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-
- GEnie Outdoors Newsletter
- July, 1995
- Edited by John Marshall (J.Marshall2/Paladin)
-
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS:
- -----------------
-
- 9507A CAST BULLET ALLOYS by Kenneth Mollohan
-
- 9507B CONCEALMENT HANDGUNS by John Marshall
-
- 9507C THE HATCHER SCALE by John Marshall
-
- 9507D NRA NEWS by the National Rifle Association Staff
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- 9507A CAST BULLET ALLOYS by Kenneth Mollohan
-
- *BULLETS *CASTING *ALLOYS
-
-
- Permission is hereby granted to Genie (General Electric
- Information Services) for a one-time usage of this copyright protected
- document in their outdoors newsletter. All other rights reserved.
- This document, or any portion of it, may not be otherwise reproduced
- by any means without the written consent of the author, who may be
- contacted at (412) 573-1183.
-
- This is NOT a public domain document.
-
- Cast Bullets
-
- Chapter Three
- Cast Bullet Alloys
-
- Kenneth Mollohan
- Copyright April 1995
-
- ALLOY SELECTION
-
- If I were to list every lead alloy that has been used for cast
- bullets, the types of loads they were used with, how they worked in
- one man's gun, but not in another, ad nauseam, chapter three would
- could go on forever . In truth, the differences are easier to
- understand and deal with if you examine them from a performance
- standpoint instead of considering every minute variation of
- composition. Actual alloy composition ... as such ... isn't really
- important. Your world won't come apart if you find out that the alloy
- you are getting good results with has 15 % antimony instead of 12 %
- like you wanted it to. Nor does it matter whether the hardness you
- are getting good results with comes from high antimony content, or
- from quench hardening. The alloy properties are what count, not the
- alloy composition. No matter what metal blends and processing are
- used to get them, the properties important to bullet casters are
- hardness, cost, the ability to cast well, and the ability to
- reproduce your results.
-
- The hardness of cast bullets is a primary factor in determining
- how well they will perform in high pressure loads. The harder bullet
- is better able to withstand the compressive forces of firing and the
- abrasive effects of bore fouling. This translates into less damage,
- which translates into increased uniformity and accuracy in high power
- loads. Note that this is also true of low power loads, in that the
- alloy must still be strong enough to withstand serious deformation.
- But many people believe that an alloy that is just BARELY strong
- enough is best for light loads. Their reasoning generally runs that a
- slight base upset is important to good obturation or sealing of the
- bore, which reduces the lead fouling that hurts accuracy. In other
- words, they think that losing a tiny bit of accuracy because of
- marginal bullet strength is better than losing a lot of accuracy
- because of leading. Wherever the truth may lay, light target loads
- with cast bullets can deliver extraordinary accuracy. I've seen a
- group fired in competition that would have hit your thumbnail ten
- times in a row at two hundred yards!
-
- Good results require good bullets. If you are getting good
- bullets from your alloy, that's fine, and you can go on to the next
- section. If not, here are a few tips you can try to correct it..
-
- If your bullets come from the mold wrinkled, with folds and
- rounded edges, your groups are going to be poor no matter how
- carefully you prepare them afterwards. The ability of an alloy to
- pour well is usually called castability, and is mostly determined by
- two things: The fluidity of the molten alloy and the lack of
- contaminates. In other words, an alloy that cast well will have low
- surface tension and be free of dirt and incompatable materials.
-
- One way to reduce the surface tension is to add tin. It is
- frequently possible to salvage poor metal by adding two or three
- percent of tin, but do not add more than this, because the improvement
- in castability from tin tapers off very quickly above this level. If
- tin is used, it would be best if the salvaged metal is used for
- relatively low velocity rifle and pistol loads. The hardness probably
- will not be consistent enough for reliability in heavy rifle loads.
- The traditional remedy for poor flow is to just add tin until it DOES
- cast well. And this will still work, but as noted above, this can
- lead to other problems. Adding antimony will also improve the
- fluidity of the alloy, but not as much as the tin will.
-
- Depending on their nature, contaminates can form inclusions to
- damage the balance of a bullet, or they can make the alloy "slushy",
- so that it does not pour well. Inclusions can be handled by cleaning
- and fluxing your alloy properly. But slushy alloys are more difficult
- to deal with.
-
- A number of metals like zinc or aluminum are not soluble in
- molten lead to any extent, and an alloy contaminated with them will
- have a slushy consistency that will not cast well no matter what the
- temperature, or how much tin you add. There are two other things you
- can do to salvage such metal. The first is to turn down the
- thermostat and let the alloy cool until it is just barely liquid. At
- lower temperatures, solubility of many contaminating metals in lead is
- at a minimum. At lower temperatures, the sludge will frequently float
- slowly to the top of the lead alloy, and most of it can be carefully
- skimmed off. This can do a great deal to clean up your alloy, and
- then raising the temperature again will put some of the residues that
- you could not skim off back into solution. Now try to cast your
- bullets again, and you should see a big improvement. If not, just
- fall back on plan two: Pour the darn stuff into a coffee can with a
- big eye-bolt, and present it to your brother-in-law as a boat anchor!
-
- The easiest, and fastest way to reduce surface tension is to
- just turn up the thermostat on your lead furnace. Everyone knows that
- a hotter alloy will cast better, but not everyone knows that's because
- the surface tension is lower at higher temperatures. This will also
- keep your mold hotter and make the lead more fluid, so it will take
- longer for the lead to crystalize (harden), and it has more time to
- fill out the mold cavity. The hotter your alloy is, the better it
- will flow. Small additions of antimony may help lower the surface
- tensiion too.
-
- Since a major attraction of cast bullets is inexpensive shooting,
- cost of the lead is a major consideration. Type metals like linotype
- and monotype are hard to find, and they are expensive when you do
- locate a source. Fortunately, lead weights used to balance vehicle
- tires ("Wheelweights") are common, and they make good bullets. Used
- Wheelweights are inexpensive, and sometimes free. But be careful to
- to focus TOO well on economy. Col. Harrison said that while economy
- is a worthwhile goal, when it leads you to use materials that
- guraantee failure, you may wish to re-examine your system of values.
- In other words, just because a big pot of soft lead was given to you
- free doesn't make it a suitable for cast bullets, any more than a wax
- candle being free makes it a good material. Soft lead will have to be
- hardened somehow for most cast bullet applications.
-
- Reproducability is also important. If you develop a load that
- works well, you will want to make it again and again. This can be
- pretty rough to do if you're using a batch of scrap alloy with unknown
- composition and hardness. If you have a good supply of salvaged
- metal, one solution is to melt down as much as possible into a single
- batch, which you will KNOW is uniform. But you can carry the trick
- one step further too: Just make up as many batches as you can, and
- label the ingots "A", "B", etc to mark each batch. Then when you go
- to fill your pot, use one ingot from each batch. The effect will be
- the same as if you had melted all those batches into one big batch.
- This trick can be used to make a uniform supply of alloy that can last
- for a year or more.
-
- Sooner or later though, you will run out of your favorite alloy,
- and have to make more. You can fiddle with witches brews for years,
- adding a pinch of this and a little of that, and going to the range
- too test every one until you come up with something that does as well.
- But you can sure save yourself a lot of work by investing a few bucks
- in some way to measure the hardness of the alloy. If you reproduce
- the hardness, you will also reproduce the accuracy potential, with a
- 99.9 % guarantee! There are a lot of commercial hardness testers,
- ranging from laboratory Rockwell and Brinell testers costing thousands
- of dollars, to a simple set of art supply pencils. All will do for
- the simple measurements you will need.
-
- Another question of reproducability occurs with the use ot tin in
- lead alloys. As noted below, alloys with tin will soften with age,
- and you can get startling differences in hardness even from the same
- batch of metal. The trick here is to use an alloy hard enough that it
- is still adequate after it has softened a bit. Just let the softening
- take place before you use them. The rate of softening slows down
- rather sharply, after the first week or so, and almost all the
- softening occurs within a couple of weeks. And while it doesn't seem
- to ever quite quit softening, it may take years for noticeable
- softening to occur after that.
-
- ALLOY BLENDING
-
- THE METALS
-
- Only four metals make up the useful range of ingredients in
- modern lead alloys. They are lead, tin, antimony and arsenic. Oh, it
- is possible to use other metals. Some early alloys had a few percent
- of copper, and alloys can contain other trace ingredients without
- serious harm. But most of metals are either like copper, and unusable
- because you just cannot dissolve enough at ordinary melt temperatures
- to affect the properties much, or like zinc, which not only is poorly
- soluble, but it increases the surface tension until it makes the
- alloys almost impossible to cast good bullets with. Others present
- special problems, like the metals salvaged from modern automobile
- batteries, which can react with moisture to form toxic gases in your
- home.
-
- Lead is really a poor choice for a bullet metal from a technical
- perspective. It has many drawbacks that include staining of clothing
- and hands, as well as being toxic. It's far too soft and it presents
- a serious bore contamination problem (leading). It has only three
- properties that are desirable for bullets: It is dense, easily worked
- and it's cheap. The density provides for adequate bullet weight to
- retain high energies after the bullet passes through the air, and
- gives the greatest energy on the target for a given bullet size and
- shape. Well, that's not QUITE true. There are denser and harder
- metals that would do a better job. Two that spring to mind are Gold
- and Uranium. However, these introduce other minor problems like cost
- and availability: Believe it or not, I HAVE seen bullets cast out of
- gold (not MINE, you can be sure), but not many of us can afford
- bullets of gold or uranium, no matter how much better they may be in
- theory. Sometimes reality rears its ugly head and roars!
-
- Tin was once THE alloying metal of choice. Not only will it
- provide useful increases in hardness over pure lead, but even small
- amounts of tin will vastly reduce the surface tension of lead alloys,
- which improves the fluidity of the molten metal and makes it easier to
- get good, uniform bullets that are well filled out, and have no
- wrinkles or similar defects. Tin is expensive, but not so dear that
- casters can't use a few percent to improve the castability of their
- scrap lead alloys.
-
- However, modern metallurgy has shown the use of tin in lead
- alloys has some serious disadvantages. Alloys with significant levels
- of tin will not quench harden vary well. And whether quenched or not,
- they will soften badly with aging. The amount of softening they will
- undergo is worse as the level of tin increases. The use of tin in
- historical bullet alloys is probably a major reason why cast bullets
- have been long regarded as an arcane black art, where only experts
- could obtain good results, and even then, only after many years of
- experience in memorizing the proper incantations. In actuality,
- bullets from the same pot of high tin alloy might shoot well when
- fresh and hard, but do poorly a few months later after age softening
- had set in. Naturally such a lack of consistency from exactly the
- same components would get pretty discouraging. I'm not sure why tin
- does this, but it seems to act as a solid solvent that weakens the
- bonds between crystals in the solidified alloy.
-
- Antimony will also improve the castability of lead slightly, but
- it's major contribution is to harden lead alloys. It has long been a
- major component in hard type metals that need to cast well and be hard
- for wear resistance in printing presses. These same qualities made
- antimonial type metals well adapted to far more powerful loads than
- were ever achieved with lead/tin alloys, and was fully as important as
- proper bullet design in ushering in the new wave of popularity that
- cast bullets are experiencing.
-
- Arsenic is a relative new-comer to the list of desirable alloying
- ingredients. It was little used in the past, largely (I suspect)
- because of its lethal reputation. However, arsenic is not much
- different from lead (whose toxicity is notorious) and antimony, which
- got it's name because a medieval cleric / alchemist was investigating
- the interesting new metal, and by way of testing its properties, he
- fed it to a number of his fellow clergymen. When they all died in
- excruciating agony, he concluded that it was "Anti-Monk" metal. In
- time, the term became corrupted to the "antimony" metal we use today.
- Or so I've read. At any rate, adding arsenic to these metals does not
- greatly change the overall toxicity of the alloys. All of these
- metals have to be treated with respect and caution, but all of them
- can be used with safety.
-
- Arsenic will also harden lead, but not like antimony or tin
- hardens it. The mechanism is discussed below, but its use is limited
- to less than one percent in most lead alloys. Arsenic hardening is at
- the heart of quenching, which is a leading edge of cast bullet
- technology today.
-
-
- THE ALLOYS:
-
- The number of possible lead alloys is almost infinite. Even the
- number of alloys developed for printing is large, but only a few are
- common enough to be of particular interest. most common metals can be
- classified as monotype, linotype, wheelweights and soft lead or
- miscellaneous scrap or salvage. Monotype and linotype are usually
- used to harden scrap lead or for casting by those who want to avoid
- the minor hassle of quenching alloys, but they are quite expensive.
-
- Wheelweights are probably the most versatile lead alloy available
- for bullet casting. Their composition is not standardized, but they
- are usually about 2 or 3 % antimony, 0.5 % arsenic, and the remainder
- lead, with no more than traces of tin or other metals. This will
- serve well for light loads just as it is, without quench hardening.
- Or they can be dropped from the mold into a bucket of water for a
- substantial increase in hardness that will let them serve very well in
- magnum pistol and midrange rifle loads. Or they can be quenched from
- the oven to rival or exceed the hardness of print metals for a tiny
- fraction of the cost. Soft lead can be almost anything from range
- salvage to plumbers lead, but it will not often be hard enough to be
- very useful, unless it is used "as is" for muzzle-loaders.
-
- Despite their cost, type metals are just as good as they ever
- were, and that is very good indeed. They will serve in the heaviest
- loads, and of course cast superbly. Also, the loss of hardness with
- aging that all tin-bearing alloys are subject to is minimized by high
- levels of antimony, so the hardness change is not important except at
- high performance levels.
-
- Tin is a very common ingredient. Some formulas used quite a bit,
- and "Ten to One" (ten parts lead to one part tin) used to be a widely
- recommended alloy. Even today, five percent tin and five percent
- antimony is still recommended as Lyman # 2 alloy. Despite the
- problems that tin can cause, Lyman # 2 is still popular for the same
- reason that the 10 to 1 alloy once was: It is notably harder than pure
- lead, and casts superbly. However, as the disadvantages of tin become
- more widely known, I think such alloys will join the 10-1 blend in the
- archives.
-
- Automobile batteries used to be another popular source of scrap
- lead, but the alloys used in modern batteries is very unsuitable to
- cast bullets. The other ingredients will actually form intermetallics
- with the antimony in preference to antimony. The new intermetallics
- are not soluble in the lead, and will be removed as dross, leaving you
- with an alloy that is actually softer than it was before you added
- antimony to it. The total yield is very small, and of very poor
- quality. Leave car batteries to the recycling centers.
-
- Another class of alloys is sometimes used for casting bullets.
- Zinc alloys are sometimes used to cast light-weight, high velocity and
- non-expanding bullets for target practice and general experimentation
- by the curious. However, they are totally incompatible with lead
- alloys. They will raise the surface tension of any lead alloy
- containing more than a tiny trace of zinc. They have such a bad
- effect on the castability of lead alloys subsequently used in the same
- equipment that many who have tried it recommend separate pots and
- molds for zinc and lead alloys. Since this chapter is devoted to lead
- alloys, their existence is noted for the record, and their potential
- will not be dealt with here.
