So-called "one-gun-a-month" laws prohibit
law-abiding citizens from purchasing more than one handgun at a time,
and impose a 30-day waiting period between single handgun purchases.
Supporters of such laws claim that they are needed to prevent
criminals in states with relatively unrestrictive gun laws from
buying large quantities of handguns for illegal resale in high-crime
cities like Washington, D.C., and New York City. Reasons to oppose
one-gun-a-month laws include:
They set a bad and unconstitutional precedent,
namely, that government can limit the frequency with which a
law-abiding citizen may exercise a constitutionally-protected right.
The delay between purchases that the laws impose has been set at 30
days utterly arbitrarily, implying that the limit on the exercise of
that right could be arbitrarily changed to "one-per-year,"
"one-per-lifetime" or "none ever," and/or extended to rifles and
shotguns, or that similar limits could be imposed upon the exercise
of other constitutionally-protected rights, such as attending
organized religious services and publishing political
commentaires.
- Under federal law interstate handgun sales
have been prohibited since 1968. Firearm dealers are required to
report to BATF and state or local law enforcement officials any
person who buys more than one handgun in a five-day period. All
retail firearm sales are subject to the National Instant Check
System, which verifies that prospective purchasers are not
prohibited from possessing firearms.
- According to BATF, most firearms recovered by
police and later traced have not come from across state lines.
Anti-gun activists have denied this for years.
- "One-gun-a-month" laws have been tried in
three states and have failed. After South Carolina imposed its law
in 1975, violent crime soared in both New York City, the supposed
beneficiary of the law, and in S.C. In the 1990s, violent crime
declined nationally, but after Virginia imposed its law in 1993,
homicide declined more in 12 other states than it did in D.C., the
supposed beneficiary of Virginia`s law. Maryland imposed its law
in 1998, yet the state has the highest robbery rate of any state,
and Baltimore`s homicide rate is among the worst of all major U.S.
cities.
- "One-gun-a-month" cannot be enforced without a
law requiring all guns to be registered which, in turn, is also
not enforceable.
- People who disobey laws against murder and
other violent crimes, and those against selling guns across state
lines and selling guns to criminals, are not going to obey a law
prohibiting them from buying a second handgun in a 30-day
period.
- Instead of preventing criminals from getting
guns, "one-gun-a-month" primarily affects gun collectors, who buy
matched sets of pistols, those with consecutive serial numbers,
and the like.
Background
In 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson1 signed the
Gun Control Act, which, among other things, prohibited selling a
firearm to a resident of another state.2 Later, by regulation, the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (BATF) began requiring
licensed firearms dealers to file "Multiple Purchase Reporting Forms"
with the agency to document the sale, to an individual, of more than
one handgun in a 30-day period. That policy became law, under a
provision of the Firearms Owners` Protection Act (1986).
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, legislation
introduced by Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Rep. Peter Rodino
(D-N.J.) proposed requiring prospective handgun buyers to first
obtain photo-ID permits-to-purchase from the police, limiting handgun
purchases by a person to two per year, and imposing a 21-day waiting
period on individual handgun purchases.3 The bill targeted legitimate
firearms collectors and other honest gun owners, rather than
criminals, and was never approved. In 1975, after a TV network news
report portrayed South Carolina as the primary "source state" for
handguns used in New York City crime, S.C. limited handgun purchases
to one in a 30-day period.
The concept of limiting the frequency with which
individuals may exercise the right to buy arms resurfaced in 1993,
when Virginia governor Doug Wilder, approaching the end of his term
and desperate to attract attention from the media to further his
national political ambitions,5 proposed a "one-gun-a-month" law for
the Old Dominion. Wilder alleged that Virginia`s supposedly lax gun
laws had caused it to become the primary "source state" for handguns
used by criminals in Washington, D.C. and New York City.
Then-current crime data (1992) proved that
Virginia gun laws were not the cause of crime in D.C. or in N.Y.C.
The total violent crime rate was 13 times higher, and the homicide
rate was 23 times higher, in D.C., where guns are nearly prohibited,
than in the Northern Virginia part of the D.C. metropolitan area,
which has relatively unintrusive gun laws. Despite its restrictive
gun owner licensing and gun registration laws, New York City`s
violent crime and homicide rates were, respectively, 11 and 8 times
higher than those in Northern Virginia, where "easy access" to guns,
according to "gun control" theory, should cause crime rates to
soar.6
Nor had South Carolina`s law performed as
promised. From imposition of that state`s one-a-month law through
1993, the New York City metropolitan area violent crime rate had
risen 25%, while South Carolina`s rate had risen a whopping 126%.
