal Penal Code 653k REVISED Municipal Code Code City and County of Denver Colorado Codified through Ordinance No 0002 22 adopted January 18 2022 Supp No 143 Update 2 Ch 38 Art IV Div 2 38 119 It shall be unlawful for any person to sell display use possess carry or transport any knife or instrument having the appearance of a pocket knife the blade of which can be opened by a flick of a button pressure on the handle or other mechanical contrivance Simmons Tommy Here s What You Should Know About Colorado s New Switchblade Law The Greeley Tribune 2 November 2017 The cities of Denver Aurora Boulder Colorado Springs and Lakewood all have switchblade ordinances New Jersey Code of Criminal Justice 2C 39 3e 39 3g 2 39 5 See State of New Jersey v Montalvo 162 A 3d 270 2017 American Knife amp Tool Institute New Jersey Knife Laws At A Glance akti org retrieved 22 March 2022 13 New Jersey Code of Criminal Justice 2C 39 3e 3g 2 Pennsylvania Knife Laws 10 March 2014 Pennsylvania Switchblade Ban Repeal Signed Effective 1 2 2023 Knife Rights Sioux Falls 133 001 1957 There is an exemption for an ordinary pocket knife which does not include a switchblade An ordinary pocket knife means a small knife designed for carrying in a pocket or purse that has its cutting edge and point entirely enclosed by its handle and that may not be opened automatically by a throwing explosive or spring action Raposa Megan City Don t Pocket Switchblades Brass Knuckles Argus Leader 13 Nov 2015 Texas Penal Code Title 10 Sect 46 02 Places Weapons Prohibited airports amusement parks churches synagogues or other places of religious worship correctional facilities courts hospitals nursing homes racetracks schools and colleges on the physical premises of a school or educational institution any grounds or building on which an activity sponsored by a school or educational institution is being conducted any passenger transportation vehicle of a school or educational institution polling places on the premises where a high school college or professional sporting event is taking place venues serving alcohol and any area within 1000 feet of a designated execution site on execution day Texas Penal Code Title 10 Sect 46 01 et seq VA Senate Bill 758 18 2 311 If any person sells or barters or exhibits for sale or for barter or gives or furnishes or causes to be sold bartered given or furnished or has in his possession or under his control with the intent of selling bartering giving or furnishing any switchblade knife ballistic knife as defined in 18 2 307 1 or like weapons such person is guilty of a Class 4 misdemeanor The having in one s possession of any such weapon shall be prima facie evidence except in the case of a conservator of the peace of his intent to sell barter give or furnish the same a b Amended on February 6th 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Erickson Mark 2004 Antique American Switchblades Krause Publications 0873497534 9780873497534 a b c d e f g Zinser Tim Fuller Dan and Punchard Neal Switchblades of Italy Nashville TN Turner Publishing Co 2003 ISBN 1 56311933 1 pp 7 9 11 Langston Richard 2001 Collector s Guide to Switchblade Knives An Illustrated Historical and Price Reference Boulder Colorado Paladin Press p 224 ISBN 1 58160 283 9 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Schrade George M 1982 George Schrade and his accomplishments to the Knife Industry George Schrade Knife Co ASIN B00072P8NU a b c d e f g h i Zinser Fuller 2003 Switchblades of Italy Turner Publishing ISBN 1 56311 933 1 History of Maniago Italy antiqueswitchbladeknives com 14 retrieved 28 March 2022 Shackleford p 152 The name Diamond Edge would live on after Shapleigh Hardware went into bankruptcy in 1960 Its trademarks were purchased by Imperial Cutlery Company who used the Diamond Edge trademark on a variety of knives Hughes Rupert Letters Patent No 1 315 503 issued September 9 1919 Archived April 6 2017 at the Wayback Machine Washington D C United States Patent Office a b c Hughes Rupert Letters Patent No 1 315 503 issued September 9 1919 Washington D C United States Patent Office Crowell Benedict 1919 America s Munitions 1917 1918 Report of Benedict Crowell Assistant Secretary of War Director of Munitions U S War Department Washington D C U S Government Printing Office pp 88 228 Military affairs journal of the American Military Institute American Military History Foundation American Military Institute Kansas State University