-
- ALLOY HARDNESS
-
- The primary question in selecting lead alloys for casting bullets
- is "How hard should it be?". The answer of course, is "At least hard
- enough to give good results!". This is may be a cute evasion, but
- it's also the only possible answer. If you are shooting light target
- loads at close range, you can probably use almost anything that will
- melt and cast reasonably well. If you're shooting deer at 50 to 100
- yards, then something in the 15 to 20 Brinell range will be the
- minimum that will probably work well for you. And if you're
- interested in shooting a .300 Magnum in 1000 yard competitions, you'll
- need paper patched bullets with hardness in the range of 22 to 30
- Brinell. In all cases, the ONLY test of acceptability is on the
- range. If it shoots well, it's hard enough. If it doesn't, the
- answer may be a harder alloy (though it could also be as simple as
- cleaning your bore!). Note that except for muzzle-loaders, there are
- very few cases where a cast bullet can be TOO hard. Like gasoline
- octane, enough is good, and too much seldom hurts. When in doubt,
- make it a little harder than you think it needs to be.
-
- If you find you need a harder bullet, you have several options.
- You can buy a harder alloy (expensive), you can make your current
- batch of metal harder by adding antimony, or you can try quenching it.
- Quenching is the least expensive choice, but it is extra trouble, and
- it may be easier to just harden your current batch of metal by adding
- a little antimony. At one time, the recommended procedure was to
- pre-blend the antimony into an equal weight of lead to make the mixing
- easier. Trouble was, blending the antimony and lead was not easily
- accomplished! One recommendation was to have the local metal shop to
- melt the antimony with an acetylene torch so you could then stir the
- lead into it before it cooled. I also recall a RIFLEMAN article that
- gave detailed instructions on how to construct your very own small
- backyard blast furnace fueled with charcoal from your barbecue and
- driven by the exhaust from your vacuum cleaner!
-
- This is one more proof that if one grips the bedpost, grits his
- teeth and grunts hard enough, he can make ANYTHING into a hard job!
- In truth, blending antimony into lead or lead alloys is NOT difficult,
- nor does it take a torch or a blast furnace. All it takes is a little
- time and enough heat to melt the lead. Antimony is soluble in lead
- just like sugar is soluble in water. If you pour the sugar in the
- water and stir it from time to time, it will dissolve in the water
- just fine, and so will the antimony dissolve into the lead. The only
- difference is that the antimony is lighter than the lead, and it will
- float if you just pour it in the lead pot. This is not a good idea
- because you can evaporate small quantities (and antimony IS toxic),
- and you also limit the contact with the dissolving lead to the bottom
- of the antimony, a condition guaranteed to slow things down. The best
- procedure is to go down to the kitchen department of your local store
- and get a STEEL strainer. Don't get a strainer made with aluminum,
- because aluminum will raise the surface tension of the lead alloy, and
- make it cast poorly. Now bend or trim the strainer ears and handle
- until you can insert it upside down into a pan you can use to melt
- lead in. Crush your antimony with a hammer to pulverize it: Salt
- granules dissolve a lot faster than a salt block. Now put a pile of
- antimony on the surface of the molten lead, and use the strainer to
- push and hold it completely below the surface of the lead. Use a
- heavy iron bar to keep it there if you need to. It will not dissolve
- as fast as sugar in water, but give it time and it will go in fine.
- This immersion will not only prevent any evaporation of the antimony,
- but it will also maximize exposure of the antimony, and shorten the
- time needed to dissolve it. Ideally, you should weigh both the lead
- and the antimony, so you will know how much you have added.
-
- Tin is unique among the common alloying materials in being
- soluble in both molten and cold, solidified lead. It is fairly hard,
- and hardens lead by adding it's hardness to that of the lead. It is
- alone among the common alloying materials in being soluble in both
- molten and cold, solidified lead.
-
- Antimony hardens lead alloys in two ways. The first is by
- precipitating as the alloy cools and forming many tiny crystalline
- inclusions that reinforce the lead alloy much like struts reinforce
- the roof of your house. The second is by forming an intermetallic
- compound with tin which functions in much the same manner, but is more
- effective in hardening than tin alone. This intermetallic is 50% tin
- and 50% antimony. Any tin or antimony in excess of this will just act
- as if it is present alone. In other words, if an alloy has 3% tin and
- 8% antimony, the cooled bullet will actually consist of 6%
- intermetallic crystals and 5% antimony crystals imbedded in a lead
- matrix. If the percentages are reversed to 3% antimony and 8% tin,
- you will still have 6% intermetallic crystals, but they will be
- imbedded in a lead/tin alloy, and there will be no crystals of pure
- antimony at all. The famed Lyman # 2 alloy is really not 90% lead, 5%
- tin and 5% antimony, even though that's what you put into the pot. If
- you want to be really accurate, it's 10% intermetallic compound
- crystals imbedded in 90% lead! Now someone is sure to ask why an
- alloy with the tin all reacted into an intermetallic compound is still
- able to cause age softening of alloys. The answer is easy (though not
- helpful): Durned if I know! But I can at least put my ignorance to
- good use with the comment that this is a good illustration of my
- earlier comment about the ever expanding complexities and fascination
- of cast bullet technology. There is always something new to be
- learned!
-
- I haven't covered half of what there is to say about lead alloys,
- but that's a good start, and this makes a good place to stop. I find
- that I have already blabber-mouthed far beyond what most people will
- want to read at one sitting anyhow, so I'll cover quenching of lead
- alloys to harden them later. Unfortunately, I am no longer able to
- access Genie services, and have little choice but to postpone such a
- discussion for the foreseeable future. However, someone who
- understands Genie software (I don't) will wander by someday, and I
- hope to resume this series at that time if I haven't bored you to
- death with it by now. Until then, please be patient with your friend
- ... Molly
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- 9507B CONCEALMENT HANDGUNS by John Marshall
-
- *HANDGUNS *CONCEALED CARRY
-
- It's no secret that the concept of legal concealed weapons carry is
- spreading like wildfire across the country. From New Hampshire
- (state motto: "Live free or die") where no permit at all is required
- and anyone may carry concealed, to Texas, where a concealed carry law
- was recently passed and signed by a new governor pledged to do so, the
- trend is there. The National Rifle Association has campaigned long
- and hard for concealed carry permits with considerable success. In
- spite of dire predictions of high-noon shootouts and vigilantism, such
- occurrences rarely if ever happen among the law-abiding cleared for
- concealed carry. And the stats show that the violent crime rate
- often goes down after passage of a concealed-carry-permit law. It
- certainly did in Florida, and that state's experience with their law
- has been used as an example for others to follow.
-
- Here in Phoenix, murders are already down 10% from last year; Arizo-
- na passed a concealed-carry-permit law for the first time late last
- year. The word is definitely out on the street that if you intend to
- committing mayhem, you'd better be damn careful, because the citizen
- you assault might be fully capable of stopping you in your tracks with
- a legal concealed weapon.
-
- So because your state might have or soon have a concealed-carry-
- permit law on the books, it's worthwhile to examine the choices of
- firearms that might be suitable for such duty. Certainly the selec-
- tion of a CC handgun involves a lot of personal preference, but there
- are definite advantages and disadvantages to most of the guns that
- might qualify for such duties. In this article, we'll examine some
- of the more popular choices and give both fact and opinion on each.
-
- Before we begin, it's wise to remember that each of us differs in our
- physical configuration and manner of dress. What may be suitable for
- a 6 foot-3 man built like a football tackle may not be the best choice
- for a 5 foot-2 woman of slight build. Also, what may be a good
- choice in the summer might not be the optimum selection for winter,
- and vice versa. Casual clothing permits options that would not be
- socially acceptable in office or formal garb, and so on. In short,
- there probably isn't any one best choice for a concealed defensive
- firearm, but there are plenty of options to suit the particular situa-
- tion.
-
- Let's look first at deep concealment firearms. Typically, such guns
- are intended for situations where your manner of dress is not going to
- permit anything bulky to be packed for concern over being spotted as
- obviously armed. Tiny arms suitable for this role have a terrible
- history as "manstoppers," but they have often proved to have a deter-
- rent effect when some gun is better than no gun at all. Here in
- Phoenix in the summer, my typical office wear is a pair of dress
- slacks, a dress short-sleeve shirt, and a tie. This particular
- combination of clothes does not permit a normal-size handgun to be
- packed on the body. However, a tiny "pocket pistol" can be slipped
- into a pocket, and properly done, be undetectable. Another option is
- a small handgun stowed in an ankle holster. For ladies, a garter or
- bra holster or a handbag can be the resting place for a small unobtru-
- sive handgun.
-
- Here are some "deep concealment" handguns you may wish to consider.
-
- The Hi-Standard double derringer. Now out of print since the High
- Standard Manufacturing Company went bankrupt, these diminutive
- little .22 double-action derringers are still available on the used
- gun market, and are often seen at gun shows. These little guns were
- chambered for either .22 Long Rifle or .22 Magnum. They feature a
- stiff double-action-only trigger pull (no trigger guard), and a very
- flat configuration. They don't weigh much, and can be almost forgot-
- ten about once secured on the person. They give you two quick
- shots, and then must be reloaded like a break-open shotgun, The
- double action design and the crude sights mean that they aren't going
- to be very accurate much beyond a few yards, but they can serve as a
- deterrent nonetheless. I've owned one of these in .22 LR since the
- middle '60s, and have found that with care and a controlled trigger
- pull, I can hit an object the size of a gallon milk bottle out to
- around 20 yards or so. The little gun was never designed to be shot
- at this distance, but it can be done with practice. The best way to
- hold this little number, with its rounded vestigial grip, is to lay
- the index finger alongside the barrels, and use the middle finger to
- manipulate the trigger. Thus employed, shooting it can be as in-
- stinctive as pointing your finger.
-
- The North American Arms Mini-Revolvers. These little five-shot sin-
- gle-action revolvers are about as tiny as a revolver can get. You can
- find them chambered for .22 short, .22 LR, and .22 Magnum. The .22
- short and LR handguns are small enough to be carried in the watch
- pocket of a pair of Levi's, and the .22 LR version can be fitted with
- a folding grip which envelops the gun when folded, and which extends
- out to give a far more comfortable hold than is afforded by the stand-
- ard small bird's-head grip. This folding grip adds very little in
- bulk to the handgun when closed up, and it does serve to conceal the
- shape of the gun when it's inserted into a pants pocket. This grip
- has a belt clip, which can also be used by the ladies to hook the
- little revolver onto a bra, for example. With the grip, the gun can
- still fit into a Levi's watch pocket, and becomes invisible when a
- shirt is worn over it tail out. It's one of the most comfortable
- little guns to wear. Sadly, the .22 out of a short barrel isn't going
- to be much good except as a deterrent, or if used, for a head shot.
- The mini-revolvers do offer a 3 to 4-shot advantage over a derringer,
- as they can fire 5 shots without reloading. Reloading is best done
- away from a stressful situation, as it involves removing the cylinder
- pin and then the cylinder, poking out the empties with the cylinder
- pin, single-loading five fresh rounds into the cylinder, replacing the
- cylinder in the frame, and reinserting the cylinder pin in the cylin-
- der and frame. It's slow and cumbersome, and the gun is in pieces
- while you do it. As a safety factor the little revolvers must be
- carried hammer down either on an empty chamber (making them 4-shots),
- or with the hammer resting fully down in one of the safety notches in
- the cylinder, which are located between cylinders. One must take care
- to do this right, as it's definitely playing with fire to leave the
- hammer down on a live cartridge. If this is done, a blow to the
- hammer could set off a round to go who knows where.
-
- .25 ACP pocket pistols. These little semiautos, not much bigger than
- the firearms mentioned above, offer the advantages of increased fire-
- power and quick reloading. They are typified by the "Baby Browning"
- and the little Colt .25, both John Browning designs. Since these are
- hammerless designs, they are best carried with the firing pin down on
- an empty chamber, and a full magazine. Employing them requires
- jacking the slide to chamber a round. Carrying them with the chamber
- loaded and the safety applied is not recommended for two reasons; one,
- the firing pin spring may take a set, and two, the safeties are not
- really positive enough to give a margin of comfort. These pistols do
- offer a flat configuration and small size. The .25 ACP is not much
- better, if any better, than a .22 LR for defense purposes, and such
- guns are best employed as potential deterrents than actually used.
- The little Beretta .25 DA/SA semiauto does offer an alternative to
- carrying the chamber empty, because it employs the traditional
- double-action first shot method. However, it seems to me that the
- Beretta pistols, even the smallest ones, are bulkier than they need to
- be across the frame as compared to others.
-
- The Seecamp .32 ACP pocket semiauto pistol. This little pistol is in
- a class by itself. It is designed around the .32 ACP Winchester
- Silvertip HP round specifically, and is little bigger than the
- typical .25 auto. It is a bit of a cult item, and there's a waiting
- list to get one from Seecamp. Although the Winchester round is recom-
- mended, it will also feed, chamber and fire the high-performance
- Glaser Safety Slugs and the Magsafe .32 ACP loads were recently re-
- designed to function in this pistol. It has no sights, which is a
- turn-off for many shooters, and is double-action only. It does offer
- a more effective round than the .25 ACP, but it's still not up to
- the .380 ACP or .38 special class.
-
- Now, let's look at handguns a little higher up on the size scale,
- which will serve comfortably for concealed carry. Typical employment
- will be in an inside-the-pants holster with the shirt worn out, in a
- shoulder holster beneath a vest or open shirt, in an ankle holster, or
- in a handbag.
-
-
- Perhaps the minimum cartridge recommended for actual employment in a
- defense situation is the .380 ACP, or as it's known in Europe, the 9mm
- Kurz (German for "short"). This is a rimless cartridge employing a
- 9mm bullet at relatively moderate velocity. In hardball configura-
- tion, the round is not a reliable stopper, but with certain hollow-
- point loads, the cartridge can do some damage to an assailant. Arms
- chambered for this number can be fairly compact in size and light and
- weight. The pressure of the cartridge is low enough to permit blow-
- back actions, fixed barrels, and simplicity.
-
- Pistols for the .380 cartridge are all over the place, so I'll stick
- to some personal recommendations, both for and against a few specific
- pistols.
-
- Once upon a time, I purchased a .380 "Backup" pistol, made by AMT of
- Pasadena, California. I was intrigued by the small size of the
- pistol, and figured it could almost go where no pistol had gone be-
- fore. The stainless-steel "Backup" is a single-action hammerless
- design, meaning that it's best carried with a loaded magazine and an
- empty chamber. That's OK. The quality control on the pistol is
- definitely NOT OK. First off, the firing pin spring had taken a set
- (no doubt from the previous owner keeping it cocked), and it had no
- power to reliably ignite a primer. Secondly, the pistol was a jama-
- matic - not reliable in its feeding, chambering, and ejection, even
- with hardball ammo. Thirdly, the pistol is damnably difficult to
- disassemble; it nearly requires three hands in addition to a block of
- wood to hold the slide back, and a pin punch. I got rid of this
- little number later at a gun show, with a note that it needed work.
