Reversing anti-gun regulations
imposed by the
Clinton-Gore-Reno Administration is a major
victory for law-abiding Americans who
exercise their Second Amendment rights.
By Dave Kopel
The omnibus appropriations bill passed by the
Senate in January contains several important reforms in federal gun
laws to protect the privacy of people who lawfully exercise their
constitutional rights. Most of the reforms undo abuses of federal
power introduced in the Clinton era.
First, the bill--which passed the House in 2003
and was sponsored by Rep. Todd Tiahrt (R-Kan.)--requires that
federal records on lawful gun purchasers approved by the National
Instant Check System (NICS) be destroyed within 24 hours. When
Congress created the NICS in 1993, it added an amendment to require
destruction of records on law-abiding gun owners: "No department,
agency, officer, or employee of the United States may . . . use the
system established under this section to establish any system for the
registration of firearms (or) firearm owners . . . ."
The 1993 law reinforced the Firearms Owners'
Protection Act of 1986 (FOPA), which prohibited the creation of a
registry of gun owners. FOPA mandated that no "system of registration
of firearms, firearms owners, or firearms transactions or
dispositions be established." Thus, the new 2004 law brings the
federal government into compliance with long-standing federal
statutes.
Second, the "Tiahrt amendment" reinforces existing
provisions in federal and local gun laws prohibiting the release of
those records that are allowed to be kept on gun owners. Federal law
requires that dealers inform federal law enforcement any time a
person purchases two or more handguns in a five-day period. Current
law requires the federal government to keep private the names of
lawful purchasers.
In early 2003 the Supreme Court was on the verge
of hearing a case involving the city of Chicago's attempt to obtain
the name of every multiple handgun purchaser in the United States.
After the case had been briefed, but before oral arguments, Congress
passed an appropriation with a very specific prohibition on the
release of purchaser names. In light of the appropriation language,
the Supreme Court sent the case back to the lower courts.Sometimes
the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (BATFE)
traces a particular gun at the request of law enforcement. The trace
may involve an attempt to find the owner of a stolen gun or to learn
more about a gun seized from a criminal or it may involve a gun
seized for a paperwork offense (such as failure to register the gun
in some jurisdictions). BATFE traces can be useful in some cases, but
they are not representative of the broad universe of guns used in
crime.
The Tiahrt language requires BATFE to disclose the
necessary caveats in published summaries of firearm trace data--thus
preventing BATFE from using trace summaries to push a political
agenda, as it did during the Clinton years.
The appropriations bill also forbids disclosure to
the public (but not to law enforcement) of particular trace records.
Chicago had sought these records, too. As the Solicitor General
argued in his Supreme Court brief, many of the people whose names are
in the trace database are innocent of any wrongdoing; for example,
they may be listed on the trace forms because they were witnesses to
the crime in which the traced gun was used. Accordingly, their
privacy should not be violated by disclosing their names to third
parties.
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NRA-ILA Executive Director Chris W.
Cox (l.), congratulates Congressman Todd Tiahrt (R-Kan.) for
championing legislation that will protect the privacy rights
of law-abiding American gun owners.
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Because the federal Freedom of Information Act has
no restrictions on who is seeking the information--or why they
want it--if Chicago had prevailed in the Supreme Court, and if
Congress had failed to act, then anyone (including burglary rings or
anti-gun lobbyists) could have obtained the name of every multiple
handgun purchaser and every person named in a trace
request.
When a person buys a gun from a retail dealer, the
dealer is required to fill out federal Form 4473, which contains a
record on the gun buyer's identity, and the model and serial number
of the gun. According to current federal law, the forms may be
inspected at any time pursuant to a law-enforcement investigation.
The forms may also be inspected as part of annual administrative
review of a gun dealer's compliance with record-keeping
requirements.
Gun dealers are required to retain the forms for
20 years. When a gun dealer goes out of business, he must send the
forms to BATFE. Under the Clinton Administration, BATFE began
creating computerized records of the forms from retired dealers. This
computer database violates the 1986 law against creation of gun-owner
registries. Accordingly, the Tiahrt language prohibits the
expenditure of funds for the computer database.
The Tiahrt language
requires BATFE to disclose the necessary caveats in
published summaries of firearm trace data--thus
preventing BATFE from using trace summaries to push a
political agenda, as it did during the Clinton
years.
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By enacting these reforms, Congress has taken an
important step toward undoing the damage of the Clinton years. The
rest of the Clinton gun-control agenda appears to be dwindling, too.
The Brady handgun waiting period expired in 1998 and was replaced by
NICS, which is now registration-free. Many Capitol Hill analysts
believe that the federal ban on so-called "assault weapons"
(cosmetically incorrect guns) will sunset by its own terms on Sept.
13, 2004.
Thus, on Sept. 14, 2004, Bill of Rights activists
may wake up to find that the Clinton anti-gun legacy has been almost
entirely erased. As President Ford once said, in a different context,
"Our long national nightmare is over." |