Illegal Possession of Body Armor?

In a recent article about the death of rapper O.D.B. there is mention of some of his past run-ins with the law.

(Bolding mine)

How and why is the possession of body armor regulated. It isn’t a weapon in itself, it surprises me to learn that there are restrictions placed on possession.
Not looking for a debate, just looking for factual answers as to:

What are the various regulations concerning possession of body armor in different jurisdictions of the United States?

What is the rationale behind the call for such regulations?

I’m assuming it stems from an incident that occured in LA quite a few years ago. A few guys robbed a bank and wore complete body armor, making it extremely difficult for the police to stop them.

Here is a link

US code Title 18 Section 931

He was on probation at the time and was the first person charged the then-new law prohibiting felons from having body armor.

(bolding mine)

Sorry, I haven’t read much Law. Does this (“US code”) mean that this is a federal law applying in every State in the same way?

IANAL etc, but yes, you’re right.

So a non-felon can possess and wear body armor?

I dunno about that. I get my crossing guard uniform stuff at a place that sells police uniform paraphanelia, and I’m pretty sure that you need some sort of ID/Permit or something. I’m pretty sure they sell body armor there, but the only people who were buying it were police officers. If anybody could buy it, I would think there would be a lot of nutcases/paranoid people waiting in line there :stuck_out_tongue:

If I’m a felon, and I dress in a suit designed to make me look like the Master Chief, and it just happens to be made of metal or bullet-resistant composite, am I in violation?

All that matters is the Federal definition of body armor:

Provided you’re not a fellon, there is no systematic prohabition against an average citizen purchasing, owning, and wearing body armor. At least not in the US. Some local juristictions may restrict it, but most do not.

Anyone recall all the stories of families buying commercial-grade body armor and sending it to the troops over in Iraq…? Those people making the purchases were civilians.

Now, that said, I believe many juristictions have penalties for using body armor in the course of commiting a crime, even if the user wasn’t previously prohibited from owning said armor.

Whew, what a reli…eeah, I mean, Oh, thanks, that’s really interesting.

About 10 years ago, Harpers had a piece that talked about parents buying their school children body armor. There’s even body armor that’s tailored like street clothes.