- This was honest, but an understatement. I would never again be
- tempted by one of these little pistols.
-
- A trifle bigger pistol is up next, and my recommendation regarding it
- is a hearty "thumbs up." This is the famed Walther PP design, as
- personified in the PP, PPK, and PPK/S pistols made both on these
- shores and in Europe. The design of this pistol originated in the
- late 1920's, and its (now) traditional double-action design set the
- standard, both then and now. It's a blowback design, immensely
- reliable, slim and handy. In .380, it's a serious hideaway defense
- pistol. The first shot can be fired double-action, and it can be
- carried with the safety off, as it incorporates a firing-pin block
- that rises only when the trigger is fully back. Subsequent shots are
- single-action. In the event of a misfire, the pistol reverts to
- double-action so you can take another whack at the primer. Field-
- stripping is simple; lock the slide back, pull down on the trigger
- guard, press it to one side to keep it down, pull the slide all the
- way back, lift its rear up, and slide it forward off the frame. This
- leaves you the grip/barrel frame, the slide, and the recoil spring to
- deal with. It's a slick system that's been widely copied.
-
- There are basically three models of the PP design. There is the
- original full-size PP pistol ("PP" stands for "Polizei Pistole," or
- police pistol). There is the PPK variation (PPK meaning Polizei
- Pistole Kriminal, or police pistol/detective model). Its barrel and
- frame are shortened for better concealability for undercover work.
- Then there is the strange-birthed PPK/S pistol, which is a combination
- of the longer PP grip frame and the PPK slide and barrel. It con-
- ceals almost as well as the PPK, but has the larger magazine capacity
- and hand-filling feel of the PP. It came into being because the PPK,
- due to the factoring points of the '68 gun control act, could not be
- imported. So the Walther factory in Germany simply combined the two
- pistols to make one that would pass importation criteria. The "S"
- stands for "special" for the American market. Later, of course, the
- small PPK was made in America, and import laws don't apply to it.
-
- There are other small .380 pistols that have some merit, notably the
- Colt Government single-action design and the Beretta double-action
- pistols. The Colt is a dead-ringer for the 1911 .45, except it's
- smaller. The Berettas look a lot like their big brother, the 9mm
- 92F, which was adopted as standard by our military. The
- Beretta .380s are to me overly bulky, due to their double-stack
- magazine design, while the little Colt is slim with its single-stack
- magazine.
-
- A step up on the power scale gives us some nice revolvers in .38
- special for the concealment role.
-
- Perhaps the most highly regarded of the "pocket" revolvers are the
- little J-frame Smith & Wessons. This series actually began a long
- time ago with the I-frame revolvers, which were chambered in .32
- caliber and for the stubby .38 S&W cartridge. Later on, Smith decided
- to chamber this little number for the longer .38 special, and this
- necessitated lengthening the frame somewhat; this became the now-
- standard J-frame. One of the best of the early J-frames was the
- Chief's Special, or model 36. This was a blued 5-shot revolver cham-
- bered in .38 special. It was an instant hit with police for a backup
- revolver, and it became very popular as a concealed-carry piece.
- Later on, this revolver was produced in stainless steel as the Model
- 60; it was the first commercial handgun to be made almost entirely of
- stainless steel, and the factory couldn't make them fast enough. At
- one time, S&W made a little number they dubbed the "Centennial" re-
- volver, which had an internal hammer so it could be drawn quickly
- without snagging on clothing. This revolver also featured a grip
- safety along the rear of the grip frame, which had to be depressed
- before the revolver would fire; this was reminiscent of the even
- earlier "Safety Hammerless" revolver, which was a top-break design.
- Thoughtfully, the factory provided a little pin which could be removed
- when the grips were off the frame, and which could then be reinserted
- so as to lock out the grip safety for more assurance of discharge when
- the trigger was pulled. In recent years, the Centennial was re-
- introduced in stainless steel as the Model 640, sans the grip safety.
- This sleek little double-action-only revolver has become immensely
- popular, and with a strengthened frame, it is chambered now in the
- potent .357 magnum. As the Model 940, it is chambered in 9mm Luger,
- and is intended to be fired with full-moon clips holding 5 rounds of
- this high-pressure number. I have a Model 640 in .38 special, and
- can attest that it packs easy, draws nicely, and within the limits of
- the double-action-only design, is quite accurate when the shooter does
- his or her part. The model 640 in .38 special is capable of firing
- sustained doses of even +P+ high-pressure ammo. Taurus offers the
- Model 85, which is very similar to the J-frame Smiths. These little
- revolvers offer a lot of power with very compact size, but with full-
- house loads, recoil can be vicious. Good hand-filling grips are
- highly recommended. My 640 is dressed with a pair of Herrett's
- Shooting Star checkered wood grips with a palm swell on both sides,
- and this makes it very comfortable to shoot, adding only about 1/2" to
- the depth of the grip. It enables me to wrap four fingers around the
- grip easily. Smith now offers the "boot grip" as an option; this is a
- checkered black neoprene grip that provides a bit more bulk but no
- more depth; I find it awkward, and must curl my little finger under
- the grip to grasp it right.
-
- Colt is also in the snubby revolver fray. This began years ago with
- the Colt Cobra, a small (D-frame) 6-shot revolver with a 2-inch barrel
- in .38 special. This later evolved into the famous Detective Spe-
- cial, which has recently been reintroduced with an ejector rod shroud
- to prevent bending of the ejector rod in rough usage. Colt touts the
- advantage of the extra round over the Chief Special and its cousins,
- but that extra round does make the revolver marginally more bulky. In
- this regard, you have your choice with Colt or S&W - an extra round or
- less bulk and weight.
-
- Next up in power level are the 'mini-autos' in 9mm caliber. As you
- probably know, the 9mm Parabellum cartridge is a high-pressure number,
- usually requiring a locked breech in semi-auto configuration. Fore-
- most among the "chopped and channeled" 9mm concealment pistols is the
- Smith and Wesson line, perhaps best personified in the Model 3913.
- This is an alloy-framed stainless-slide pistol with a 3.5" barrel
- (1/2" shorter than the standard 4" barrel), and a shortened frame.
- It also has a bobbed hammer which cannot be cocked easily for single-
- action fire; you have to move the hammer back a bit with the trigger
- to thumb it back, not an easy task under stress. It's definitely
- designed for double-action first shots. The single-stack magazine
- holds 8 rounds, which with one in the chamber gives you 9 shots of
- full-house ammo. The grips on this number are grey to match the
- frame and slide, which is an advantage between a T-shirt and an outer
- shirt, offering little see-through contrast. It's provided with a
- finger-rest mag and an flat-bottomed mag, so you have your choice of
- maximum control or minimum size. As the 3913LS, it's a Ladysmith
- pistol, and so etched on the right of the slide. This pistol has a
- tuned trigger which is a mite easier for arguably less powerful female
- hands. The LS model has one slide-mounted safety lever on the left,
- while the 3913 is ambidextrous with two levers, one on each side of
- the slide. This makes it a bit bulkier for concealed carry; it's very
- similar to the blued 3914 model. With the "NL" (no logo) option, the
- 3913NL is identical to the Ladysmith in configuration, but lacks the
- Ladysmith logo on the slide. I have one of these, and suspect it
- also lacks the lighter, smoother trigger, as I'd judge it about equal
- to an old Model 59 I've kept around since the middle '70s. The
- 3913NL I have weighs just 25 ounces, is extremely compact, and is not
- noticed at all when packed in an inside-the-pants holster. It's very
- comfortable for all-day wear in the summer. All Smith 3rd-generation
- pistols have a magazine safety, which means it's not possible to
- discharge the pistol when the magazine is removed. The jury is out
- on this feature, but it's there.
-
- Competing with the Smiths are chopped Glocks and Berettas. Both are
- somewhat bulkier than the single-stack-mag S&Ws, with their double-
- stack magazines. The Glock, of course, has a polymer frame, which
- does offer the advantage of less weight. The Berettas can be had in
- traditional double action (TDA) or double-action-only (DAO). The
- Glock has its weird (to me) trigger action which is a cross between
- single- and double-action in feel; it has no safety, and negligent
- discharges with the Glock are perhaps somewhat easier to achieve, if
- you can call that sort of thing an achievement.
-
- The 9mm mini-guns are to my mind the optimum combination of serious
- power and concealability, and should be given serious consideration.
- The represent one of the best possibilities for firepower, cartridge
- effectiveness, and smallness. They do demand the best ammo possible,
- and I highly recommend the Cor-bon 116 gr. +P hollowpoint for defense
- work; it has an excellent street one-shot-stop record. My 3913NL is
- my gun of choice for concealed carry in the summer.
-
- Next up on the defense-power scale, it's a tossup between many medi-
- um-frame .357 revolvers as typified by the Ruger SP101 design, the
- Smith & Wesson Model 19 and its derivatives in stainless steel, and
- the Colt Python-class revolvers. All of these revolvers are more
- bulky than their junior counterparts, but give you increased control-
- lability. With 2", 3", and 4" barrels, you're going to get some
- muzzle blast and flash, and a LOT of noise when the gun discharges.
- There is no question that these handguns are effective defense guns,
- but the cylinder girth makes them harder to conceal and they may dig
- into your flesh a bit, making them rough for prolonged concealed
- carry. They are impressive, somewhat concealable, effective, but
- heavier and less comfortable. They're pushing the concealability
- envelope a bit.
-
- For full-power handguns epitomized by those chambered for the time-
- honored .45 ACP cartridge, you have a plethora of choices. Colt,
- Smith & Wesson and Glock all offer bobbed semiautos for this car-
- tridge, some with alloy frames for increased lightness. The small
- width of the 1911 design allows flat packing, so much so that in the
- winter, the full-size 1911 design can be carried with almost as much
- comfort as the shorter Commander or Officer's Model pistols, with the
- advantage of full velocity and power for the low-pressure round. I
- myself prefer the full-size Colt in the winter, when it can be better
- concealed in a shoulder holster under a jacket, rather than dragging
- down my pants. It's believed that hollow-point bullets may clog with
- fabric when fired through layers of winter clothing, and they may thus
- not open up properly, lacking the necessary hydraulic pressure. If
- this is the case, the .45 caliber makes bigger intrinsic holes, and
- this alone makes it the caliber of choice in the winter. In the
- summer, some may find them bulkier than optimum, and certainly heavier
- than their 9mm or 40mm counterparts. There's no disputing the de-
- fense capability of the .45 ACP; it's the standard by which all others
- are judged.
-
- OK, there's one category left - full-house handguns chambered for
- the .44 and 41 magnums, the IMI .50 Desert Eagle, etc., and yes, Dirty
- Harry did pack a Model 29 concealed. Of course, he was a skinny guy
- with an oversize jacket, and Clint Eastwood only had to pack this
- Smith & Wesson N-frame monster for the scenes in which he appeared in
- the movie! I have a Model 29, and I have a shoulder holster for it,
- but you can bet it's not my concealment handgun of choice in either
- summer or winter. The shoulder holster is for packing in the field,
- for hunting, and for packing for possible defense use against wild
- animals. The .44 magnum is more of a hunting cartridge, harder to
- control, and the possibility of over-penetration and danger to the
- innocent is always there. It's not the optimum defense cartridge,
- and neither is its first cousin the .41 magnum, or the monstrous .50
- for which the Desert Eagle handgun is chambered. That goes for the
- now-discontinued .44 Auto-mag, also. I suppose I could manage to
- stuff my Model 629 8 3/8"-barreled revolver so as to conceal it in the
- winter, but, I'd walk lopsided, that's for sure! Let's just laugh
- and say "sure" in a derisive tone when you see this sort of thing in
- the movies. It's not real world.
-
- So there you have it - from tiny to monstrous; these are the choices
- that are out there for concealed carry.
-
- My choices?
-
- Here in Arizona, I favor three handguns, each employed depending on
- the circumstances. For deep concealment and effortless packing, my
- little North American Arms .22 LR 5-shot mini-revolver with folding
- grip slips into the watch pocket in my Levis, or slips into the side
- pocked of my dress slacks. It's virtually unnoticeable, and it will
- serve when any handgun is a better option than nothing.
-
- For effective defense capability in the summer with optimum conceal-
- ability and comfort, it's my 9mm Smith 3913NL in an inside-the-pants
- holster. If I ever need it, it'll do the job, and meanwhile, no
- one's tipped to the fact that I'm packing some serious ordnance. My
- Model 640 .38 special revolver runs a close second for summer work,
- with my Walther PPK/S in .380 bringing up the rear, James Bond not-
- withstanding.
-
- In the winter, I choose to use my favorite pistol - my early Colt
- Stainless series 80 Government Model (full-size) in .45 ACP. It
- rides in a shoulder holster under a jacket comfortably, and the bulk
- of a jacket conceals it adequately. There's no question about this
- gun's effectiveness, or mine when armed with it. Two extra mags
- balance the other side of the shoulder rig, giving me 22 rounds of
- fast and powerful firepower. There's no better deal around.
-
- I hope this overview of concealment firearms gives you some food for
- thought - I know I haven't mentioned all the possibilities, and I may
- have left out some of your favorites. Let me know on the GEnie
- outdoors forum roundtable what YOU think - there's plenty of room for
- opinion there!
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- 9507C THE HATCHER SCALE by John Marshall
-
- *HATCHER *STOPPING POWER *HANDGUNS *CARTRIDGE POWER
-
- One of the truisms of handgunning is that all other things being
- equal, a bigger bullet is going to do more damage than a smaller one.
- And it is also true that bullet shape has a lot to do with how much
- damage a bullet will do. Of course, there are always exceptions to
- the rule, but by and large, the above rules hold pretty true.
-
- Way back earlier in this century, a fellow by the name of Julian
- Hatcher sought to find out why these truths were so. He had a dis-
- tinct advantage, because he was then Chief of Ordnance for the U.S.
- Army, and had a lot of people and equipment to utilize.
-
- He called in another fellow by the name of John Taliaferro Tompson,
- whom you may recall was involved in another venture which became the
- Thompson submachine gun. Thompson was then a Colonel in the Army
- Ordnance Corps. Hatcher also engaged the services of Col. Julius A.
- LaGarde of the Army Surgeon General's office. He asked the two of
- them to collaborate on some empirical tests of bullet effectiveness,
- and this they did. The results became the famous Thompson-LaGarde
- study.
-
- To his dismay, Hatcher discovered that he could not correlate kinetic
- energy, to the observed results of the tests. He reasoned that there
- must be something missing in that equation, and attempted to create a
- mathematical formula which correlate to stopping power, or terminal
- effectiveness.
