Saturday, March 26, 2011

 
Two neighbours in the US state of Mississippi drew weapons and fired at each other as an argument over a defecating dog ran out of control.

Associated Press news agency said Jerry Blasingame, 60, has been charged with assault for shooting Terry Tehnet, 52, with a shotgun.

Mr Tehnet was angry because he thought Mr Blasingame's dog had defecated on his lawn, in a rural part of the state.

Mr Tehnet, whose injuries are not life-threatening, may also be charged.

The two men gave AP different versions of what happened.

'Meet me at the levee'
 
Mr Tehnet said he visited his neighbour to complain about dog "poop" on his property.

Mr Blasingame blamed him for shooting his dog the week before, Mr Tehnet said, and told him: "Just meet me at the levee and I'll shoot you down."

Mr Blasingame told AP he got his gun and drove off but Mr Tehnet did not follow so he returned to the neighbourhood.

The two men confronted one another again and each claimed the other produced a weapon first.

"He shot twice, I returned fire," said Mr Blasingame.

Mr Tehnet said Mr Blasingame opened fire first with his shotgun so he took his pistol from his car and fired back.

He said he was hit in both hands, the shoulder, chest and side by shotgun pellets, AP reported.

Washington County Chief Deputy Sheriff Billy Barber said: "Homeowners and property owners need to respect each other's property... If a dog did that in your yard, call the law. Don't take matters into your own hands."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-12869141?print=true

Friday, March 25, 2011

Panel votes to allow guns in public establishments


PHOENIX - Saying they'll work out concerns over property rights later, a House panel voted Thursday to let people bring their guns into public establishments.

Current law permits public agencies to declare their buildings as gun-free zones by putting a sticker on the door and agreeing to check the weapons of those entering. Sen. Ron Gould, R-Lake Havasu City, the sponsor of SB 1201, called that meaningless.

"Stickers don't really protect anybody," he said, noting there are "no guns" stickers on the front of the House and Senate buildings. "But you and I both know that that does not really keep a criminal or a psychotic from walking into this meeting and shooting each and every one of us dead."

His legislation would let public agencies keep their buildings free of guns only if there are metal detectors at each entrance with security guards. That way, Gould said, visitors could feel safe without a weapon to defend themselves.

The committee also voted to declare the Colt single action Army revolver the official state firearm. Gould, sponsor of that measure, too, said the gun played a key role in the settling of Arizona.

But Rep. Albert Hale, D-Window Rock, said SB 1610 ignores the people who often were on the wrong end of these guns.

"The gun symbolizes the extinction, the extermination of those Indians who were here," said Hale, a member of the Navajo Nation.

"I recognize some of the atrocities that went on," responded Rep. Eddie Farnsworth, R-Gilbert. He said this does not celebrate those events but simply recognizes the part that particular weapon played in the state's history, for good or bad.

The concept of allowing guns in public buildings has broad support among legislative Republicans. But several said Thursday they worried about the breadth of the provision.

As crafted, the legislation applies to all "public establishments." That includes not only buildings owned by the state, counties and cities but also any space these governments lease or control.

But not all public agencies are in publicly owned buildings. For example, the state Fingerprint Board and the Department of Veteran Services both lease space in a private building in midtown Phoenix.

Marc Osborn, lobbyist for the Arizona Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said the legislation could infringe on the right of those building owners to keep guns out.
Gould said he will work with business groups to come up with some compromise.
The other question involves stadiums.

Weapons would be allowed at "public events." And that is defined not only as events conducted by a public agency but those run by private groups with a license or permit from a public entity.

Representatives of several sports teams that play in stadiums and fields that actually are owned by local governments said they did not want their fans to be armed.

Dave Kopp of the Arizona Citizens Defense League said there are negotiations to remove all the references to public events from the legislation.

The measure does not affect schools. But the committee, in a separate vote on SB 1467, approved a Senate-passed measure that would allow people to carry weapons on public rights-of-way in and around university and community college campuses.

That vote came over the objections of Anthony Daykin, police chief of the University of Arizona. He said that while the bill no longer would permit guns in campus buildings, it is still a bad idea to let individuals carry weapons through campuses.