Dept of History 1937 Vol I p 153 Erickson Mark Antique American Switchblades Chapter 22 KA BAR a trademark of Union Cutlery Co Olean NY Krause Publications ISBN 0 87349 753 8 2004 a b c Benson pp 49 50 Some M2 knives featured a hawkbill blade Trzaska Frank Misunderstood Switchblade Tactical Knives July 2013 a b c Pollack Jack H The Toy That Kills 77 Women s Home Companion Magazine 38 November 1950 Siler Wes Why Switchblades Are Banned Gizmodo Levine Bernard Switchblade Legacy Knife World August 1990 p 24 Dick Steven 1997 The Working Folding Knife Stoeger Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 88317 210 0 Levine Bernard R The Switchblade Menace OKCA Newsletter 1993 Rep Sidney R Yates D of Illinois was convinced of a sadistic connection proclaiming that vicious fantasies of omnipotence idolatry barbaric and sadistic atrocities and monstrous violations of accepted values spring from switchblades Minus switchblade knives and the distorted feeling of power they beget power that is swaggering reckless and itching to express itself in violence our delinquent adolescents would be shorn of one of their most potent means of incitement to crime Pollack Jackson We Must Stop The Sale Of Switchblade Knives Parade Magazine May 26 1968 It could happen to you or any member of your family any time anywhere Tempers flare Suddenly a hand streaks toward a pocket There Is a swift click A hidden dagger tipped blade darts out like a snake s tongue Clutched In a fist is a murderous switchblade Wolff Lester L Speech to the House of Representatives U S Congressional Record House May 27 1968 UPI The Salinas Californian Salinas CA 27 May 1968 Rep Lester L Wolff D N Y said today he would introduce legislation shortly to restrict both the manufacture and sale of switchblade knives and similar weapons Wolff Lester R Prohibited Knife Act HR8612 HR8613 HR8198 U S Congress 1968 1973 1974 In his bill s declaration Rep Wolff stated flatly that switchblade knives have no redeeming social value and are restricted almost solely to violence Wolff would continue his legislative attempts to ban switchblade sales and ownership until 1974 Moore Joan W Going Down to the Barrio Homeboys and Homegirls in Change Philadelphia PA Temple University Press ISBN 0 87722 855 8 ISBN 978 0 87722 855 4 1991 pp 40 59 60 McCorkle Richard C and Miethe Terance D 2001 Panic The Social Construction of the Street Gang Problem New York Prentice Hall pp 54 214 ISBN 0 13 094458 0 ISBN 978 0 13 094458 0 Schneider Eric C 2001 Vampires Dragons and Egyptian Kings Youth Gangs in Postwar New York Princeton NJ Princeton University Press p 242 ISBN 0 691 07454 2 Department of Justice Federal Bureau of Investigation Uniform Crime Reports for the United States 1965 Crime in the United States 2012 U S 19 CFR 12 95 1990 Definitions A switchblade knife means any imported knife or components thereof or any class of imported knife which has one or more of the following characteristics or identities 3 Unassembled knife kits or knife handles without blades which when fully assembled with added blades springs or other parts are knives which open automatically by hand pressure applied to a button or device in the handle of the knife or by operation of inertia gravity or both Further reading editAldighieri Paolo Coltello a scatto antico italiano Italian Switchblade self publishing ISBN 979 1220036887 2018 Benson Ragnar Switchblade The Ace of Blades Paladin Press ISBN 1 58160 283 9 1989 Byrd K L SwitchPix com Erickson Mark Antique American Switchblades Krause Publications ISBN 0 87349 753 8 2004 Federico Vincent Foreign Spring Steel Collectors Guide Vol I self published 2003 Langston Richard Collector s Guide to Switchblade Knives Paladin Press ISBN 1 58160 283 9 ISBN 978 1 58160 283 8 2001 Meyers Ben and Meyers Lowell An Introduction to Switchblade Knives American Eagle Publishing 1982 Shackleford Steve ed Blade s Guide To Knives And Their Values Krause Publications ISBN 978 1 4402 0387 9 1989 Zinser Tim Fuller Dan and Punchard Neal Switchblades of Italy Nashville TN Turner Publishing Co ISBN 1 56311933 1 2003 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Switchblades Netcom com Archived 2006 08 20 at the Wayback Machine Bernard Levine State Knife Laws Police govt nz Archived 2007 01 12 at the Wayback Machine NZ Police Swords Knives and Bayonets State laws map from AKTI Retrieved from https en 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