-
- For reference purposes, the quick formula for computing kinetic energy
- in foot-pounds is:
-
- W x (VxV) where W = bullet weight in grains, V = velocity,
- --------- = KE and KE = kinetic energy in foot-lbs.
- 450,240
-
- He next attempted to factor in bullet mass and shape, as well as its
- weight and velocity, and the results started to more closely match
- reality. He called this advanced formula's results the index of
- relative stopping power, and the formula went like this:
-
- 1 WV
- -------- x ----- x A x y = RSP
- 2(32.16) 7000
-
- RSP = Relative Stopping Power
- W = Bullet weight in grains
- V = Velocity in feet per second
- A = Cross sectional area of bullet in square inches
- y = emperical shape factor, using a lead roundnose bullet for
- a basis of comparison, with a factor of 1000, and a lead
- semiwadcutter having a factor of 1250, or 25% greater effective-
- ness.
-
- For years, Hatcher's formula reigned supreme, as it closely approxi-
- mated on a linear scale observable stopping power; any handgun car-
- tridge could be compared to any other handgun cartridge in effective-
- ness. Of course, back then they didn't have expanding HP bullets or
- frangible bullets such as the Magsafe or Glaser examples, but we can
- factor those in today with a close guess as to their shape factors.
-
- All attempts in later years to come up with something better by way of
- a yardstick on handgun stopping power have pretty well met with fail-
- ure. A prime example was the Law Enforcement Assistance Administra-
- tion's "relative incapacitation" study which used gelatin blocks, a
- computer-generated "man," every example of ammo known at the time, and
- computers to tabulate the data. The results were interesting, sound-
- ed good if you said them fast, but they didn't relate to what was
- happening on the street. A subsequent full report refuted the first
- one, and the whole thing was declared a mess from the get-go.
-
- This brings us back to Hatcher's scale. Included in this newsletter
- is the program "HATCHER.BAS" which will run on most computers that
- have a BASIC executable file (GWBASIC is what I use). You can exper-
- iment with it a bit, feeding it your cartridge's velocity, weight,
- cross-sectional area, and bullet shape. It will give you a reading,
- which you can compare with pretty-well proved cartridges like the .45
- ACP hardball ammo which is ubiquitous. It does all the hard work of
- calculation for you. If you can use it, great - just don't bug me
- for another version which will work in more modern permutations of
- BASIC like QBASIC or Visual Basic. I just don't have the time or
- inclination to learn to program them; I learned how to program in
- BASIC, and that's all, folks! Oh, it also calculates foot pounds of
- energy in the same breath, so you can have both figures at once.
- Enjoy!
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- 9507D NRA NEWS by the National Rifle Association Staff
-
- *NRA *SECOND AMENDMENT *RIGHT TO KEEP AND BEAR ARMS *RKBA
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE FOR MORE INFORMATION:
- JULY 7, 1995 NRA PUBLIC AFFAIRS
- 703-267-3820
-
-
- RIGHT TO CARRY MARCHES ON AND ON AND ON...
-
- Fairfax, Va-- This week, the right to carry movement
- continued as Nevada and North Carolina joined the growing list of
- states passing this lifesaving legislation this year. On Monday,
- the Nevada legislature gave final approval to carry legislation
- which was signed by Governor Bob Miller earlier today.
-
- On Thursday, the North Carolina legislature gave its final
- approval to carry legislation,
- however unlike Nevada, the governor can neither sign nor veto the
- bill.
-
- "This is a national movement by the states to empower their
- citizens," said Mrs. Tanya K. Metaksa, chief lobbyist of the
- National Rifle Association. "Not only was the theme of empowerment
- felt in the nation's capitol on election day, it was felt in many
- state capitals as well. The right to carry movement is reflective
- of elected officials heeding their citizens calls: Let us have the
- ability to protect ourselves and our loved ones," she continued.
-
- "With the addition of Nevada and North Carolina, eight states
- have passed lifesaving right to carry this year," said Mrs Metaksa.
- "With Justice Department studies showing that 88% of all violent
- crime occurs outside the home, this legislation is long overdue."
-
- 28 states now allow law abiding citizens to carry firearms for
- self protection. In the 20 states that had right to carry laws
- prior to 1994, the crime rates are lower as compared to the states
- without carry laws in all the major crime categories that the FBI
- tracks (Shall Issue: The New Wave of Concealed Handgun Permit Laws,
- by Clayton Cramer and David B. Kopel).
-
- "NRA will continue to aggressively fight for citizen's self
- defense. The few states that have rejected right to carry will not
- be forgotten. And, as in Texas where then Governor Ann Richards
- vetoed right to carry legislation two years ago, the NRA and the
- voters will make the needed changes to secure the basic civil right
- of self defense," she concluded.
-
- =+=+=+=+
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE For further information,
- June 30, 1995 call: NRA Public Affairs
- 703-267-3820
-
-
- THE RIDDLER?
- NRA Comments on President's Visit to Chicago
-
- Atlanta, Georgia -- President Bill Clinton's visit to Chicago,
- Illinois, for a gun control fund-raiser was, from all
- appearances, riddled with irony.
-
- "The same Administration intent on banning guns by banning
- bullets is soft on criminals with guns, and, according to a
- Senate hearing, soft on criminals with drugs," commented Mrs.
- Tanya K. Metaksa, executive director of the National Rifle
- Association Institute for Legislative Action, during a visit to
- Georgia.
-
- "He has called on Congress to ban ammunition despite a 1986 law
- that works flawlessly. Since 1986, when NRA helped craft and
- support a law limiting certain ammo to police use, no police
- officer in the United States has been killed with any projectile
- fired from a handgun through the protective material of a soft
- body armor vest. The number is _zero_."
-
- "Our president also praised his ban on guns based solely on their
- appearance -- in Chicago where handguns are banned regardless of
- their appearance. Both prohibitions fail to stop criminals.
-
- "And our president is praising a waiting period in a state that
- employs the NRA-backed instantaneous criminal background check.
- These ironies must be truly embarrassing."
-
- On the President's ammo ban, Mrs. Metaksa cited a remark made by
- a White House official who told the Associated Press that it was
- not a "huge problem."
-
- "Indeed, the `huge problem' that the president's scheme utterly
- fails to address is that persons with prior criminal histories
- are involved in the majority of homicides of law enforcement
- officers," Mrs. Metaksa said. "During the last ten years, 73% of
- those involved in officer killings had prior criminal arrests,
- 56% had been convicted of criminal offenses, and 23% were
- actually on parole or probation when the officers were killed.
-
- "That's the `huge problem.' It is the same problem that cost
- officer Daniel Doffyn his life. He was tragically slain by three
- suspected gang members -- drugs dealers who are suspects in
- previous shootings, including murder.
-
- "That's the `huge problem.' And that is why NRA has been working
- for criminal justice reform -- from `Three Strikes You're Out' in
- Vermont to the `Hard Time for Armed Crime' initiative in
- Washington state. That³s the kind of work that keeps real
- assault weapons and real cop killers off our streets."
-
- Mrs. Metaksa noted that NRA currently has 10,000 certified law
- enforcement instructors who work with 450,000 law enforcement
- officers annually. "NRA also subsidizes vest purchases and buys
- a $25,000 life insurance policy free of charge to every law
- enforcement officer who joins. Since 1992, we have provided
- $450,000 in payments to the survivors of our law enforcement
- members who lost their lives in the line of duty.
-
- "If you work out the figures, that means -- every other month,
- some law enforcement agency loses an officer, an agent, a sheriff
- or deputy -- and so does the NRA. Forty thousand Americans
- joined NRA last month. Our survey of new members found that more
- than 18 percent reported that they or someone in their household
- has been or is currently in the field of law enforcement.
- Members of the law enforcement family join NRA, because they know
- where NRA stands on the most important issue of the day: their
- safety."
-
- The Clinton gun ban, Mrs. Metaksa said, impacts some 190 firearms
- rarely used in crimes. "It is effective only in masking poor
- performance in banning _real_ assault weapons -- namely, armed,
- violent criminals. Federal weapons prosecutions have plummeted
- 23% his first two years in office. H.R. 1488 not only repeals
- the Clinton gun ban. It requires the Attorney General to start
- enforcing the laws that put armed criminals behind bars."
-
- Mrs. Metaksa noted that the background check component of the
- federal waiting period has been found void and unconstitutional
- by five federal courts. She also noted that Georgia and
- Pennsylvania have recently opted out of the waiting period scheme
- in favor of the NRA-backed computer check for gun purchasers.
- "Wait prompts flight, but the instant check prompts instant
- arrest of the rare dangerous criminal who attempts a direct
- commercial purchase. On passage of the federal waiting period
- legislation, the NRA-backed check was employed by Virginia,
- Delaware, Florida, Wisconsin, Illinois." Since then, Colorado,
- South Carolina, Georgia, Idaho, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire,
- Utah and Pennsylvania have adopted the mandatory check.
-
- Mrs. Metaksa also quoted yesterday's AP report: "The Bureau of
- Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms said, `Black Rhino' bullets, said
- to be capable of piercing body armor, apparently do not exist.
- The agency in January did approve the sale of the `Rhino-Ammo'
- fragmenting bullet after firing tests showed that it was no
- different from other hollow-point bullets that had no armor-
- piercing qualities."
-
- "His advisors should stop counseling the president to build laws
- -- and campaigns -- on myths," Mrs. Metaksa said.
-
- =+=+=+=+
-
- CLINTON ATTEMPTING TO BAN GUNS BY BANNING BULLETS
-
- On June 30, 1995, President Bill Clinton made the following
- statements while receiving the Abraham Linclon Courage Award at
- 15th District Police Headquarters in Chicago, Illinois.
-
- Referring to the recent, fatal shooting of Chicago police
- officer Daniel Doffyn, Clinton said "[A]s we remember Officer
- Doffyn, I say there is at least one more thing we must do. Today I
- am announcing support for legislation that will ban armor-piercing
- bullets of all kinds. . . .
-
- "[W]e do ban some kinds of armor-piercing bullets. . . but . . .
- the law is written . . . in the wrong way. . . . based on what it's
- made of. . . . (that's) not good enough because clever people have
- figured out how to design ammunition made from common materials
- that do just as much damage. . . . "This legislation will change
- that. It will see to it that we judge ammunition not based on what
- it's made of, but based on how much harm it can do. That should be
- the test, and the test should be simple and straightforward. If a
- bullet can rip through a bulletproof vest like a knife through hot
- butter, then it ought to be history. We should ban it. . . . (I
- ask you to help me) "oppose their (NRA's) efforts to keep us from
- getting all these horrible police-killing bullets out of our lives.
- . . "
- POINTS TO REMEMBER
-
- * Clinton's notion that the current "armor-piercing ammunition"
- law, enacted in 1986 and added to in 1994, is too weak because
- "clever people" have designed new ammunition with additional armor
- piercing abilities, is sheer nonsense, as definitively demonstrated
- by the recent, nationally-broadcast expose of the "Black Rhino"
- hoax swallowed hook-line-and-sinker by anti-gun politicians and
- their allies in the media. Indeed, Officer Daniel Doffyn, whose
- death Clinton is shamelessly trying to use for his own political
- purposes, was not killed because a bullet penetrated his protective
- vest. According to a Chicago Police Department spokesman, one of
- the bullets that killed Officer Doffyn struck him in the head,
- while a second bullet entered an opening in his vest -- it didn't
- defeat the material of the vest.
-
- * President Clinton is attempting to resurrect an approach to
- banning ammunition that the Congress considered and rejected in the
- mid-1980s when it enacted the first "armor piercing ammunition"
- law. The previously-rejected approach proposed today by the
- president, would ban virtually all commonly used rifle ammunition,
- and a great deal of handgun ammunition, commonly used by law-
- abiding hunters and target shooters, and by people who own firearms
- for self-defense against criminals.
-
- In 1986, Congress adopted the approach that Clinton now
- criticizes, an approach that the original sponsor of the "armor
- piercing" ammunition legislation, Rep. Mario Biaggi, a highly
- decorated police officer who had been wounded in the line of duty,
- said "was no compromise on the part of police safety."
- * Clinton's approach would ban virtually all rifle ammunition
- used for hunting, target shooting, or self-protection in the United
- States, such as .30-30 Winchester, .30-'06 Springfield, .308
- Winchester, .300 Savage, 7mm Remington, .270 Winchester, .257
- Roberts, .243 Winchester and .223 Remington, to name just a few.
-
- * Clinton's approach would ban most handgun ammunition,
- including that which is used for hunting, target shooting and self-
- protection, such as .45 Colt and Auto Colt, .44 Remington, .44
- Smith and Wesson Special, .41 Remington, .357 Smith and Wesson, 9mm
- Luger, and many .38 Special loads, to name just a few.
-
- * About the only ammunition that would not be banned is .22
- Rimfire ammunition, several outdated rifle cartridges, such as .25-
- 20 Winchester and .32-20 Winchester, and several lower-powered
- handgun cartridges, such as .25 and .32 caliber (which anti-gun
- activists have for years claimed, albeit incorrectly, that
- criminals favor.)
-
- * The real problem is the criminal. During the last ten years,
- 73% of those involved in officer killings had prior criminal
- arrests, 56% had been convicted of criminal offenses, and 23% were
- actually on parole or probation when the officers were killed.
- (Source: FBI, "Law Enforcement Officer Killed and Assaulted, 1993")
-
- * The problem is not bullets that defeat the protective material
- of body armor vests. During the last ten years, 70% of the police
- officers who have been fatally shot were not even wearing their
- protective vests, according to the FBI. In fact, less than 2% of
- the officers feloniously killed in the line of duty during the last
- ten years were killed because a bullet penetrated their protective
- vests. A police officer is 30 times more likely to die in a motor
- vehicle accident than be killed because of a bullet penetrating his
- or her vest. (Source: FBI, "Law Enforcement Officer Killed and
- Assaulted, 1993")
-
- The Nat'l Institute of Justice has found that "many (officers)
- who possess body armor do not use it routinely." ("Selection and
- Application Guide to Police Body Armor, 1989)
-
- NRA-ILA Research and Information Division, July 7, 1995
-
- =+=+=+=+
-
- Six Months of Progress ... For $17.50
-
- A speech by
- Mrs. Tanya K. Metaksa
- Executive Director, NRA Institute for Legislative Action
- to the
- Outdoor Writers Association of America
- Chattanooga, Tennessee,
-
- June 28, 1995
-
- I want to thank the Outdoor Writers Association of America for this
- opportunity -- but let me begin with a viewers' advisory.
-
- This morning, you will hear facts, not fireworks.
-
- You will hear about NRA benefits, not brimstone.
-
- And you will hear about NRA progress ... not petty politics.
-
- In public discourse filled too often with downright spitefulness,
- we need more downright information ... information about benefits -
- - about value -- about production.
-
- So, this morning, I want to share with you the tangible benefits of
- NRA membership -- the value of belonging -- and give you a sense of
- what NRA produces because people join us -- for thirty-five
- dollars-a-year annual dues.
