
A weapons under disability charge in Ohio is a third-degree felony that can send you to prison for up to 36 months, even if you never fired or used the weapon in any crime. Under ORC § 2923.13, simply having a gun while you fall into a prohibited category is enough for the charge.
But “having” a gun isn’t as straightforward as prosecutors make it sound. The state has to prove you knowingly possessed the firearm, that the disability actually applied to you, and that the weapon was operable. Each of those elements is a potential weak point in the prosecution’s case.
Under Ohio Revised Code § 2923.13, it’s illegal for certain people to knowingly acquire, have, carry, or use any firearm or dangerous ordnance. The statute doesn’t require you to have used the weapon or committed any other crime with it. Possession alone is enough.
Ohio law identifies five categories of people who are prohibited from possessing firearms:
The critical word in the statute is “knowingly.” The prosecution must prove you knew you had the firearm. That single element shapes the entire defense strategy.
Weapons under disability is classified as a felony of the third degree under ORC § 2923.13(B).
That means:
The penalties don’t stop at prison time. A conviction creates lasting collateral damage. You lose your Second Amendment rights permanently under both Ohio and federal law.
Employment opportunities shrink. Housing applications get harder. And if you’re not a U.S. citizen, a felony conviction can trigger deportation proceedings.
To convict you, the prosecution must prove three elements beyond a reasonable doubt:
The “knowingly” element is where most contested cases are won or lost. If the gun was found in a shared vehicle, a common area of a house, or someone else’s property, the prosecution has to connect it to you specifically. Being in proximity to a firearm is not the same as knowingly possessing it.
Prosecutors typically prove the disability element through certified copies of prior convictions, court orders, or records from mental health proceedings. If any of those records are flawed, incomplete, or don’t match the statutory categories, the foundation of the charge weakens.
Every case turns on its own facts, but several defense strategies come up frequently in weapons under disability cases:
Challenging “knowing” possession. If the firearm was found in a car you borrowed, a house with multiple residents, or a location you didn’t control, the prosecution may not be able to prove you knew it was there. The state can’t convict you for someone else’s gun in someone else’s space.
Illegal search and seizure. Many weapons under disability charges originate from traffic stops, “stop and frisk” encounters, or searches incident to arrest. If the police violated your Fourth Amendment rights by conducting an unlawful stop, search, or seizure, the firearm may be suppressed as evidence. Without the gun, the case falls apart.
The disability didn’t apply. The prosecution has to prove you were actually under a qualifying disability at the time of possession. If the underlying conviction has been sealed or expunged, if a mental health commitment has been lifted, or if you were granted relief from disability under ORC § 2923.14, the disability element may not hold.
The firearm was inoperable. Ohio law requires the weapon to be capable of firing. Police don’t test-fire at the scene; they take the weapon into evidence and test it later. Chain of custody issues, testing delays, and questions about the weapon’s condition at the time of the alleged offense all create defense opportunities.
Constructive possession challenges. Being near a gun is not the same as possessing it. If the prosecution is relying on “constructive possession” (meaning the gun was in an area you could access, but not on your person), the defense can argue there’s insufficient evidence linking you to the weapon.
Ohio law does provide a path to restoration. Under ORC § 2923.14, a person under a weapons disability based on a felony conviction or felony drug offense can apply to the court of common pleas in the county where they reside for relief from the prohibition.
To qualify, you must meet several requirements:
The county prosecutor is notified of the application and can object. The court holds a hearing and decides whether to grant relief. If granted, the relief restores your civil firearm rights to the same extent as any other citizen.
There are exceptions. If you’ve been convicted of using a firearm as a violent career criminal under ORC § 2923.132, or if you have two or more felony convictions with certain firearm specifications, you’re ineligible to apply.
Weapons under disability rarely shows up alone. It’s frequently added to drug cases, domestic violence arrests, traffic stops that turn into vehicle searches, and any encounter where police find a gun on someone with a prior record.
When it’s stacked with other charges, the stakes multiply. Consecutive sentencing becomes a real risk, especially if the other charges involve firearm specifications under ORC § 2941.141, which adds a mandatory 1-year prison term served consecutively.
The prosecutor’s job is to convict you. And weapons under disability cases are built on the assumption that the evidence is simple: you had a record, and you had a gun. But the law demands more than assumptions. It demands proof of every element, obtained through lawful means, beyond a reasonable doubt.
If you or someone you care about is facing a weapons under disability charge in Ohio, contact The Botnick Law Firm for a consultation. The sooner you have a defense attorney reviewing your case, the better your options.