"Stickers don't really protect anybody.... But you and I both know that that does not really keep a criminal or a psychotic from walking into this meeting and shooting each and every one of us dead."

Sen. Ron Gould,
sponsor of SB 1201

http://azstarnet.com/news/local/article_a190418c-5f1d-5382-a607-da797f146f30.html

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Venue, sports officials fear bill allowing guns at events

by Larry Rodgers and Alia Beard Rau - Mar. 24, 2011 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic
 
Concert-hall operators and officials from two Valley sports teams are concerned about a proposed law they fear could open the door to allowing firearms at arenas and stadiums.

Senate Bill 1201, which the House Government Committee is scheduled to hear Thursday, would require that guns be allowed into public buildings and events unless they have metal detectors, armed security guards, gun lockers and signs.
The measure applies to courts, libraries and city council chambers. It creates an exemption for events or facilities, such as publicly funded arenas, that serve alcohol, requiring them to post signs and provide gun lockers if they want to prohibit guns. However, events without alcohol would likely have to comply
 
Opponents say the bill's language is unclear and could foster the misperception that Arizona allows guns into major events such as Arizona Cardinals and Phoenix Suns games or rock concerts, where they believe alcohol and charged-up fans shouldn't mix with firearms.

The confusion has led to discussions among the Valley's major sports teams and operators of large entertainment venues.


"This bill will give the impression that Arizona allows guns into concerts and basketball games," said Terry Burke, president of major concert promoter Live Nation Southwest.

"There is a perception that you are allowed to bring guns everywhere, but then there are all these exceptions."

Burke said it appeared the bill would allow guns at family shows that don't serve alcohol, such as "Sesame Street Live" or "Disney on Ice."

If venues are forced to install additional security measures, critics say it could lead to higher ticket prices. The bill also could provide another reason for musical acts to avoid Arizona in the wake of a boycott linked to the immigration law passed in 2010.

Sports and entertainment executives said the bill could affect several venues, including: Phoenix's Chase Field, US Airways Center, Comerica Theatre and Ashley Furniture HomeStore Pavilion (formerly Cricket Wireless Pavilion), Glendale's University of Phoenix Stadium and Jobing.com Arena and the Mesa Arts Center.

All these facilities are owned, leased, operated or controlled with an element of public funding, which defines them as public establishments under SB 1201.

But the Citizens Defense League, the gun-rights group that wrote the bill, said the measure would not apply to arenas and stadiums that serve alcohol.

"No one understands the gun laws," league spokesman Charles Heller said, contending that venues that serve alcohol are governed by a separate set of laws. "(SB 1201) won't impact them."

The bill would not apply to sports events held at universities, such as football games at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, because property that belongs to K-12 schools, universities and community colleges fall under a different section of state law and would not have to comply with SB 1201.

Private facilities would be exempt from the bill's requirements.

Venue concerns

An agent for John Mellencamp and ZZ Top said he couldn't imagine any artist agreeing to appear at any venue that allowed guns in the audience.

"The fear of every performer onstage is that some nut will shoot them," said veteran Los Angeles agent Bob Merlis of Merlis For Hire.

Ralph Marchetta, an executive with the Suns and the team's home venue, US Airways Center, said, "It could have a chilling effect on ticket sales, a chilling effect on artists and acts. We are opposed to it."

Arizona Cardinals executive Mark Dalton said that team also opposed the bill because "its applications would be impractical and imprudent for sports arenas and stadiums."
Bill sponsor Sen. Ron Gould, R-Lake Havasu City, said the bill wasn't intended to target arenas, just public buildings. But he said he would like to see the metal detectors and armed-security-guard requirements expanded to include arenas at some point.

"I think fans would like that," he said, adding that it would give them more assurance that the facility was safe.

The only way to ensure there are no guns, he contended, is to have metal detectors - or build facilities using only private money.

"If they build their own stadium, they can do whatever they want to," Gould said.
Installing metal detectors, hiring additional security staffers and erecting gun-storage lockers could drive up ticket prices for fans.

According to an analysis by legislative staff, it would cost venues about $5,000 per door to install a stationary metal detector, signage and a gun locker. It would cost $45,000 to $90,000 annually pay for armed security at each door.