-
- Later today, you'll hear from our president, Tom Washington, about
- NRA's education, safety and skill training programs. If you add my
- words to Tom's, I believe you'll be convinced that NRA is
- delivering real value to its members.
-
- When Americans join NRA for thirty-five dollars, the NRA Institute
- for Legislative Action invests in hunting and wildlife
- conservation, invests in an education strategy about the Second
- Amendment, and invests in meaningful criminal justice reform.
-
- And in just the first six months of this year -- our members are
- seeing a substantial return on their investment.
-
- Let's examine the dividends our members have enjoyed.
-
- Let's measure our return -- in just the first six months of this
- year -- on seventeen dollars and fifty cents -- half the NRA annual
- dues.
-
- One of our greatest achievements this year has been our work with
- other conservationist groups to restore the National Wildlife
- Refuge System.
-
- In order to understand the scope of our achievement this year,
- you've got to understand a little of the history ...
- We all know it was a hunter -- Teddy Roosevelt -- who first
- established this system with the opening of Pelican Island,
- Florida, in 1903.
-
- We know that our excise taxes, duck stamps and entrance fees
- represent the bulk of the funds used to acquire new lands.
-
- And we know that, today, Roosevelt's vision touches nearly six
- million anglers, more than a million hunters and over 90 million
- acres.
-
- But the National Wildlife Refuge System has deteriorated. Until
- recently, Roosevelt's vision appeared lost.
-
- * Biological programs were ignored due to lack of funding.
-
- * Wildlife habitat was deteriorating due to lack of maintenance.
-
- * Much needed work on those lands was postponed, year after
- year, and now deferred maintenance is measured in the hundreds
- of millions of dollars.
-
- The symbol of Roosevelt's greatest domestic vision has decayed. So
- too has the relationship between the refuge system and the hunters
- who helped create it.
-
- For years, wildlife-dependent recreation -- including hunting --
- has been relegated to second priority, wrapped up and discarded in
- the phrase, "secondary use." Since hunting is a "secondary use" of
- the refuge system, it can be allowed only after a determination is
- made that hunting is compatible with the purposes of the refuge.
-
- Using "secondary use" as their primary target, environmentalists
- filed suit against the Fish and Wildlife Service for permitting
- what they alleged to be incompatible uses on refuge lands. The
- lawsuit prompted the Fish and Wildlife Service to conduct a system-
- wide review of ALL uses in ALL five hundred and four refuges.
-
- On the heels of that system-wide review came a memo from the
- director to field personnel to divert funding from "secondary
- uses," if those uses could not pass some sort of test. If they
- applied the test initially prescribed by Fish and Wildlife Service,
- refuge managers would be forced to throttle all hunting, fishing,
- wildlife photography -- in short, ALL wildlife-oriented
- recreational uses in many refuge areas.
-
- That was, at least, NRA's view.
-
- Indeed, it must have been the feeling of many Fish and Wildlife
- Service personnel, because several leaked the director's memo to
- NRA and other conservation groups.
-
- This under-funding of hunting -- I call it the unfunding of hunting
- -- spoke volumes to me about the mind-set of the political
- leadership of this agency. The Fish and Wildlife Service
- leadership simply did not understand the significance to hunters
- and anglers of the refuge system we hunters helped create and
- maintain.
-
- Essentially, the stewards of our nation's wildlife resource --
- hunters -- were being asked to leave. We were upset when we got
- our eviction notice, but the landlords just didn't get it.
-
- So this was the history.
-
- And soon after our successes in Election '94, NRA set about
- reforming the refuge system.
-
- This year, together with the Wildlife Legislative Fund of America
- and the International Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies,
- the NRA began working with the Congress to overhaul the refuge
- system.
-
- What did NRA-member-hunters get this year for their $17.50?
-
- * The launch of Congressman Don Young's National Wildlife Refuge
- Improvement Act of 1995 (H.R. 1675).
-
- This bill opens the parachute to stop the free-fall in wildlife
- habitat management.
-
- Moreover, it recognizes the pivotal role played by hunters. How?
- By making all wildlife-dependent activities, INCLUDING hunting, a
- PURPOSE of the refuge system -- not a fund-it-if-you-can "secondary
- use."
-
- And NRA has done more than push pro-hunting bills the first six
- months of this year.
-
- Together with thirteen other conservation organizations, NRA formed
- CARE -- the Cooperative Alliance for Refuge Enhancement. CARE
- helps the Fish and Wildlife Service overcome problems created by
- the long-term throttling-down of funds.
-
- CARE is key. Lawmakers are responding to the legitimate calls of
- the people to eliminate questionable programs. But the ill health
- of the refuge system is BEYOND question. CARE teaches lawmakers
- that the refuge system has been resource-starved and
- disproportionately neglected ... for years. CARE teaches that
- what's needed is not the budget ax, but a resource injection.
-
- That's a lot for seventeen fifty and six months -- but there's
- more.
-
- Americans have witnessed the positive message of lawful self-
- defense generated by pushing Right to Carry laws across the various
- states. Even TIME magazine tipped its hat to our enactment just
- this year of Right to Carry in Virginia, Utah, Idaho and Bill
- Clinton's home state of Arkansas. It has just been signed into law
- by the governors of Texas and Oklahoma, and it is moving in Ohio,
- Michigan, North Carolina, South Carolina and California.
-
- Some forty percent of the population can now apply for a permit to
- protect themselves and their families.
-
- That's not all. There's an education component in Right to Carry.
-
- In following the Right to Carry movement, millions of Americans are
- examining their views on the right of self-defense. Without ever
- applying for a permit, millions of Americans are understanding,
- perhaps for the first time, that the Second Amendment is anchored
- in the right of self-defense -- and their right to defend
- themselves does not stop at the front door.
-
- Our CrimeStrike Division has advanced criminal justice reforms and
- victims' rights in fifteen states and the U.S. Congress in the
- first six months of this year -- from "Three Strikes" in Vermont to
- "Hard Time for Armed Crime" in Washington state.
-
- Let me repeat that -- criminal justice reform and victims' rights
- ... in fifteen states ... in just six months.
-
- I don't think ANY citizen organization can claim such a record.
- Don't let anyone tell you that NRA is not out there advancing
- public safety for law enforcement and civilians alike. We're there
- before the arrest is made, making sure the sentences will be tough,
- inappropriate plea bargains are trashed and pre-trial release of
- dangerous offenders doesn't put crooks back on the street before
- the officers make it home for dinner.
-
- The fact is, law enforcement and NRA have one thing in common, and
- that's history.
-
- We not only fight for the kinds of reforms cops need to do their
- job, we've trained hundreds of thousands of officers nationwide,
- thousands each year. NRA pays for free life insurance for every
- officer who joins NRA, free life insurance worth $25,000. Each
- year, NRA sponsors the Jeanne Bray Memorial Scholarship competition
- to help the children of officers get the education their parents
- want for them.
-
- And your NRA is doing more than just talking to politicians on
- Capitol Hill. We're educating America.
-
- Americans have witnessed an unprecedented partnership between NRA,
- the Speaker of the House and the Senate Majority Leader on the
- right to keep and bear arms for lawful purposes. The first fruit
- of that partnership was a comprehensive education strategy that is
- well underway.
-
- Our strategy has enabled witness after witness to tell the positive
- story of their use of a gun in self-defense -- and most of those
- witnesses, by the way, or their spouses are hunters.
-
- Our strategy helped scholars speak to the true meaning of the
- Second Amendment and social scientists debunk gun control as
- ineffective.
-
- And we crafted the most monumental educational conference in the
- nation's capitol on the right to bear arms -- "The Second
- Amendment: Right Under Fire?" -- a symposium featuring prominent
- scholars, journalists, public health and criminology professionals,
- leading presidential candidates and other leaders of the U.S. House
- of Representatives and the U.S. Senate.
-
- If you're sighted in and your aim is true, you are forced to
- conclude that members have got a lot for their seventeen-fifty.
-
- NRA has helped safeguard hunting.
-
- NRA has advanced the right of self-defense.
-
- NRA has been a leader in criminal justice reform.
-
- And, perhaps most important, NRA has helped teach the constitution
- to an America that is souring on sound bites -- and hungry for its
- history.
-
- As we honor the father of America's wildlife refuge system by
- working to recapture his vision, let's also honor the Founding
- Fathers who left us a constitution and democratic institutions
- through which we can advance our rights, build on scientific
- wildlife conservation and preserve our outdoor cultural heritage.
-
- And let's honor NRA members who, for seventeen dollars and fifty
- cents, made possible all the successes you and I have witnessed for
- the first half of 1995.
-
- Thank you.
-
- =+=+=+=+
-
- History of Federal Ammunition Law
- Restricting Projectiles Based Upon Construction
-
- In 1966, Lorain County, Ohio, coroner Dr. Paul Kopsch,
- Lorain Police Sgt. Daniel Turcus, Jr., and Dr. Kopsch's special
- investigator, Donald Ward, began designing special-purpose
- handgun ammunition for law enforcement agencies' use. The
- objective was to provide police with handgun ammunition capable
- of penetrating hard materials, such as automobile doors, cinder
- blocks and walls. Previous efforts by major manufacturers at
- producing ammunition of this general type had been only
- marginally successful.
-
- Most projectiles, constructed primarily of lead, a
- comparatively soft metal, cannot consistently penetrate hard
- materials when fired at handgun ammunition velocities. In the
- 1970s, Kopsch, Turcus and Ward began producing their "KTW" line
- of handgun ammunition, featuring projectiles manufactured with
- case-hardened steel cores capable of significant penetration,
- even when fired at handgun ammunition velocities. In 1981, after
- experimenting with various metals and alloys, they began
- manufacturing their projectiles using brass as the primary
- element.
-
- To prevent damage to firearm barrels caused by firing hard
- metal projectiles through them, KTW projectiles were coated with
- Teflon. Many in the media, however, incorrectly claimed that
- Teflon also lubricated the point of impact and significantly
- increased the ability of the projectiles to defeat soft body
- armor (often called "bullet proof vests") worn by many police
- officers and other individuals.
-
- Government tests proved otherwise. The Justice Department
- determined that Teflon had "little or no effect on the
- penetrating qualities of the projectile" when fired at soft body
- armor, while the U.S. Treasury Department concluded that Teflon
- was "little more than a cosmetic additive" to the ammunition.
-
- In January 1982, NBC TV transformed KTW ammunition into a
- political issue, by running a sensational, nationwide, prime-time
- television spectacle titled "Cop Killer Bullets." The title of
- the piece was as preposterous its message. KTW ammunition had
- never been offered for sale to the general public; it was
- originally intended for, and was marketed to, law enforcement and
- the armed forces. Additionally, no police officer had been killed
- with KTW or similar projectiles, a record intact to the present.
-
- Law enforcement officials pled with NBC to discontinue its
- sensational reports on KTW, lest criminals learn of the virtually
- unknown ammunition. Placing its ratings and profits ahead of the
- lives of law enforcement officers, NBC not only refused to drop
- its coverage, but rebroadcast "Cop Killer Bullets" six months
- later. Not to be undone, the print media soon joined in the hype.
-
- Publicity-hungry anti-gun members of Congress soon
- recognized that NBC's "Cop Killer Bullet" term was the most
- exciting buzzword since "Saturday Night Special." Rep. Mario
- Biaggi (D-N.Y.) introduced "a bill to stop the proliferation of
- 'cop-killer' bullets." Biaggi's bill proposed a performance based
- prohibition, which would have outlawed any bullet that, when
- fired from a 5" barrelled handgun, would be capable of
- penetrating the equivalent of 18 layers of Kevlar, the tradename
- of a fiber used in the construction of soft body armor.
-
- Technical experts of the FBI, BATF, Secret Service and
- police forensic labs throughout the country warned that a
- performance based ban would be impractical and unenforceable. The
- National Rifle associaition (NRA) warned additionally that it
- would have affected more than 85% of commonplace, conventional
- hunting and target shooting rifle ammunition, in addition to the
- specialty handgun rounds that were the intended targets of the
- bill. NRA joined many in law enforcement in opposition to the
- bill.
-
- Federal and local law enforcement experts could not think of
- an acceptable approach to restricting the ammunition, but with
- input from the NRA, the original performance-based concept was
- discarded for one based upon the design and construction of the
- projectiles themselves. In 1986, after a four-year battle,
- Congress approved H.R. 3121, which prohibited the sale, other
- than to law enforcement and the armed forces, of ammunition
- manufactured with "a projectile or projectile core which may be
- used in a handgun and which is constructed entirely (excluding
- the presence of traces of other substances) from one or a
- combination of tungsten alloys, steel, iron, brass, bronze,
- beryllium copper, or depleted uranium," other than shotgun shot
- required by federal regulations for hunting and other
- specifically-described projectiles. Upon that bill's passage, the
- original sponsor, Rep. Mario Biaggi (D-N.Y.), said "Our final
- legislative product was not some watered-down version of what we
- set out to do. In the end, there was no compromise on the part of
- police safety." Despite NRA's help in writing the law, the anti-
- gun lobby continues to claim that NRA opposed it.
-
- In 1994, after the development in Sweden of another special-
- purpose handgun round, one never introduced in the United States,
- Congress again used a construction-based approach to restrict its
- sale, by prohibiting sales of ammunition manufactured with a
- "full jacketed projectile larger than .22 caliber designed and
- intended for use in a handgun and whose jacket has a weight of
- more than 25 percent of the total weight of the projectile."
-
- Modern, lightweight Level A/IIA body armor vests typically
- worn by police officers are capable of defeating conventional
- handgun projectiles, which comprise the vast majority of rounds
- encountered by officers in hostile encounters. According to
- Second Chance Body Armor, Inc., the industry leader in the
- manufacture of police protective vests, police officers' "chances
- of encountering (threats) beyond Level A/IIA are REMOTE."
- (Emphasis in the original)
-
- Heavier, higher-performance vests capable of defeating more
- powerful rifle rounds are also readily available to police
- officers. However, higher-powered rifle ammunition accounts for a
- small percentage of the ammunition officers face in dealing with
- criminals.
-
- =+=+=+=+
-
- "Government, Citizens And Keeping The Trust"
-
- "Do you think the federal government has become so large and
- powerful that it poses a threat to the rights and freedoms
- of ordinary citizens, or don't you think so?"
-
- Shockingly, 52% of Americans answered yes to this Time/CNN
- poll question posed a week after the terrorist bombing in
- Oklahoma City. Such is the depth of the concerns of millions of
- honest, hard-working, tax-paying citizens.
- Since the cowardly bomber murders, however, public attention
- has failed to center on the critical question of why so many
- citizens no longer trust their government. Rather, the focus has
- been on a small number of people who form so-called "citizen
- militias." These groups exist, we are constantly informed, in
- defiance of governmental efforts to control firearms.
- While the National Rifle Association, of course, opposes gun
- control schemes, for decades it has followed an explicit policy
- that condemns violent individuals and groups, including those
- advocating the violent overthrow of the government of the United
- States.