South Carolina State Senator Joe Wilson observed in 1993, his state`s
"tragic crime problem is proof that limiting gun sales to one a month
has failed to make a dent in violent crime in our state. . . . You
don`t impact criminals by taking a swipe at honest
citizens."
Wilder disagreed, claiming "(t)he surest
way to stop the number of guns available for illegal sale is to place
limits on the numbers that can be purchased legally." As he spoke,
though, not one out-of-state gun-runner had been prosecuted under
Virginia law for an illegal gun purchase.
The supposed "evidence" the governor offered to
prove the need for "one-a-month" appeared in two forms, one of which
was, literally, comical. As the debate over gun rights rationing
heated up, Wilder sent legislators copies of a Batman comic book with
a story line portraying Virginia as the leading gun-running state on
the East Coast. One character in the Batman story complained that
highly restrictive gun laws were prevented from being enacted
"because some fat white b-----d wants to play with his guns on a
weekend." The Caped Crusader endorsed a complete ban on private
ownership of firearms, sermonizing that violent crime "will end when
we decide that we don`t want guns in our houses, in our
neighborhoods, in our schools, in our hands. It will end when we
decide to get rid of the guns we have and not get more."
The other "evidence" consisted of
misrepresentations of data from Project Lead, a firearms trace
operation conducted by BATF over the previous decade. Anti-gun
activists have misused tracing data ever since the Cox newspaper
chain falsely claimed that traces showed that "An assault gun is 20
times more likely to be used in crime than a conventional
firearm."7
BATF`s firearms traces do not match guns to
crimes, however. According to the Congressional Research Service
(CRS), "(B)ATF does not always know if a firearm being traced
has been used in a crime. For instance, sometimes a firearm is traced
simply to determine the rightful owner after it is found by a law
enforcement agency." 8 Additional findings by the CRS
included:
- "A law enforcement officer may initiate a
trace request for any reason. No crime need be
involved."
- "(T)races may be requested for a
variety of reasons not necessarily related to criminal
incidents."
- "The absence of a screening policy to ensure
that trace requests are related to crimes, the omission of any
reference to crimes on some requests, the omission or inclusion of
certain firearms from the system, and -- most significantly --
ATF`s recent statement that it does not `always know` if a traced
firearm has been used in a crime, provide foundation for questions
as to whether the data from the tracing system provide
representative information on firearms used in
crimes."
During the Virginia gun rights rationing debate,
it was discovered that Project Lead had received trace information on
only 6% of firearms recovered by NYPD in 1991 and 1992. Between Jan.
1 - Oct. 1, 1992, 13,382 firearms were recovered by NYPD, of which
only 1,231 were traced. During the same period, approximately 119,350
violent crimes, including approximately 1,490 homicides, occurred in
N.Y.C.
Of firearms found at the scenes of violent crimes
in New York City, only 32 had been originally sold retail in
Virginia; only three of the guns "traced to Virginia" had been
"found" at homicide scenes. Project Lead was unable to determine
whether traced firearms had been stolen from the original buyer.
According to BATF, "it is difficult to trace firearms after the first
retail purchase."
Additionally, while the U.S. Department of Justice
has determined that 81% of felons consider a gun`s untraceability
"important,"9 the only firearms submitted for tracing were those less
than two years old. No attempt was made to determine if any of the
firearms had been acquired as part of a "multiple purchase." At the
same time, many firearms actually used to commit violent crimes are
never recovered and therefore, are not traced. Despite the inherent
shortcomings of the firearms tracing system, firearms ownership
opponents continue to misuse its data for political
expedience.
At the time of the Virginia debate, South Carolina
ranked worst among the 50 states in aggravated assault rates,
fifth in total violent crime, and higher than national rates for
murder, rape, and robbery. Virginia, without gun rights rationing,
ranked well below national rates in all violent crime categories, and
37th in violent crime overall. In public meetings with legislators,
held around the state, thousands of gun owners voiced their
opposition to the proposed gun rights rationing bill. Yet the bill
was passed, and gun rationing took effect in Virginia during July
1993, with no apparent effect on crime thereafter.
While the Virginia`s bill was being debated,
Robert G. Torricelli (D-N.J.) introduced H.R. 544, The Multiple
Handgun Transfer Prohibition Act of 1993, in the U.S. House of
Representatives, which would have prohibited an individual from
purchasing more than one handgun in a 30-day period, with penalties
of up to a year in prison and $1,000 in fines for violators. Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum (D-Ohio) and Rep. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.)
introduced S. 1878/H.R. 3932, a sweeping proposal which included a
one-a-month limit. In the 104th Congress, Torricelli reintroduced his
bill as H.R. 964. Schumer introduced H.R. 1321, dubbed the "Brady II"
bill, which contained a gun-limit proposal along with provivions to
increase the cost of a federal firearms license (FFL) to $3000/3
years, require ammunition sellers to be licensed, require states to
impose handgun permit laws, prohibit sales of handguns at gun shows,
empower BATF to conduct unlimited inspections of FFL records without
search warrants, appropriate $2 million for "gun control," and other
attacks on firearms.