"Any time you have an increased cost, somewhere along the line that cost ends up at the box office," Burke said.

Currently, most Valley sports and entertainment venues prohibit all weapons except those carried by off-duty peace officers.

Jim Foss, vice president and general manager of Jobing.com Arena, said that venue had used metal detectors on 1.2 million visitors per year since 2006.

"It slows things down, but we've done it for a few years now, so people have become accustomed to it when they come back to Jobing.com," he said.

Security measures vary among venues, but all major local sports and concert venues scrutinize patrons as they enter on some level. Most arenas check purses and many forbid backpacks.

Patrons entering University of Phoenix Stadium and the Ashley Furniture amphitheater are subject to full pat-downs.

Representatives of the sports teams are working with lawmakers to amend the bill to ensure that they are excluded from requirements.
Gould said he would reconsider an amendment to get his bill through the House.


Read more: http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/local/articles/2011/03/24/20110324guns-public-events-arizona.html#ixzz1HVVacQwb

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Refused a smooch, 92-year-old woman fires gun?

Wed Mar 23, 11:24 am ET
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla (Reuters) – Helen Staudinger, 92, wanted a kiss.
But authorities say after her 53-year-old neighbor refused, the central Florida woman aimed a semi-automatic pistol at his house and fired four times.

"If my head would have been over just a little bit further, (a bullet) probably would have hit me in the back of the head," the neighbor, Dwight Bettner, told Reuters.


Staudinger remained in jail on Tuesday, a day after being arrested on charges of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and shooting into a dwelling. Her next court date is April 26.

The case of the kiss that wasn't occurred in Fort McCoy, Florida, about 20 miles northeast of Ocala.

Bettner, a former law enforcement officer and boilermaker, said his elderly neighbor has seemed attracted to him since he moved in six months ago. He's not sure why.
"I've taken her trash out for her, just neighborly stuff," Bettner said. "I guess she just took that as something else."

He told Marion County Sheriff's deputies that Staudinger threatened to shoot him recently when he told her he had a girlfriend but didn't follow through.

Just after noon on Monday, Bettner argued with Staudinger when she came to his house and refused to leave, according to an incident report.

"I want a kiss before I leave," Bettner said Staudinger told him.

No, he said.

"Just go back to your property, and leave me alone," Bettner recalled saying.

Bettner was on the phone with his father when he heard gunshots moments later. One bullet went through a window, spraying him with glass.

Staudinger told deputies that she fired at Bettner's new Mitsubishi 3000GT, a car "that he loved so much," the incident report said.

Bettner said on Tuesday that he would probably move out of his rented home.

"I just don't need the stress or the hassle," he said. "I thought this only happened to younger people."
(Editing by Jerry Norton)
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110323/od_nm/us_crime_kiss

Even if We Had No Second Amendment. . .
By Laurence M. Vance
Published 03/23/11

The Irrelevance of the Second Amendment
The killing of six people on January 8, 2011, in Tucson, Arizona, and attempted assassination of a "public servant" and her staff members has brought forth a predictable response from the left and gun-control groups: We need stricter gun-control laws to prevent tragedies like the Tucson shooting.

But calls for banning extended-capacity magazines, instituting gun-free zones, more thorough background checks, longer waiting periods for gun purchases, limits on gun purchases, stricter licensing of gun dealers, comprehensive databases of gun owners, repealing concealed-carry laws, gun registration and licensing, and outright gun bans will not prevent gun violence any more than drug-prohibition laws stop people from using drugs.

If someone is willing to commit murder, he is unlikely to be deterred by any gun-control regulations or laws. Would-be murderers aren’t the least bit concerned about gun-free zones, bans on certain types of guns and ammunition, restrictions on concealed weapons, trigger lock requirements, and gun bans. And they will either reluctantly comply with waiting periods and background checks or circumvent them by purchasing a gun from an individual or on the black market.

It is those who use guns responsibly, whether for hunting, sporting, or recreation, and those who desire to own a gun for self-defense, collecting, or peace of mind, that overwhelmingly bear the brunt of the inconvenience, hassle, expense, and loss of liberty that results from the myriad of federal gun rules and regulations regarding the purchase, sale, manufacture, transport, storage, and use of firearms.