- NRA defends the individual right of law-abiding citizens to
- keep and bear arms for legitimate purposes, the individual right
- guaranteed by the Constitution. This right is not dependent upon
- the Second Amendment's militia clause, nor does participation in
- a citizen militia organization make that right any more valid or
- strong. Consequently, NRA has never been involved in the
- formation or support of so-called citizen militia units.
- It is the gun control advocates who advance the fantasy that
- the right to keep and bear arms is a "collective right,"
- contingent upon participation in a "citizen militia." As
- constitutional scholar Stephen Halbrook says: "If anyone
- entertained this notion in the period during which the
- Constitution and Bill of Rights were debated and ratified, it
- remains one of the most closely guarded secrets of the 18th
- century."
- On the other hand, one can cite, as just one example, famed
- English jurist Sir William Blackstone, whose writing strongly
- influenced the framers of our Constitution. Blackstone referred
- to the right of the people to be armed as an "auxiliary" right
- that serves "to protect and maintain inviolate the three great
- and primary rights, of personal security, personal liberty, and
- private property."
- Following the Oklahoma tragedy, there have been calls to
- expand the powers of federal law enforcement agents. Fingers of
- guilt have been pointed at individuals and groups who bear no
- responsibility for the terrorist attack but who do exercise their
- right to express anger and frustration at what they feel their
- government has become.
- These are the voices of not only those who choose to join
- citizen militias. For every militia member, there are hundreds of
- thousands of Americans who are angered by a tax system that
- penalizes rather than rewards hard work, angered by a regulatory
- system that confiscates private property by transforming puddles
- into "wetlands," angered by a criminal justice system that often
- seems to treat criminals as victims, and, yes, angered by
- politicians who seek to disarm them under the guise of fighting
- crime.
- These citizens spoke loudly last November in voting booths
- across the nation, and they proved to any doubters that
- government remains subject to democratic change. These citizens
- became active participants in the debate about the proper role of
- the federal government, about what power should be concentrated
- within Washington, D.C. That debate, despite what some political
- opportunists seem to suggest, is legitimate, is necessary and is
- thoroughly American.
- It is these same citizens who rightfully question BATF/FBI
- actions at Ruby Ridge and Waco and feel that the government, in
- its internal reviews, has stonewalled attempts to arrive at the
- truth behind those disasters. It is these citizens who distrust
- Attorney General Janet Reno's recent promotion of the censured
- FBI official who oversaw both the attack at Ruby Ridge and the
- assault in Waco. These citizens know that only the harsh light of
- congressional hearings - hearings NRA continues to call for -
- will bring out the truth.
- Distrust of government now runs so deep in some Americans
- that they see the menace of unmarked "black helicopters" flying
- over their towns. They see U.N. troops occupying U.S. soil. They
- fear intrigues to establish a "one world order." For their
- concerns they most often are dismissed as paranoids, or worse, by
- the cultural elite who claim that the citizens voting for change
- last November 8 were, as ABC News anchor Peter Jennings
- contemptuously suggested, angry two-year-olds acting out temper
- tantrums, stomping their feet, rolling their eyes and screaming.
- While the evidence supporting notions of global conspiracies
- may be illusory, that doesn't mean NRA ignores threats to the
- Second Amendment from the international quarter. In fact, NRA
- assisted Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Jesse Helms
- in investigating a Japanese gun control resolution introduced at
- the recent Ninth U.N. Congress on the Prevention of Crime and the
- Treatment of Offenders in Cairo.
- Sen. Helms and Sen. Larry Craig addressed the issue of the
- globalization of gun control in a letter to Attorney General Reno
- as the conference was underway. "Japan's proposal may not be
- binding on U.S. citizens," they wrote, "but it would be a serious
- mistake for any U.S. administration to support any proposal
- calling for actions that could ultimately be an infringement of
- the U.S. Constitution and the rights of law-abiding Americans."
- Sens. Helms and Craig pointed out that "as is usual with
- such ill-considered proposals, it assumes that firearms, not
- criminals are the cause of crime." The Clinton administration,
- however, failed to heed the Senators' words, and the resolution
- was passed without dissent.
- Times have changed. But was it so long ago that a paladin of
- American liberalism wrote: "Certainly one of the chief guarantees
- of freedom under any government, no matter how popular and
- respected, is the right of the citizens to keep and bear arms.
- This is not to say that firearms should not be very carefully
- used and that definite safety rules of precaution should not be
- taught and enforced. But the right of the citizens to bear arms
- is just one guarantee against arbitrary government and one more
- safeguard against a tyranny which now appears remote in America,
- but historically has proved to be always possible."
- The nation has changed greatly since Sen. Hubert Humphrey,
- whose unflagging optimism always saw and sought to summon the
- best from his countrymen, wrote those words. Today law-abiding
- gun owners are viewed with suspicion if not fear by a cultural
- elite that seeks to demonize them. It is these gun owners who
- some politicians increasingly seek to blame for the nation's
- crime problem.
- NRA will continue to insist that the traditional right of
- American citizens to own and use firearms for lawful purposes be
- respected. NRA will continue to support politicians who support
- that right and seek to defeat those who do not.
- NRA will also recognize that freedom and liberty are not
- gifts that governments or politicians can bestow or take away.
- Filling Congress and state houses with pro-gun legislators is not
- enough. Gun owners also must not allow themselves to be demonized
- and become false images in the hearts and minds of their fellow
- citizens.
- Attorney and author Jeffrey Snyder captured that truth in a
- recent essay. "Ultimately, it is the support and esteem of our
- neighbors that we must win," he wrote, "for it is upon them that
- the continued enjoyment of our rights depend."
-
- =+=+=+=+
-
- NRA CrimeStrike
- 11250 Waples Mill Road, Fairfax, VA 22030
- * July 5, 1995 * 1-800-TOUGH-11 *
-
- Inmate Escapes -- Can the Numbers be Trusted?
-
- On June 23, convicted killer Tyrone Bernard Diggs shaved his
- head, beard and mustache and walked away from a work-release job in
- Columbia, MD. That same week, inmate Derrick Washington also
- "walked away" from a Maryland pre-release center. Neither convict
- has been recaptured.
- But according to Division of Corrections spokeswoman Maxine
- Eldridge, these are not classified as "escapes" -- which are
- violations of security -- rather, these are mere violations of
- "trust." Approximately 70 of the 400 prisoners in Maryland's work-
- release program -- nearly 20% -- "walked off" last year.
- According to Robert Bidinotto, editor of the new book Criminal
- Justice? and the award-winning author who brought the dangers of
- weekend furlough for violent criminals to national attention
- through Massachusetts' Willie Horton case during the 1988
- presidential election, "in state after state, corrections officials
- are playing Russian Roulette with innocent human lives.
- Frequently," Mr. Bidinotto said, "the reporting procedures of state
- departments of corrections mislead the public into thinking these
- programs are safe, when in fact they represent a significant threat
- to pubic safety."
- To interview Mr. Bidinotto, call 1-800-TOUGH-11.
-
- Do Clinton Campaign Ads "Lie by Omission?"
-
- The unprecedently-early Clinton/Gore '96 $2.4 million campaign
- ads, now running in swing states, have come under attack as pushing
- the truth-telling envelope too far, even for political ads.
- One tells viewers a Houston police officer was shot and nearly
- killed by Wayne Bunch, then blames the tragedy on "assault
- weapons." But it fails to mention that Bunch, a 42 year-old career
- criminal, was able to kill the officer because he was freed from
- prison on early parole.
- Another Clinton ad retells the horror of November 23, 1994,
- when two FBI agents and an District of Columbia homicide detective
- were gunned down inside the police station, then blames the triple
- murder on "assault weapons." The ad fails to say is the gunman,
- Bennie Lee Lawson, Jr., was able to murder three law enforcement
- officers because he was freed from prison on parole. The charge?
- Weapons violation.
- According to NRA Chief Lobbyist Tanya Metaksa, "The tragedy of
- these killings of dedicated men in blue is that all four deaths
- could have been prevented if we had simply required those convicted
- felons to serve their time. Had they been behind bars, these
- officers would be alive today." Focusing the crime debate on
- "assault weapons" instead of criminals, she said, "is tantamount to
- looking the other way."
- FBI Agent John Kutcha, who survived the November shooting at
- D.C. Police Headquarters, angrily told the crowd at this May's
- National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial, "I would not be sharing
- these words with you tonight [about the slayings]... had it not
- been for a failed criminal justice system that gave an early
- release to a violent criminal who destroyed such good lives."
- Says Elizabeth Swasey, CrimeStrike Senior Counsel for Policy,
- "every day in America, convicted criminals on parole like Bunch and
- Lawson commit five murders, 14 rapes, 228 robberies and 163
- aggravated assaults -- that's 59,495 violent crimes every year.
- And amounts to nearly 60,000 criminal victimizations that could be
- prevented every year if we would just start focusing on the real
- `assault weapons' -- violent criminals -- by keeping them in
- prison."
- To interview Mrs. Metaksa or Ms. Swasey, call 1-800-TOUGH-11.
-
- Home Detention Device Nets $5 at Pawn Shop
-
- Broward County, Florida officials were stunned when a woman,
- convicted of drug charges and sentenced to home detention monitored
- by an electronic ankle bracelet, sold the $1,700 piece of equipment
- for $5 at a local pawnshop.
- Evelyn Davis, a.k.a. Michelle Williams, 27, reputedly nipped
- off the monitoring device that connects with the "BI 9000 Home
- Escort" electronic box, and then pawned the box. Ms. Davis now
- faces a series of additional charges, including grand theft,
- dealing in stolen property, resisting arrest and obstructing
- justice.
-
- State Reform Legislation
-
- A listing of state criminal justice reform legislation will be
- available next week through NRA CrimeStrike. Legislators and media
- representatives may call 1-800-TOUGH-11 for pre-release data.
-
- Do Prisons "Overflow" with Non-Violent Offenders?
-
- State prison inmates in 1991, before incarcerated, killed
- twice as many people as all Americans who died in the Vietnam War.
- Sixty percent were convicted of at least one violent crime, 80% are
- repeat offenders -- 45% serving at least their fourth sentence,
- according to The Bessette Quarterly Report on Crime and Justice,
- USA.
-
- =+=+=+=+
-
- NRA-ILA FAX NETWORK
- 11250 Waples Mill Road Fairfax, VA 22030
- Phone: 1-800-392-8683 Fax: 703-267-3918
- Vol. 2, No. 28 6/30/95
-
- CLINTON "GUN CONTROL" ADS: "IT'S NOT ABOUT POLITICS"
-
- That's what President Clinton says about his new political
- ads, glamorizing his 1994 gun and magazine ban. But truth be
- told, the ads, which were unveiled on Tuesday, June 27th, are
- nothing but politics. The President made the decision to sink
- millions of dollars into this campaign venture despite the fact
- that the election is a full 17 months away and at this time, he
- doesn't even face a primary challenger! According to
- presidential press secretary Michael McCurry, the 12 state ad
- campaign highlights Clinton's determination "not to let the
- National Rifle Association [get] the upper hand." It's all about
- politics -- and poor performance. The Clinton gun ban masks
- Clinton's poor track record in rounding up real assault weapons -
- - armed criminals! Federal weapons prosecutions plummeted 23% in
- the first two years of the Clinton presidency.
-
- And Speaking of Politics: On Friday, June 30th, President
- Clinton requested that Congress introduce a bill he authored to
- ban bullets. His proposal is remarkably similar to Rep. Charles
- Schumer's (D-N.Y.) failed bullet ban amendment to the House anti-
- terrorism bill (see FAX ALERT No. 26). In an attempt to disguise
- this legislation as a pro-law enforcement bill, Clinton entitled
- it the "Saving Law Enforcement Officers' Lives Act of 1995."
- This yet-to-be-introduced bill, coupled with the President's
- campaign ads, represents nothing more than a transparent attempt
- to garner the support of the law enforcement community for the
- President's 1996 re-election campaign. Despite its benevolent
- title, the Clinton proposal would ban bullets commonly used for
- self-defense and target shooting while offering no protection for
- police officers from repeat violent offenders.
-
- PRESIDENT EQUATES BRADY FIVE DAY WAIT WITH DRUG TESTING:
- Speaking in front of law enforcement officers and select members
- of Congress on June 29, President Clinton alluded to a recent
- Supreme Court decision upholding drug tests for high school
- athletes as being analogous to the Brady Act's five day waiting
- period. Referring to the "hassle" of drug testing for student
- athletes, Mr. Clinton noted that like the Brady five day waiting
- period, it's a "hassle" we must endure for the good of the
- nation. The President also noted his disdain for law-abiding
- citizens who opposed the Brady Act and the gun and magazine ban,
- and get upset over being treated like criminals. The President
- said that none of us can "go off in some sanctimonious huff,
- saying that just because we don't do anything wrong, we shouldn't
- be asked to contribute to our country [by] obeying these gun
- laws."
-
- THIS YEAR'S MODEL: On Tuesday, June 27th, Rep. Major Owens
- (D-N.Y.) introduced his annual Second Amendment-bashing bill.
- For the past two sessions of Congress, Rep. Owens has introduced
- legislation calling for the abolishment of the Second Amendment.
- This year, however, he's trying a new tact -- H.J. Res. 98 --
- which, rather than calling for the end to our right to keep and
- bear arms, calls for a constitutional amendment "clarifying" the
- Second Amendment. In its entirety, the one sentence proposal
- reads as follows: "The right enumerated in the second article of
- amendment to the Constitution of the United States shall be
- construed as a right of States and not of individuals." H.J.
- Res. 98 has been referred to the House Judiciary Committee for
- further review. Although it's doubtful this proposal will see
- any action in the 104th Congress, we'll keep you informed of any
- developments.
-
- A LOOK AT THE STATES:
- Indiana: The Johnson County Board of Commissioners approved an
- ordinance prohibiting the carrying of firearms in certain public
- places. However, language was deleted that banned gun shows at
- county fairgrounds.
-
- Louisiana: Governor Edwin Edwards vetoed SB 886, NRA-supported
- right to carry reform legislation. The only way to pass SB 886
- now is through a special veto session of the legislature.
- Members: please call your State Representatives & Senators at
- their district offices & urge them to hold a veto session!
-
- Nevada: It appears as though the legislature will adjourn tonight
- without passing SB 299, the NRA-backed right to carry reform
- bill. We'll come back in future sessions and work to pass this
- much-needed reform!
-
- North Carolina: The Senate approved HB 90, NRA-supported right to
- carry legislation. If the House concurs with the Senate
- amendments, or if both chambers approve a conference report on
- this measure, it becomes law without the governor's signature.
-
- Ohio: The House approved HB 336, NRA-supported instant check
- legislation to replace the Brady Act waiting period. HB 266 will
- likely be referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee for
- consideration after summer recess. The Senate Judiciary
- Committee reported out SB 68, the right to carry bill. It now
- moves to the Senate floor for consideration -- possibly during
- one of two floor sessions to be held in July. If the Senate
- approves the measure, NRA-ILA will work on the House side to
- address committee amendments added to the bill which relate to
- training and restrictions on carrying by individuals with a
- permit. Members: please contact your State Senators & urge them
- to support both HB 336 & SB 68.
