home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT2252>
- <link 93TO0110>
- <title>
- Dec. 20, 1993: Beyond The Brady Bill
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 20, 1993 Enough! The War Over Handguns
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CRIME, Page 28
- Beyond The Brady Bill
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The future of handgun control is likely to be stringent licensing
- and curbs on assault pistols
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Edward Barnes and Andrea Sachs/New York and Elaine
- Shannon/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Up to a point, the bumper stickers are right. Guns don't kill
- people. People kill people. But the slogans stop short of the
- obvious question. Without easy access to guns of all kinds,
- could Americans go on killing one another at anything like the
- present rate? When the noise of gunfire stopped on the Long
- Island Rail Road last week, it was the sound of that question
- that rose in its place. It brought other pressing questions
- with it. How far do we go? What formula can rein in guns while
- permitting their legitimate use? And how much will gun control
- reduce the killing?
- </p>
- <p> Washington was full of ideas. FBI Director Louis Freeh proposed
- a complete ban on assault weapons. A group of mayors presented
- the White House with an anticrime plan that called for gun registration
- and an assault-weapon ban. New Jersey Senator Bill Bradley suggested
- a 30% sales tax on handguns, assault weapons and ammunition.
- But even as the President chimed in, he had a word of caution:
- "We have to figure out exactly what to do and in what order."
- </p>
- <p> By week's end Bill Clinton, who had been supportive but wary
- about gun control, made his first choice. One day after directing
- the Justice Department to examine the possibility of a national
- registration and licensing system for handgun owners, he told
- Attorney General Janet Reno to draw up a detailed plan. One
- likely model is the method for licensing drivers, in which states
- operate a system with federal standards. "I think it should
- be at least as hard to get a license to possess a gun," said
- Reno, "as it is to drive an automobile." It's a good deal harder
- than that in some other democratic nations. Even if no single
- factor explains why the U.S. had to tolerate 10,567 handgun
- murders in 1990 while there were just 22 in Britain and 10 in
- Australia, strict gun control in both countries would seem to
- be part of the reason. Britain forbids handguns to most people
- who are not members of gun clubs; members must store their weapons
- at the club. Australian handgun owners must undergo a background
- check before getting a license, which is granted mostly to business
- owners or gun clubs for target shooting. Gun deaths have gone
- down in Canada since tight controls were put in force in 1978.
- </p>
- <p> Societies being the complex organisms they are, however, it's
- never possible to know whether controls that succeed in one
- place would work as well in another. How much of Japan's low
- murder rate from handguns--just 87 last year in a nation with
- almost half the U.S. population--is owing to its almost complete
- prohibition of handguns, and how much to its famously cohesive
- and cooperative culture? Britain's relative peace is partly
- due to the fact that British criminals "feel they should be
- playing within a set of rules," insists David Kopel, an expert
- on gun control at the Cato Institute in Washington.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S is still a long way from knowing what rules would work
- in a nation proud of its reputation for rugged individualism.
- That's because rigorous foreign gun control has no equivalent
- in the sprawling U.S., where there are numerous state and local
- regulations but few far-reaching federal laws. The latest, the
- Brady Bill, is likely to be more notable as a psychological
- breakthrough than for its impact on gun crime. Studies in the
- 25 states that already have a waiting period show that between
- 1% and 2% of prospective buyers are turned away. Under a nationwide
- system they would be prevented from making the buy in another
- state with no waiting period. But few criminals get their guns
- from ordinary shops. All over America, illicit gunrunners supply
- the streets. As he fills out the forms to buy a Beretta at the
- Maryland Small Arms Range in Upper Marlboro, customer Gary Roland
- complains that black-market buyers have a network all their
- own. "It's easier to get a firearm delivered in the Washington
- area than it is to get a pizza."
- </p>
- <p> A 1991 Justice Department survey of state-prison inmates found
- that just 27% had purchased their handguns legally. The rest
- got them from family or friends, bought them on the black market
- or stole them. The Brady law would have done nothing to stop
- them or even some of the inmates who bought their guns legally,
- if, like the Long Island Rail Road gunner, they had no prior
- record of arrests or mental illness.