The self-defense issue is especially important because in the Supreme Court cases of South v. Maryland (1855), Castle Rock v. Gonzales (1985), the Court ruled that law-enforcement officers do not have a constitutional duty to protect a person from harm. Their primary responsibly is to enforce the law.

Gun enthusiasts, some civil libertarians, sportsmen, hunters, gun-rights organizations, concerned citizens, and others that take a dim view of most gun-control legislation have likewise come forth with a predictable response: The Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms is not the cause of tragedies like the Tucson shooting.

They are right, of course, just as they are also correct in emphasizing -- contrary to most gun-control advocates -- that the right to keep and bear arms is an individual right. Their case has been made easier since the Supreme Court ruled in District of Columbia v. Heller (2008) that "the Second Amendment protects an individual right to possess a firearm unconnected with service in a militia, and to use that arm for traditionally lawful purposes, such as self-defense within the home." And also since the Court reaffirmed this opinion in McDonald v. City of Chicago (2010) and further ruled that the Second Amendment applies to the states.

The U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of Legal Counsel had, in 2004, already answered the question "whether the right secured by the Second Amendment belongs only to the states, only to persons serving in state-organized militia units like the National Guard, or to individuals generally." The conclusion was definitive: "The Second Amendment secures a right of individuals generally, not a right of states or a right restricted to person serving in militias."

And as Stephen Halbrook more than demonstrated in The Founders’ Second Amendment: Origins of the Right to Bear Arms (The Independent Institute, 2008), such a view was held throughout early American history.

Although the Heller and McDonald cases affirmed that the Second Amendment protects an individual right, they at the same time made it abundantly clear that government can still infringe upon that right. According to the majority decision written by Justice Alito:
It is important to keep in mind that Heller, while striking down a law that prohibits the possession of handguns in the home, recognized that the right to keep and bear arms is not a "right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose." We made it clear in Heller that our holding did not cast doubt on such longstanding regulatory measures as "prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill," "laws forbidding the carrying of firearms in sensitive places such as schools and government buildings, or laws imposing conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of arms." We repeat those assurances here.
In a footnote to this last phrase quoted from the Heller decision, Justice Scalia makes an important clarifying statement: "We identify these presumptively lawful regulatory measures only as examples; our list does not purport to be exhaustive."

Scalia also makes it clear in Heller that the Second Amendment "does not protect those weapons not typically possessed by law-abiding citizens for lawful purposes, such as short-barreled shotguns." But it gets worse, for Scalia goes on to say: "We also recognize another important limitation on the right to keep and carry arms. Miller said, as we have explained, that the sorts of weapons protected were those ‘in common use at the time.’ We think that limitation is fairly supported by the historical tradition of prohibiting the carrying of ‘dangerous and unusual weapons.’"

No wonder some advocates of gun control liked the Heller and McDonald decisions.

Indeed, just days after the Heller decision, in two federal court decisions, Mullenix v. BATF and U.S. v. Dorosan, the Heller decision was relied on to uphold federal gun right infringements. And the D.C. city council merely enacted new gun regulations.

But when it comes to real gun liberty, the Second Amendment is irrelevant, but not because lip service is given to it even while it is ignored.

The Amendment was adopted because, as Scalia wrote in Heller: "During the 1788 ratification debates, the fear that the federal government would disarm the people in order to impose rule through a standing army or select militia was pervasive in Antifederalist rhetoric."

But it should be understood that the Second Amendment confers no positive right. The Bill of Rights is an additional limitation on federal power to infringe upon gun rights besides the fact that no authority is granted to the federal government in its limited, enumerated powers to infringe upon them in the first place. If the Second Amendment didn’t exist, Americans would still have the natural right to keep and bear arms.

From a constitutional (and libertarian) perspective, the federal government has no authority to ban or regulate handguns, shotguns, sawed-off shotguns, rifles, assault rifles, extended-capacity magazines, high caliber guns and ammunition, automatic weapons, or bazookas.

And neither does the federal government have the constitutional authority to establish gun bans, gun-free zones, background checks, waiting periods, limits on gun purchases, licensing of gun dealers, gun-owner databases, gun licensing, gun registration, age restrictions, or concealed weapons laws.