-
- Oregon: Governor John Kitzhaber is undecided on signing two bills
- into law: SB 1096, a bill replacing the state's 15-day waiting
- period on handgun purchases with an instant check system, and HB
- 2784, legislation clarifying and strengthening the state firearms
- preemption statute. Both bills passed with overwhelming
- bipartisan support! Members: please call Governor Kitzhaber's
- office at (503) 378-3111 & encourage him to sign both SB 1096 and
- HB 2784!
-
- =+=+=+=+
-
- ============================================================
- N R A G R A S S F I R E !
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- The Newsletter for NRA-ILA Volunteers
-
- July 1995 Vol. 1, No. 7
- ============================================================
-
- HEARINGS ON FEDERAL LAW
- ENFORCEMENT ABUSES THIS MONTH
-
- A special U.S. House of Representatives' joint subcommittee of
- the Judiciary and Government Reform and Oversight committees is
- conducting investigations into the government tactics that led to
- civilian and law enforcement officer deaths at Waco and Ruby
- Ridge. Reps. Bill McCollum (R-Fla.) and Bill Zeliff (R-N.H.),
- co-chair the joint subcommittee, and have scheduled hearings for
- mid-July. According to Rep. McCollum, the hearings will be "an
- exhaustive examination of the Waco tragedy so that at the
- conclusion of the hearings, the American public will feel they
- have all the answers." Echoing Mr. McCollum's sentiments, Rep.
- Zeliff assured that Congress "will come to these hearings with an
- open mind, yet we intend to be tough, credible and fair." The
- House hearings are scheduled to last several days, and while
- Senate hearings are also being planned, no dates have been set
- yet. We'll keep you posted as to any hearing date changes or
- other new developments!
-
- SENATE PASSES S. 735 --
- COUNTER-TERRORISM BILL
-
- During the week of June 5, the U.S. Senate passed S. 735, its
- version of anti-terrorism legislation, -- without the restrictive
- "gun control" provisions proposed by President Clinton and his
- anti-gun allies in the Senate. These proposals called for the
- end of the Civilian Marksmanship program, ammo bans, and firearms
- registration (just to name a few), and each fell by the wayside
- or never even came up for a vote! While Senate Republicans
- eliminated Clinton's anti-terrorism proposals that threatened
- other civil liberties, the Senate later added in scaled-back
- measures giving new "roving wiretap" authority to federal
- agencies to monitor conversations of suspected terrorists on
- different telephones, expanding the use of the military in cases
- involving chemical or biological agents, and requiring tracer
- elements in some explosives. Thanks to NRA, however, the Senate
- voted 90-0 not to include these microscopic identifiers, known as
- "taggants," in black and smokeless powder. We are outraged that
- the consideration of this bill, that was supposed to focus on
- terrorism, was used as an attempt by anti-gun Senators to take
- away freedom, rather than protect it. Moreover, Senate Minority
- Leader Tom Daschle (D-S.D.) has promised that the defeated
- amendments which threaten our basic gun rights will be
- resurfacing in coming weeks. Rest assured NRA will be ready to
- address all remaining concerns.
-
- HOUSE GEARS UP FOR FLOOR FIGHT
- ON ANTI-TERRORISM BILL
-
- On Tuesday, June 20th, the House Judiciary Committee passed
- H.R. 1710 -- its counter-terrorism bill. H.R. 1710 awaits final
- floor action by the House, which will occur in the next few
- weeks. Prior to the June 20th vote, the Committee rolled back an
- attempt by Rep. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) to give the Attorney
- General broad powers to ban bullets commonly used for hunting,
- target shooting and self-defense. Make no mistake, however,
- Schumer and Company will be back with their proposals and they'll
- use every parliamentary procedure at their disposal to try to
- include these previously failed measures in the final version of
- the bill. What can gun owners expect? An attempt by Mr. Schumer
- to insert the bullet ban back in the bill and possibly an effort
- to place "taggants" in gunpowder.
-
- And speaking of taggants: NRA's concern over taggants is
- safety. The chemicals in these small plastic tags, when applied
- to gun powder, can create an accidental fire hazard. Introducing
- a fire hazard into the homes of millions of Americans doesn't
- counter terrorism, it counters public safety. NRA takes no
- position on taggants in explosives or fertilizer.
-
- Like the Senate-passed S. 735, H.R. 1710 eases restrictions on
- the placement of "roving wiretaps" and permits the military to
- assist in terrorism cases involving chemical or biological
- agents. Rest assured, NRA lobbyists are working hard to ensure
- that no provision of H.R. 1710 negatively impacts the rights of
- gun owners. We will keep you informed of any new developments.
- Action Item: Please contact your U.S. Representative again and
- urge him to oppose any "gun control" amendment offered to H.R.
- 1710 on the House floor. Encourage your family and friends to
- call as well!
-
- LOOKING FOR A FEW
- GOOD CO-SPONSORS
-
- Although debate on H.R. 1488 -- the bill to repeal the Clinton
- gun and magazine ban -- isn't likely to occur until mid-fall,
- NRA-ILA continues to recruit co-sponsors to the bill. The more
- co-sponsors we get, the more we're guaranteed debate on this
- critical measure this year! Action Alert: please continue to
- contact your U.S. Representative and urge him to become a co-
- sponsor of H.R. 1488. If your Representative is already a co-
- sponsor, be sure to thank him, and urge him to lobby his fellow
- lawmakers to do the same!
-
- DE-FUNDING OF DCM ATTACHED TO
- DEFENSE SPENDING BILL
-
- An amendment by U.S. Rep. Paul Gillmor (R-Ohio) to replace the
- Civilian Marksmanship Program with an independent, non-profit
- federal corporation was accepted to the House Defense
- Authorization bill. This newly formed non-profit corporation
- will be able to solicit funds from non-federal sources.
- According to Gillmor, this will eliminate the need for federal
- funding. More to follow soon.
-
- REP. YOUNG INTRODUCES BILL TO
- PROTECT HUNTING ON REFUGES
-
- On May 18th, Rep. Don Young (R-Alas.), with 18 of his
- colleagues, introduced H.R. 1675 -- a bill to safeguard hunting,
- fishing and other wildlife-dependent activities on national
- wildlife refuge lands. H.R. 1675 would amend the National
- Wildlife Refuge System Administration Act by elevating these
- activities to a "primary purpose" of the system. Currently,
- these activities are treated as "secondary uses" which has made
- them vulnerable to budget cuts and lawsuits challenging the
- legitimacy of hunting on refuges.
-
- Upon introduction of H.R. 1675, Rep. Young stated that the
- refuge system needs the "enthusiastic support of the American
- people who finance the system not only with the payment of their
- tax dollars, but also by purchasing Duck Stamps and paying excise
- taxes on fishing and hunting equipment." NRA-ILA Conservation,
- Wildlife and Natural Resources Director Susan Lamson recently
- testified in support of H.R. 1675 before the House Subcommittee
- on Fisheries, Wildlife and Oceans. Full committee action on H.R.
- 1675 is expected in mid-July. Action Alert: Please call your
- U.S Representative and urge him to sign on as a co-sponsor to
- H.R. 1675.
-
- IRS TO INVESTIGATE NRA
-
- The IRS is preparing to undertake a major examination of NRA's
- financial returns and statements. Unlike ordinary audits that
- affect thousands of Americans every year, the NRA will be
- subjected to a Coordinated Examination Program (CEP), that can
- last between two and three years! During a CEP, IRS agents will
- become part of the every-day corporate life of the Association.
- Why the intense scrutiny? Whatever the reason, NRA is confident
- in its reportings. And while the anti-gun media is again trying
- to stir up controversy regarding this non-issue, we are certain
- the IRS will find that NRA has complied with all laws and has
- faithfully completed our tax returns.
-
- CLINTON'S LINE IN THE SAND
-
- On Thursday, June 22, President Clinton spoke at a $1,000-a-
- plate fundraiser in New Jersey. When the President spoke of his
- commitment to keeping his gun ban on the books, he alluded to
- former New Jersey Governor, Jim Florio, who lost his 1993 re-
- election bid in large part because of his own gun ban. Mr.
- Clinton noted, "Jim Florio gave up his governorship for it (semi-
- auto ban), and if I have to give up the White House for it, I'll
- do it." Well Mr. President, we'll be glad to grant your wishes
- in 1996 if given the chance!
-
- CLINTON "GUN CONTROL" ADS:
- "IT'S NOT ABOUT POLITICS"
-
- That's what President Clinton says in his new political ads
- (unveiled on June 27th) glamorizing his 1994 gun and magazine
- ban. But truth be told, it's all about politics -- and poor
- performance. The Clinton gun ban masks Clinton's poor track
- record in rounding up real assault weapons -- namely, armed
- criminals. Federal weapons prosecutions plummeted 23% in the
- first two years of the Clinton presidency! Clinton is fighting
- H.R. 1488 which not only repeals his gun ban, but requires the
- U.S. Attorney General to do her job -- by establishing a task
- force in every U.S. Attorney's office to prosecute criminals.
-
- NOTABLE QUOTABLE
-
- Senator Joe Biden (D-Del.) had some interesting words to offer
- with respect to NRA members. But wait just a minute -- it's not
- what you might think! In referring to a recent NRA fundraiser
- that has received much attention recently, Sen. Biden noted, "The
- NRA puts out an ill-advised letter, and all of a sudden everyone
- in the NRA is a 'thug,' a 'bum.' The vast majority of NRA
- members in my state are honest, decent citizens."
-
- ACTION AT THE STATE LEVEL
-
- Even as state legislative sessions wind down for the year,
- pro-gun bills are becoming law in the states -- making 1995 one
- of the most successful pro-gun years in history. Enclosed you'll
- find a special NRA-ILA "Mid-Term Report," that will tell you
- exactly what pro-gun bills passed, failed, and are now pending in
- state legislatures across the country. For an update on
- legislation currently pending before your state or local
- governing body, please call NRA-ILA at 1-800-392-8683.
-
- NEW SURVEY SHOWS SUPPORT FOR
- RIGHT TO CARRY
-
- A June telephone survey by the Tarrance Group has found that
- support for gun rights remains strong, despite the media's
- attempt to link firearms ownership rights to the tragic Oklahoma
- City bombing. The poll of 1,000 registered voters found that 65%
- support the right of law-abiding citizens to carry firearms for
- self-defense. Further, 84% believe the individual criminal
- should be held legally responsible for the misuse of guns -- not
- law-abiding gun owners.
-
- CDC AT IT AGAIN
-
- Once again funded with tax dollars by the Centers for Disease
- Control and Prevention (CDC), Dr. Arthur Kellermann has released
- yet another "study" that concludes guns are not effective for
- self-defense. If you'll recall, Kellermann is the author of the
- much touted, yet highly suspect "study" that claimed for every
- criminal killed with a gun in self-defense, 43 family members are
- slain. Like his previous work, this so-called "study" was flawed
- from the outset. First, even by his own admission, Dr.
- Kellermann's sample of only 198 Atlanta households was too small
- to yield any conclusive results. Additionally, Kellermann never
- bothered to mention in how many of these 198 households a gun was
- even present. Despite his attempt to discredit Professor Gary
- Kleck's research showing that people use firearms for self-
- protection more than 2.5 million times per year, Kellermann's
- "study" actually found that in the instances where individuals
- used firearms for self-defense, no one was injured!
- Unfortunately, Dr. Kellermann's research will be published in
- both the Journal of the American Medical Association and the New
- England Journal of Medicine.
-
- D.C. GUN CRACKDOWN
-
- A special team of Washington, D.C., police officers and BATF
- agents will begin a crackdown on illegal firearms activities in
- the nation's capital. U.S. Attorney Eric Holder, who's
- spearheading the effort, dubbed Operation Ceasefire, says these
- special squads will be targeting vehicles that are in violation
- of safety standards i.e., operating with improper lights or
- heavily tinted windows. They will also target pedestrians who
- may fit a specific profile of an individual likely to be carrying
- a gun. BATF agents will enter any information about the seized
- firearms into two different local and national databases that
- track firearms. Could it be that officials have conceded that
- DC's handgun ban, which has been in place for almost 20 years,
- hasn't stopped the criminal misuse of firearms?
-
- AMMO BUST A BUST
-
- It seems the seizure of 75 million rounds of ammunition by
- federal authorities last month has unravelled. According to U.S.
- Customs officials, the May 3 seizure of 75 million rounds of 7.62
- x 39mm ammunition was the largest impoundment of ammunition in
- U.S. history. The only problem: the confiscation was made on the
- grounds that the ammunition was illegally imported from China,
- when in fact the ammunition was actually legally imported from
- Russia! The 75 million rounds will be returned to Eagle Exim,
- the importer of the ammunition.
-
- DEATH KNELL FOR DEATH CLOCK
-
- They've pulled the plug on the three-story tall "death clock,"
- that adorned Times Square in New York City for the past year.
- According to a June 21, New York Times story, the so-called
- "death clock," which "tracked" the number of firearm fatalities
- using a questionable statistical formula, has "quietly"
- disappeared from its perch at Broadway and 47th Street.
- Incidentally, the financier of the "death clock" project is anti-
- gun activist Robert Brennan, who along with his brokerage firm,
- was found by a Federal Court to have conducted "a massive and
- continuing fraud" on his customers, and ordered to pay a $71.5
- million restitution.
-
- AUGUST GRASSROOTS SEMINARS
-
- Help ensure a repeat performance of 1994's election successes
- by attending an NRA-ILA Grassroots/Election Seminar! These
- seminars discuss how we can elect pro-gun lawmakers, political
- strategies for 1995 and 1996, and up-to-date information on
- legislative activities in your state and the U.S. Congress.
- We'll provide you with a variety of election-action materials and
- free working luncheon. And best of all, each seminar is
- absolutely free! Below, you'll find the seminar schedule for
- August. For more information, or to register, call NRA-ILA at 1-
- 800-392-8683.
-
- Saturday, August 12 Shreveport, LA
- Shreveport Sheraton Hotel
- 1419 East 70th Street
-
- LOOKING FOR LEADERS
-
- The 1996 elections are right around the corner! As we proved
- in 1994, the voting power of gun owners makes a world of
- difference. Pro-gun candidates can only win if they have the
- campaign support of local NRA members and gun owners who are
- willing to volunteer a portion of their time to help elect pro-
- gun lawmakers to office. These individuals, however, need a
- leader to show them what's entailed when volunteering for a
- campaign. The campaign needs a committed volunteer leader who
- can get people to a scheduled event, and help get out the vote on
- election day. And the gun lobby needs to make sure the candidate
- knows who helped him win office. Enter the Election Volunteer
- Coordinator program!