- </p>
- <p> America has been so lax about firearms that even the most basic
- facts about gun violence are hard to pin down, which leads to
- uncertainty in making effective policy. A major statistical
- source is the FBI's yearly Uniform Crime Report. Though it breaks
- down deaths into three categories--by handguns, rifles and
- shotguns--it says nothing about how many people are killed
- by imported guns or "Saturday-night specials," or how many died
- while resisting a stickup. To clarify the picture, Colorado
- Representative Patricia Schroeder is sponsoring a bill to establish
- a national firearm-fatality reporting system. Comparable to
- the system that tracks motor-vehicle deaths--and which helps
- lawmakers tailor car and highway safety laws to real perils
- of the road--it would identify gun victims and shooting incidents
- in greater detail.
- </p>
- <p> Representative Charles Schumer isn't waiting for the information
- to come online. "We do not have to live with this insanity,"
- the New York Democrat said last week as he unveiled the gun-control
- package he plans to submit to Congress in January. The bill,
- which has the backing of Sarah Brady's Handgun Control Inc.,
- would require all handgun buyers to be licensed and to possess
- a renewable national handgun card, which would be issued only
- after a thorough background check. To put a squeeze on gunrunners,
- it would limit purchases to one a month. To discourage illicit
- resales, it would require that all handgun transfers be registered
- with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, which
- lightly oversees the gun trade.
- </p>
- <p> With the Brady Bill soon to be law, the next major gun-control
- battle is likely to be over the rules for licensing gun dealers,
- which Schumer's bill would tighten. In August, President Clinton
- called for a review of these lax federal procedures, which currently
- provide a one-year dealer's license for a $10 fee--going to
- $200 under the Brady Bill--to anyone over 21 who has a fixed
- address and no criminal record. That entitles the holder to
- order an unlimited number of guns from wholesalers. Today there
- are more than 287,000 federally licensed dealers in the U.S.,
- nearly three-fourths of them "kitchen-table operators" who work
- from home. Though gun dealers are responsible for keeping sales
- records and running checks on potential buyers, small-timers
- who operate out of car trunks have few incentives to do either.
- And among them are rogue dealers who sell guns by the thousands
- to drug gangs and other criminals.
- </p>
- <p> Since the firearms bureau has just 225 inspectors, federal authorities
- hope that measures like those in the Schumer bill will reduce
- the number of marginal operators. Some states are moving on
- their own. In March the Alabama revenue department obtained
- a list of over 6,500 federally licensed gun dealers in the state.
- When they did a search of the names, they found that only 2,450
- of them were licensed by the state. By May they had tracked
- down 3,000 of the others and informed them that they would have
- to pay past license fees and fines. Nearly a third decided to
- quit the gun business. "Quite a few individuals who were operating
- out of their houses selling guns to juveniles or guns that ended
- up on the streets of places like Detroit have decided not to
- sell firearms because of this," says Dwight Pridgen, chief of
- Alabama's natural resources and license tax division. "The sad
- thing is that we found at least one circuit judge and a few
- state legislators who were dealing guns on the side."
- </p>
- <p> Law-enforcement officials would also like more restrictions
- on semiautomatic assault weapons like the TEC-9 and the MAC-10.
- Though inaccurate, those guns are also cheap, easy to conceal
- and convertible to fully automatic operation. Last month the
- Senate unexpectedly adopted Diane Feinstein's assault-weapons
- amendment to the crime bill. It would ban the production, sale
- or possession of 19 models--if it isn't squeezed out of the
- joint House-Senate version of the bill. Though the White House
- has pledged to press for legislation banning the manufacture
- of semiautomatic pistols like the one used by the Long Island
- Rail Road gunman, it has not drawn up legislation. Despite his
- words last week, the President is in no hurry to add another
- political battle to the ones pending on health-care and welfare
- reform.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton could act more easily against foreign-made assault weapons.
- In July, after a deranged California man used three 9-mm semiautomatic
- weapons made in China to kill eight people in a San Francisco
- law firm, the President suspended imports of semiautomatic assault
- pistols. By law, he could ban the imports entirely, as George
- Bush did with larger assault rifles after another California
- man used one to spray a schoolyard in 1989. In spite of these
- measures, law-enforcement authorities report a sizable increase
- in imported firearms recently, especially from China and former
- Soviet bloc nations seeking to keep their defense industry at
- work by churning out small arms. "They bring in hard currency,
- and we're probably the only country in the world that has a
- large civilian market in handguns," says firearms-bureau spokesman
- Jack Killorin.