When looked at from this perspective, the self-proclaimed opponents of gun control and stanch defenders of the Second Amendment in Congress don’t look much different from their opponents. Republicans in Congress are already looking at working with Democrats to tighten federal gun laws.

The issue is not even about guns; the issue is about the limited powers of the federal government under the Constitution. If a clearly unconstitutional exception can be made for guns, then a way can be found to make an exception for anything.
http://www.campaignforliberty.com/article.php?view=1381

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

A gun control compromise for everyone


LOS ANGELES, March 21, 2011 —
Let's all come together and unite on gun control.
Despite being a staunch supporter of the Second Amendment, it is time for a compromise on gun control that will make conservatives happy and liberals less miserable than usual.

President Obama has decided to try and rescue his failing presidency and reputation for laziness by actually "doing something."

Unfortunately his something is the wrong thing.

When a pot smoking reader of the Communist Manifesto shot Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, Mr. Obama did not ban left-wing books or in any way enforce laws against drugs that are already illegal.
He does not want to alienate drug users.

Most gun owners did not vote for him, so offering more gun control legislation is harmless for him.
If it causes Democrats in moderate areas to lose their jobs, Mr. Obama will be fine. He really has taken "to thine own self be true" to stratospheric levels.

Conservatives need not panic. Mr. Obama is merely floating trial balloons because he wants to talk about anything other than his record. While he is a leftist on gun control, he has shown zero inclination to fight for his beliefs other than the big three of healthcare, education, and energy/environment.

With a Republican House, gun control is dead on arrival. Conservatives can and should guard against complacency, but full blown panic is not needed on this one. There will be no gun control legislation, and the issue will soon be forgotten.

Until then, why can't we all just, to quote leftist union thugs trying to divide us, "come together?"

It is high time for a gun control compromise that will satisfy the philosophies of those across the ideological spectrum.

Since liberals favor gun control and conservatives are against it, just take away all the guns from the liberals. That way, if there is ever a conflict like the 2000 election that cannot be resolved peacefully, the right will win because we will have all the guns.

This could lead to fantastic policy developments.

Liberals favor higher taxes and conservatives favor lower taxes. If the left likes socialism and wealth redistribution so much, splendid. Take away the money from the left and give it to the right. If they try to stop us, remember the first bullet point.
We will have all the guns, and the bullets.
Evan Sayet brilliantly points out that certain reasonable restrictions on guns should exist.
"Nobody should own a gun if they are found to have a criminal record, a psychiatric record, or a Barbra Streisand record," he says.
Let's for once be honest about the issue. Even conservatives who oppose all gun control have to admit that they are nervous about the idea of liberals owning guns.

Would you want violent SEIU or moveon.org protesters owning guns? Should Wisconsin protesters screaming about Hitler and Ghadafi running their government have guns? They are at war with conservative governors. These governors do not need extra security because of 80 year-old tea party ladies in wheelchairs with knitting apparel.
Would you want Jeremiah Wright owning guns? His church upstairs is already a few pews short of a full congregation.
Would you want Ward Churchill owning guns? There may not be any barriers to the mentally deranged becoming schoolteachers, but the firearms industry should actually have standards.

Would you want liberals in Congress owning guns? Some of these lefties are one violent outburst away from their own heads exploding. With nuclear explosions and meltdowns being in the news, those wanting to keep firearms away from nuclear reactors should not let such weapons be anywhere near Andy Weiner or Barney Frank.

The only reason the Supreme Court successfully and barely blocked Al Gore from stealing the George W. Bush presidency was because those threatening death to the conservatives on the court were unable to carry out their desires.

The only thing saving American society from total breakdown is the fact that angry violent leftists have not gotten beyond the horse and buggy stage with regards to weapons. They can throw rocks and bring their AFL-CIO billy clubs like in the good old mob days, but firehoses are effective enough when necessary to handle that.
Even tear gas could be a problem if leftists had guns.
Conservatives did bring guns to the tea parties, and they kept them at their waists. Yet this exposes the problem with gun control from the start. Attempts to punish law abiding responsible citizens will just reward the criminals.

In looking at the goal of gun laws, it should be to punish the irresponsible while leaving the responsible people alone.