During the 105th Congress, Schumer introduced H.R.
12, the "Twelve is Enough Anti-Gunrunning Act," and asked, "Who needs
more than 12 handguns a year?" The bill proposed to prohibit a dealer
from selling more than one handgun to a non-dealer within a 30-day
period, prohibit non-dealers from buying or selling more than one
handgun in a 30-day period (exchanges of one handgun for another
handgun were exempt), eliminate the federal law that allows
individuals to make occasional firearm sales to improve their
collections without first obtaining an FFL, impose a penalty of 10
years imprisonment for violations (the same as for possession of
firearms by felons, knowingly providing a firearm to a prohibited
person, possessing a firearm or ammunition knowing that it has been
stolen, and similar offenses), extend from 20 business days to 35
calendar days the period of time that may elapse before law
enforcement officials had to destroy records pertaining to the
application a law-abiding citizen made to buy a handgun under the
Brady Act before Instant Check, and permit the Instant Check system
to retain records of a firearm purchase for 35 calendar days after
the purchase has been approved.
Nationwide, violent crime began declining in 1992
and has continued to decline, as the number of privately owned guns
continues to increase. In Dec. 1995, Attorney General Janet Reno
credited the decline to community policing, while criminologists
attributed the trend to the maturing of gang members, who are now
less willing to resolve turf disputes violently. Later, President
Clinton credited the decline to the Brady Act and federal "assault
weapons" laws, both of which did not take effect until 1994. Anti-gun
activits noted that the homicide rate in Washington, D.C., across the
Potomac River from Virginia and its one-per-month limit, declined 11%
1993-1994, without noting that homicide declined more in 12 states,
including not only some near D.C.--Pennsylvania (13%), West Virginia
(22%), Vermont (72%), New Hampshire(30%) and New York (17%)-- but
others across the country, including Alaska (30%), North Dakota
(88%), South Dakota (59%), Iowa (26%), Nebraska (21%), Georgia (12%)
and Oklahoma (18%). Further, while the 1968 GCA prohibited interstate
firearm sales and D.C.`s 1975 handgun law prohibited handgun
purchases altogether, D.C.`s homicide rate rose 36% between passage
of the two laws, and 146% 1975-1991 (when homicide peaked), an
overall increase of 234%. D.C. criminals obviously ignored those
laws, just as they ignore Virginia`s law today.
1. In signing the Gun Control Act, Johnson
bemoaned the fact that it did not require gun
registration.
2. The Firearms Owners` Protection Act (1986)
amended the Gun Control Act to, among other things, permit a firearms
dealer to sell a rifle or shotgun to an individual residing in
another state, provided that the transaction occurs in-person at the
dealer`s business premises and does not violate the laws of either
the dealer`s or purchaser`s states. Interstate sales of handguns
remain prohibited.
3. In South Africa, the Democratic Party`s draft
policy proposed limiting individuals to one gun for self-defence and
four guns for sport. The proposal was withdrawn in March 2000, to
minimize opposition to the Party`s other gun proposals.
4. As a state legislator, Wilder opposed mandatory
sentences for gun-wielding felons, opposed reinstating the death
penalty in Virginia, even for mass murderers, and opposed denying
parole to twice-convicted felons.
5. In 1994, Wilder attempted a run, as an
independent candidate, for the U.S. Senate, but threw in the towel
when polls idicated little support for his candidacy among Virginia
voters.
6. FBI Uniform Crime Reports, Virginia State
Police, New York Division of Criminal Justice. Crime rates for
Virginia statewide, and its metropolitan areas, were similarly below
those of New York City and the District of Columbia. Those cities`
higher crime rates included higher rates of non-firearm related
crimes as well as those committed with firearms.
7. Jim Stewart, Andrew Alexander, "Assault Weapons
Muscle In On the Front Lines of Crime," Cox Washington Bureau, 5/
21/89.
8. Keith Bea, et al., "CRS Report for Congress:
`Assault Weapons`: Military-Style Semiautomatic Firearms Facts and
Issues," Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service, May 13,
1992, rev. June 4, 1992. (92-434 GOV)
9. James D. Wright and Peter H. Rossi, Armed
and Considered Dangerous: A Survey of Felons and Their Firearms,
N.Y.: Aldine de Gruyter, 1986. |