- </p>
- <p> As always, talk about gun control in any form is enough to make
- the N.R.A. load its ammunition. "They can talk taxes and gun
- bans all day, but it won't get us further down the road to stopping
- violent crime," complains N.R.A. executive vice president Wayne
- LaPierre. "I say, go ahead, pass your taxes, pass more gun bans,
- and we'll see you at the polls in '94." But even some less biased
- observers wonder whether most kinds of gun control may not do
- more harm than good. Gary Kleck, a professor at Florida State
- University, is author of Point Blank: Guns and Violence in America
- and a onetime supporter of broad gun control who lost the faith.
- His study of 4,798 homes across the nation convinced him that
- guns prevented more crimes than they furthered. "Since the majority
- of people who own handguns are responsible, law-abiding citizens,"
- says Kleck, "you end up regulating those people instead of the
- small percentage of people who commit most crimes."
- </p>
- <p> Though the N.R.A. says its resistance to gun control is just
- an assertion of something that the Constitution already forbids,
- judges have never read the Second Amendment to prohibit most
- gun control. "The Second Amendment is about the right of a state
- to have an organized militia, in order to protect the states
- from being completely overrun by the Federal Government," says
- Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe. In the early 1980s, when
- gun owners brought a court challenge to the handgun ban adopted
- in Morton Grove, Illinois, lower courts rejected its argument.
- The Supreme Court refused to hear the case. The ban stands.
- </p>
- <p> Sanford Levinson, a professor at the University of Texas in
- Austin, believes the Constitution was indeed intended to protect
- some personal ownership of firearms, if only because the framers
- distrusted authority. "The Bill of Rights was basically written
- by people who had overthrown a government 13 years before,"
- he notes. "They had no great confidence that the new Federal
- Government would turn out acceptably." But even he admits that
- "courts are likely to rule that Congress can do almost anything
- short of an outright prohibition of owning guns."
- </p>
- <p> Outright prohibition--at least of handguns--is exactly what
- some people have in mind. Rhode Island Senator John Chafee has
- twice introduced a bill to ban their sale, manufacture and possession.
- Connecticut Governor Lowell Weicker plans to introduce a bill
- in February making it a crime for most people to be caught outside
- their home or business with a concealed weapon. Weicker says
- he intends for the law to lay the groundwork for an eventual
- ban on handguns in his state--though as a lame-duck Governor
- he would be leaving the job of getting one as a tricky legacy
- to his successor. "I don't see any reason at all why anyone
- should have a handgun," he says.
- </p>
- <p> A nationwide ban would still leave 67 million handguns in circulation.
- How hard it would be to reclaim many of those is evident from
- the few places already trying to spoon them up through gun buybacks
- or givebacks. Operation Cease-fire in Denver encourages people
- to turn in guns to the police, no questions asked, for tickets
- to Nuggets, Broncos and Rockies games or tickets to the Museum
- of Natural History. But buybacks tend to run out of steam and
- over budget. Minnesota's Hennepin County, which offered $50
- a gun, spent more than $300,000 last year to collect 6,100 firearms.
- Even at that price, buybacks don't offer much incentive for
- criminals whose guns are more valuable as tools of the trade.
- </p>
- <p> If a handgun ban is the atomic weapon of gun control, it also
- inspires the same reluctance to use it; for most Americans,
- it seems too radical a step. Even Handgun Control Inc. shies
- away from the idea, perhaps because that kind of policy would
- make it easier for the N.R.A. to tag it as extreme. The future
- of gun control is still likely to be a process of incremental
- measures. Feinstein's amendment on assault guns, for instance,
- would prohibit the 15-bullet clip that the Long Island Rail
- Road killer used, which allowed him to fire two long barrages
- before he was stopped. But even her proposal would permit clips
- of 10 cartridges or less. Would a measure so limited have mattered
- in last week's attack? Only to the last few people who were
- hit.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-