Irresponsible people are those who violate the law, whether it be conducting illegal strikes, handing out fake medical sick notes, or vandalizing government buildings. Since these people are criminals, it is perfectly fair to keep guns away from them since petty crimes do lead to bigger crimes.

So let's all unite and support President Obama in his quest for more gun control. As with every other bill he has signed, the unintended consequences will be interesting to watch.

Conservatives want to be free and provide liberty for everybody. Liberals want to permanently silence conservatives and then regulate us all to death. Right now the left hates guns, and anybody in a street fight knows that the sword actually is mightier than the pen.

Outside of the Jayson Blair Times, this is common knowledge.

So let's all come together and unite. Ban liberals from owning guns. They don't need them, can't be trusted with them, and as with most other issues, have no understanding of them or the Constitution, that allows the rest of us to have them.

http://communities.washingtontimes.com/neighborhood/tygrrrr-express/2011/mar/20/gun-control-compromise-everyone/

Monday, March 21, 2011

Mexican Criminals, American Guns Did the ATF help create its own crisis?
The next time gun-control advocates point to violence in Mexico and call for more restrictions on gun sales or a revived assault-weapons ban, they should consider that the problem may not be with the laws on the books, but with those who enforce them.

A number of outlets — among them CBS News, the L.A. Times, and the Center for Public Integrity — have alleged scandalous behavior at the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF). Sen. Chuck Grassley (R., Iowa) is investigating allegations that ATF supervisors ordered agents to let gun runners ship arms across the border. Two of those guns turned up in a gunfight that killed a Border Patrol agent.
ATF special agent John Dodson says that agents in the Phoenix office were ordered to let known gun traffickers purchase firearms. The plan, Operation Fast and Furious, was intended to help investigators follow low-level gunrunners to cartel leadership. That may justify letting a few illegal sales slip by, but agents say the number soon climbed into the hundreds and thousands.


Agents raised warnings to their superiors about the quantity of sales and the rising violence across the border, but were told that the operation had been approved at ATF headquarters. They were also told that if they didn’t like it, they were welcome to seek employment at the Maricopa County jail as detention officers making $30,000 a year.

Dodson came forward after hearing that two of the guns showed up at a crime scene, a remote valley where Border Patrol agent Brian Terry was killed in an exchange of fire. Dodson gave an emotional on-camera interview to CBS reporter Sharyl Attkisson, clearly disturbed by Terry’s murder.

The ATF’s alleged malfeasance is all the more disturbing when considered in the context of the Mexican drug war. The problem, however, is not legal U.S. gun dealers.

The media — for example, Reuters — have widely reported that “nine out of ten guns” found at Mexican crime scenes came from U.S. gun dealers, but this claim has been debunked: The statistic takes into account only guns traced by the FBI. Such tracing is possible only if the Mexican authorities submit a weapon to the FBI, and they submit only weapons designed for the U.S. civilian market (the only kind of gun the FBI is equipped to trace). Once all guns retrieved in Mexico are included, only 17 percent come from U.S. gun dealers.

There are plenty of places for the cartels to buy guns other than the U.S. retail market. A goodly portion of weapons trotted out for the press cannot be legally purchased in the U.S. without the ATF’s say-so and approval from the local chief law-enforcement officer (short-barreled rifles, for example). Rocket-propelled grenades and newly manufactured machine guns are not available at gun shows. Further gun control imposed on typical American buyers would have no effect on the ability of the cartels to purchase these military-grade weapons.

To acquire such weapons, the cartels put up recruiting billboards to persuade Mexican soldiers and police officers to leave their posts, and thousands have done so with weapons in hand. Past wars in Latin America have also created a healthy black market that the cartels can tap into. There remains the question of U.S. arms exports, but these, when legal, are monitored by the State Department.

Congress should be able to assume that the gun-control laws already on the books are being enforced. That does not seem to be the case. Congress should find out why, and the public should bear it in mind next time Attorney General Holder or Mexican president Felipe Calderón says that a new assault-weapons ban is necessary.