-
- As the Election Volunteer Coordinator for your district,
- you'll be the liaison between the pro-gun candidate's campaign
- and his gun-owning community. You'll work directly with the
- campaign to find out what needs to be done to get the candidate
- elected, be it walking precincts, stuffing envelopes, or hosting
- a fundraiser. You'll assemble individuals into an organized team
- of volunteers, and utilize the resources right in your community
- -- gun clubs, shooting ranges, and gun shops. You'll help
- register voters and put together neighborhood events, and other
- activities that need to be done to elect pro-gun candidates to
- office. If this sounds like a lot of work, it can be -- but the
- rewards can be monumental! If you have some campaign experience,
- coordination and delegation skills, and the desire and interest
- in developing a solid relationship with your lawmakers, this is
- the volunteer assignment for you! For more information on this
- program, please call NRA-ILA at 1-800-392-8683.
-
- Copyright 1995 NRA Grassfire
- NRA Institute for Legislative Action
- Fairfax, VA 22030
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
-
- NRA-ILA MID-TERM REPORT:
- STRIKING SUCCESS IN THE STATES
-
-
- At the half-way point of 1995, state after state has
- showcased an unprecedented level of pro-gun activity. Whereas in
- previous years, gun owners struggled to prevent anti-gun bills
- from passing, so far in 1995, gun owners have achieved a
- startling success rate at either passing pro-gun measures, or
- further advancing pro-gun proposals through the legislative
- process. This success is directly attributable to your active
- participation in the 1994 elections.
-
- Listed below is a brief synopsis of the gains gun owners
- have made from January to June this year at the state level.
-
-
- Right To Carry Overview
-
- In 1994, four states passed laws either establishing a
- "shall issue" carry permit system or reforming existing statutes:
- Alaska, Arizona, Tennessee and Wyoming.
-
- Thus far in 1995, seven more states have passed right to
- carry legislation either establishing a "shall issue" carry
- permit system or reforming existing statutes: Arkansas (signed by
- Governor Jim Guy Tucker), Florida (became law without Governor
- Chiles' signature), Idaho (signed by Governor Phil Batt), in
- Oklahoma (signed by Governor Frank Keating), Texas (signed by
- Governor George W. Bush), Utah (signed by Governor Michael
- Leavitt), and Virginia (signed by Governor George Allen). In
- Louisiana, an NRA-supported right to carry reform bill passed the
- legislature, but will be vetoed by the Governor. We'll be back
- in 1997 to pass this critical measure!
-
- Right to carry legislation is currently pending in seven
- states -- Massachusetts (pending in Executive Committee),
- Michigan (introduced in the House Judiciary Committee), North
- Carolina (passed House, and Senate Judiciary and Finance
- Committees, and will soon be debated on the Senate floor), Nevada
- (passed Senate, pending in Assembly Judiciary Committee), New
- York (passed Senate, pending in Assembly Codes Committee), Ohio
- (pending in Senate Judiciary Committee) and Wisconsin (in
- drafting stage, will be introduced this summer).
-
-
- State Firearms Preemption Overview
-
- In 1994, two states passed legislation clarifying and
- strengthening state preemption of firearms laws: Pennsylvania and
- Indiana. Indiana's law contained a grandfather clause which
- allowed gun bans in Gary and East Chicago to remain in place.
- Utah also enacted preemption for one year, establishing a
- Governor's Task Force to study what, if any, authority local
- municipalities should retain in the area of firearms regulation.
- Both the Task Force and the legislature's Judiciary Interim
- Committee recommended passage of permanent preemption legislation
- that would wipe out waiting periods in Salt Lake City and other
- municipalities.
-
- Four states have passed legislation so far in 1995
- establishing a state firearms preemption statute or clarifying
- and strengthening existing law: Georgia (signed by
- Governor Zell Miller), Oregon (awaiting signature of Governor
- John Kitzhaber, who is currently undecided on whether to sign the
- bill into law). In Utah, the state legislature passed
- legislation making the one-year preemption law permanent. It was
- signed by Governor Mike Leavitt. Preemption also passed in
- Wyoming (signed by Governor Jim Geringer).
-
- State firearms preemption legislation is pending in two
- states -- North Carolina (passed House, pending in Senate
- Judiciary Committee) and Wisconsin (pending in Assembly Criminal
- Justice & Corrections Committee and the Senate State Government
- Operations & Corrections Committee). In Illinois, preemption
- legislation passed the House, but died in the Senate. We will
- come back next year and work to pass this much-needed reform!
-
-
- Instant Check Overview
-
- In 1994, computerized "instant-check" systems were
- implemented in five states, exempting prospective handgun
- purchasers from the onus of the Brady Act's five-day waiting
- period: Colorado, Idaho, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Utah.
-
- So far in 1995, three states have passed instant check
- legislation, overturning state or local waiting periods or the
- Brady Act waiting period. Georgia (signed into law by Governor
- Zell Miller; this law also exempts handgun purchasers from the
- Brady five-day wait), Oregon (pending signature by Governor John
- Kitzhaber, who is currently undecided on whether to sign the bill
- into law) and Pennsylvania (signed into law by Governor Tom
- Ridge).
-
- Instant check is pending in two states -- North Carolina
- (passed House Judiciary I and House Finance Committees, and is
- currently pending in the House Appropriations Committee) and Ohio
- (passed House Judiciary Committee, pending on House floor).
-
-
- Shooting Range Protection
-
- In Maine, the Governor has signed into law NRA-backed
- shooting range protection legislation. In Minnesota, NRA-
- supported shooting range protection language was deleted from
- another bill in conference committee just before the legislature
- adjourned for the session. In North Carolina, a shooting range
- protection bill has passed out of one House Committee and has
- been referred to a second House Committee for consideration. In
- Oregon, an NRA-backed shooting range protection bill has passed
- the legislature and been sent to the Governor for his signature.
- In Tennessee, Governor Don Sundquist has signed into law an NRA-
- backed shooting range protection bill. In Washington, NRA-
- supported range protection legislation passed the House, but was
- killed in a Senate Committee. In Wyoming, the Governor has
- signed into law NRA-supported range protection legislation.
-
-
- Sportsmen's Protection
-
- In Hawaii, the Governor has signed into law NRA-backed
- sportsmen's protection legislation. In Nebraska, the Governor has
- signed into law NRA-backed sportsmen's protection legislation
- Now, all 50 states have a hunter harassment or sportsmen's
- protection law on the books.
-
-
- =+=+=+=+
-
- The American Rifleman, July 1995
-
- THE ARMED CITIZEN
-
- Studies indicate that firearms are used over two
- million times a year for personal protection, and that the
- presence of a firearm, without a shot being fired, prevents
- crime in many instances. Shooting usually can be justified
- only where crime constitutes an immediate imminent threat to
- life limb or in some cases property. Anyone is free to quote
- or reproduce these accounts. Send clippings to: "The Armed
- Citizen," 11250 Waples Mill Rd., Fairfax, VA 22030
-
-
- Three young hoodlums thought their plan was fail-safe as
- they smashed through the front door of Leo Wilburd's Little Rock,
- Arkansas, home identifying themselves as police. Wilburd didn't
- fall for the ruse, and instead traded shots with one of the
- masked intruders as his wife and three young sons cowered in a
- bedroom. As four errant shots struck the walls around the defiant
- family man, at least one of the shots from his .38 found its
- mark. The three intruders fled the home and were later arrested
- after the wounded suspect appeared at a local hospital for
- treatment and confessed to the crime, identifying his
- accomplices. (Democrat Gazette, Little Rock, AR, 3/22/95)
-
- An 82-year-old East Dallas, Texas, man one-upped an
- assailant one-fourth his age during an attempted robbery, giving
- the crook much more than he bargained for. Approached from behind
- by the bandit while walking up the driveway to his home, Jack
- Topletz whirled around and fired several shots, fatally wounding
- the man. (The Morning News, Dallas, TX, 4/5/95)
-
- Already wanted by police for an earlier break-in, a Tulsa,
- Oklahoma, criminal found his way into custody via the hospital
- after a homeowner's bullet cut another burglary attempt short.
- Sam Horey was talking to his mother on the phone when the sound
- of breaking glass alerted him to trouble. Grabbing a 9 mm, Horey
- confronted the intruder in his living room, wounding him with a
- single shot. (The World, Tulsa, OK, 3/29/95)
-
- Awakened at the sound of breaking glass, Oktaha, Oklahoma,
- storekeeper John Wyatt grabbed his .22 semi-auto rifle and ran
- from the back room of his convenience mart. Discovering two
- intruders, Wyatt exchanged gunfire with the men, striking one of
- them. Both fled, with the injured crook making it just a short
- distance from the store before passing out. It was the third time
- Wyatt has been forced to use a firearm to defend himself at his
- business. (Daily Phoenix, Muskogee, OK, 3/18/95)
-
- Gastonia, North Carolina, resident Randy Watson confronted
- the teenaged thief breaking into his vehicle and told him to sit
- down until police arrived. Instead of complying with Watson's
- request, the indignant juvenile charged Watson, striking him in
- the head with a car stereo, knocking him to the ground. An
- injured Watson returned the favor with three slugs from his .380.
- Gastonia Police Capt. Mike Quilliams said the action probably
- saved Watson's life. (The Gaston Gazette, Gastonia, NC, 4/12/95)
-
- Describing his city as being fed up with crime, a
- Winston-Salem, North Carolina, assistant district attorney
- refused to bring charges against 52-year- old James Junior Lucas
- for defending himself against two thugs. After a "parking tax"
- was demanded from him as he sat waiting to pick up his wife from
- work, Lucas saw one of his attackers reach behind his back as if
- grabbing for a weapon. Concerned for his safety, Lucas fired
- several shots through the window of his car, killing his
- assailant. A knife was found near the criminal's body. (The
- Citizen, Asheville, NC, 4/10/95)
-
- It was like a case of deja vu when two Poughkeepsie, New
- York, senior citizens found themselves being attacked in their
- home by the same strongarm robber who had mauled them in 1987.
- Struck in the head and bleeding, John Brennan managed to reach
- his handgun, the sight of which caused the parolee, armed with a
- stick, to flee the home. The criminal was later arrested and
- returned to prison as part of a plea agreement that would keep
- him there for 10 to 20 years. He had only served 6 1/2 years for
- the earlier attack before being released. (The Journal,
- Poughkeepsie, NY, 3/18/95)
-
- Buckling his three-year-old daughter into a child restraint
- seat, Dothan, Alabama, resident William Kenneth Long was
- approached by three masked thugs demanding money. With the barrel
- of a .38 jabbed into his back, the young father turned around,
- and instead of handing over his wallet, delivered a single shot
- into the head of the armed bandit, killing him. The other punks
- fled the scene and were later arrested. (The Eagle, Dothan, AL,
- 4/19/95)
-
- Despite being struck in the side by a robber's bullet,
- Hartford, Connecticut, jewelry store employee Alex Keylin managed
- to return fire with his .25 cal., protecting a fellow employee
- and keeping the two bandits before him from taking any jewelry.
- Keylin fatally wounded one of the criminals, who, with his
- accomplice, fled in a vehicle that crashed just blocks away. The
- dead man had a long criminal record dating back to 1982. (The
- Courant, Hartford, CT, 4/14/95)
-
- A Phoenix, Arizona, gang member thought he had the upper
- hand as he trained a shotgun on his quarry. But the scattergun
- was snatched from his hands by his intended victim. Despite aid
- from another gangster, the first gangbanger was beaten senseless
- and struck by gunshots, both from his own shotgun and from his
- mark's .44 Mag. The attack cost the criminal both arms. (The
- Republic, Phoenix, AZ, 4/2/95)
-
- Awakened to the sounds of gunfire, Miami, Florida, resident
- Manuel Lopez grabbed his own gun and ran into his living room to
- discover four armed men herding family members into the house
- from the front lawn. One of the intruders made the fatal mistake
- of pointing a gun in Lopez's face. The householder shot him,
- killing the robber instantly. The other men fled the scene at the
- sight of their fallen accomplice. (The Herald, Miami, FL, 4/9/95)
-
-
- =+=+=+=+
-
- BULLET POINTS
- VOL. 1, NO. 001
- JUNE 28, 1995
-
-
- "It's Not About Politics" ... say the political TV spots by
- Clinton-Gore touting the Clinton Gun Ban. In fact, it's all about
- politics -- and poor performance. The Clinton Gun Ban masks
- Clinton's poor track record in rounding up real assault weapons --
- namely, armed criminals. Federal weapons prosecutions plummeted
- 23% in the first two years of the Clinton presidency.
-
- NRA Finances ... By any measure -- membership, programs, political
- successes, infrastructure -- NRA has never been stronger.
- Operating on a balanced budget, NRA in 1995 is more capable than
- ever of fulfilling its mission to advance Second Amendment rights.
-
-
- Who is the NRA ? ... Forty thousand Americans joined NRA in the
- month of May 1995, and one of every six reported that they or
- someone in their family had been the victim of a violent crime.
- Crime victims join NRA, because they know where NRA stands on the
- most important issue of the day: their safety.
-
- NRA & Law Enforcement ... What does NRA do for law enforcement?
- Trains and certifies a hundred thousand police firearms
- instructors. Subsidizes body armor for officer-members. Buys a
- $25,000 life insurance policy at no charge to every officer who
- joins. Stands up to Time-Warner when the media giant
- power-marketed "Cop-Killer" in 1992 -- the first national
- organization to get involved. Advances criminal justice reform and
- victims' rights -- in fifteen states and the Congress in the first
- five months of this year. From "Three Strikes" in Vermont to "Hard
- Time for Armed Crime" in Washington state. NRA is pushing public
- safety and protecting police long before they make an arrest.
- CrimeStrike reforms make sure sentences are tough, inappropriate
- plea bargains are trashed and pre-trial release of dangerous
- offenders doesn't put crooks back on the street before the officers
- make it home for dinner. The fact is, law enforcement and NRA have
- one thing in common: history.
-
- Gun Bans Eroding Clinton's Base ... The Wall Street Journal reports
- that labor's traditional support for Democrats has been eroded by
- gun control issues. A recent AFL-CIO poll of 853 union members
- found 29% are less likely to support a congressional candidate who
- supports the Clinton Gun Ban. Americans agree: self-defense is a
- fundamental right, and restrictive gun control is fundamentally
- ineffective in controlling crime.
-
- Self-Defense is Fundamental ... Right-to-Carry is sweeping the
- nation, says Denise Griffin, analyst with National Conference of
- State Legislators. "In a word, the issue is blossoming. We've
- seen a remarkable increase." That remarkable increase is the work
- of the NRA in helping making this vital self-defense measure the
- law in Arkansas, Virginia, Utah, Idaho, Texas and Oklahoma -- this
- year alone. Today, for 40 percent of the population, the NRA has
- made sure that the right of self-defense doesn't stop at the front
- door.
-
- For more information on the above mentioned topics, please call
- NRA/ILA Public Relations and Communications at (703) 267-1190.
-
- =+=+=+=+
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
-
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