— David Rittgers is an attorney and a legal-policy analyst at the Cato Institute.
http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/262423/mexican-criminals-american-guns-david-rittgers

David Rittgers

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Obama's stance on gun-law fixes is no stance at all

Arizona Daily Star Posted: Sunday, March 20, 2011 12:00 am
Political self-interest must never trump public safety - and yet President Obama is dancing delicately around the fringes of life-and-death gun-control issues rather than facing them down. This is not leadership.

Obama's call in the Arizona Daily Star last week for better firearms enforcement fell far short of the kind of common-sense, middle-of-the-road reforms that are needed in this country - and that also, ironically, generally prevail in public opinion polls.

The president's exclusive offering to the Star clearly was prompted by the Jan. 8 shootings here that killed six people and injured 13 others, including Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. Yet Obama's article ignored glaring failures in our laws that abetted the Jan. 8 shooter in wreaking tragic havoc.

Obama argued that better enforcement of existing laws, especially the background check system; rewarding states for providing better data to back up the system; and quicker background checks must be priorities.

We agree. But the president failed to step up and insist on meat-and-potato reforms that also are imperative, including several he supported in his campaign. Among them:
• Reinstating the expired federal ban on military-style assault weapons.

He's not talking about it now, but during the campaign Obama supported reimposition of the 1994 ban, which expired in 2004. We do, too; but the old ban was flawed and a new ban should be modeled on California's law, which uses a "one-feature" definition, banning private ownership of weapons with just one military-style feature, such as bayonet mounts, threads for silencers or flash suppressors.

No legitimate gun owner needs to use a weapon such as the .50-caliber sniper rifle, which is easier to buy legally in most states than a handgun and which is highly accurate from a mile away, firing ammunition that can pierce reinforced armor such as that on airplanes and fuel tanks.

• Reinstating a federal ban on extended-capacity magazines.

No one, not a woman carrying a weapon for self-defense or a hobbyist shooting at targets, needs to fire 30 shots in less than 30 seconds. There's no way to prevent all shooting rampages, but we can reduce the amount of carnage shooters are equipped to do.

Ten rounds is the limit that would be imposed by a bill in Congress introduced by U.S.
Rep. Carolyn McCarthy, a New York Democrat, and by a bill in the Arizona Legislature, introduced by Tucson Democratic Rep. Steven Farley. We support both measures. Obama should, too.

• Closing the gun-show "loophole," an intentional exception to the background check law which allows criminals and other undesirable gun buyers to acquire firearms in private sales.

Again, Obama is silent on this now, but he supported it during the campaign. Federal law requires that background checks be made by federally licensed gun sellers, but not by private sellers doing deals at gun shows, flea markets, garage sales or among private acquaintances.

Our view is that in order to keep firearms out of the hands of the most dangerous people, anyone who sells a gun should be required to check out the buyer through the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) system or, as in California, do the deal only through a licensed retailer.

• Improve the NICS system itself. It relies largely on data provided by the states, and many states - among them Arizona - don't provide much, especially information about people found too dangerously mentally ill to legally purchase weapons.

Obama wrote that he would reward states that do a good job in sharing this information; fine, but let's also consider ways to punish states that do not.

• As we noted last month, the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives is badly underfunded. Obama should be leading the charge to get ATF into fighting shape.

The National Rifle Association says that Obama's focus as outlined in his Star article is misplaced; that he should be talking about "criminals or mental health issues," not gun laws. We disagree that the two issues can be mutually exclusive.

The Obama administration last week held meetings on the issues at the U.S. Department of Justice.

But media reports suggest Obama's team didn't offer a priority list of gun-control reforms. Instead, it apparently wanted only to encourage discussion from the NRA (which didn't show up), the ATF, FBI, and the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, among others.

We understand that gun control initiatives can endanger political careers; the NRA can put millions into the pockets of candidates who agree with it.

We also understand that the president would like to be re-elected in 2012 and isn't eager to endanger the careers of Democrats serving in Congress.

But there's a time for leadership that sets aside calculations of political self-interest.
On reforming America's gun laws, that time is now.

Arizona Daily Star

More info
Read more about the Star's positions on gun reform at azstarnet.com/editorials-guncontrol

http://azstarnet.com/news/opinion/editorial/article_5cd6353a-fac3-5060-9a2b-45c90efe43a8.html?print=1