Eating Away
at the Fabric of Freedom
By Dave Kopel
From America's First Freedom, July 2003
Banning handguns, the gun prohibition lobbies accurately
recognize, is not politically feasible to accomplish all at once. Accordingly,
the lobbies often focus on measures which set the stage for moving towards
near-prohibition in incremental steps. In pushing for pre-prohibition measures,
the lobbies work hard to select measures which superficially seem to affect only
a small minority of gun owners-so as to keep the tens of millions of gun owning
American families on the political sidelines. Yet the pre-prohibition bills
often have enormous implications for all gun owners. Among the most clever
anti-gun proposals, expertly created to exploit the divide-and-conquer strategy,
is the campaign for "one handgun a month laws."
These gun rationing laws help lay the foundation for broader
restrictions in two important ways. First, the laws set the precedent that the
government can quantitatively limit the exercise of firearms rights, based on
the government's determination that an individual does not "need" to exercise
the right so much.
Once the gun rationing principle is established, the time
period can be changed to limit gun purchases to two per year, or two per
lifetime, or none per lifetime, based on the government's determination that
people do not need any more guns.
In Great Britain, for example, the police enforce the rifle
licensing laws so that a hunter who has a rifle in a particular caliber may
never acquire a second rifle in that caliber, since he does not "need" the
second gun.
In the U.S. Congress, the first formal efforts to impose gun
rationing came in the late 1970s and early 1980s, Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.)
and Rep. Peter Rodino (D-N.J.)(then-Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee)
proposed a handgun licensing law which would, among other things, allow the
purchase of no more than two handguns per year. As evidence of the anti-gun
lobbies' increasing sophistication in taking incremental steps, the lobbies
apparently recognized that the Kennedy "two per year" proposal was too
restrictive to be politically realistic as a first step. Accordingly, in 1993,
then-Rep. Robert G. Torricelli (D-N.J.) introduced "The Multiple Handgun
Transfer Prohibition Act of 1993." The bill would have made it a federal crime
to buy more than one handgun in a thirty day period. Currently, the leading "one
per month" advocate in Congress is Senator Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.).
The second way in which gun rationing sets the stage for more
controls stems from the fact that gun rationing is difficult to implement
without gun registration. Only if the state maintains a computerized list of gun
buyers for at least 30 days after each purchase can the state tell if a person
purchased more than one gun at retail. Only if private gun sales (e.g., buying a
gun from a relative or a friend who is not a licensed gun dealer) are prohibited
can the state be sure that the individual is not exceeding the rationing limit.
Thus, for advocates of gun registration, gun rationing is a good first step,
because it helps to create a "need" for registration and for prohibiting private
transfers.
Gun registration, in turn, makes gun confiscation much easier
to accomplish-as residents of California, New York City, Great Britain, Canada,
and Australia have already discovered, with registration lists in those
jurisdictions being used for confiscations of a variety of handguns and long
guns.
In the United States, the first regulations on multiple
handgun purchases appeared after enactment of the Gun Control Act of 1968.
Although the Act itself said nothing about multiple purchases, the new Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (BATF) created regulations for "Multiple Purchase
Reporting Forms." Whenever a federally-licensed firearms dealer sold more than
one handgun to an individual in a thirty-day period, the dealer had to send the
Multiple Purchase Reporting form to BATF.
BATF did nothing with most of the forms that it received.
Thus, when John Hinckley legally bought two handguns from a Texas firearms
dealer one day in early 1980, the dealer sent a Multiple Purchase Form to BATF.
Neither a BATF investigation based on the Multiple Purchase
Form, nor the future "Brady Act" would have prevented Hinckley's purchases. His
only criminal conviction was for a misdemeanor; his mental health records were
private; and although the address on his Texas drivers license was no longer
correct, he was a Texas resident, and legally allowed to buy guns anywhere in
Texas.
The BATF regulation for the Multiple Purchase Form was
codified in the Firearms Owners' Protection Act of 1986. (Volume 18 of the U.S.
Code, section 923(g)(3).) The 1994 the Clinton crime bill mandated that the
Multiple Purchase Form also be sent to the local chief of police or sheriff. In
recent years, Chicago Mayor Richard Daley has been attempting to use the federal
Freedom of Information Act in order to obtain every Multiple Purchase Form in
BATF's custody. This would be a gross violation of the privacy rights of
law-abiding gun owners. Commendably, the BATF fought Daley all the way to the
Supreme Court, and just before the Court was scheduled to hear the case in March
2003, Congress enacted an appropriations rider specifically forbidding the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (its new name as a result
from the Homeland Security government reorganization) from spending any money to
divulge the private information in the Multiple Purchase Forms.
The first state to impose explicit gun rationing was South
Carolina. (New York State's 1911 Sullivan Law requires police permission for
handgun purchases, and in some jurisdictions, such as New York City, handgun
purchase authorizations are frequently forbidden under the theory that the
applicant does not "need" another handgun.)
South Carolina's legislature acted after a 1975 a television
network news report claimed that South Carolina was the main source of handguns
for New York City street crime. In response, the South Carolina legislature
passed a law allowing only one handgun purchase in a thirty day period.
Next came Virginia. Efforts to pass a one-handgun-a-month law
in Virginia had floundered for years, until Democratic Governor Douglas Wilder
made gun rationing his top priority for 1993. Wilder said that "The surest way
to stop the number of guns available for illegal sale is to place limits on the
numbers that can be purchased legally."
In support of the proposal, Governor Wilder sent every
legislator a copy of a recent issue of "Batman" comics, which apparently had
been written in order to assist the anti-gun cause in Virginia. In the Batman
episode, Virginia was portrayed as the main gun-running state in the east. One
character complained that tough gun laws had not been enacted "because some fat
white bastard wants to play with his guns on a weekend."
The writers made Batman himself endorse total gun prohibition,
claiming that violence "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." Like many advocates of
gun rationing, the Batman writers saw gun rationing as merely a step along the
path towards eliminating all guns.
According to Batman, non-Virginians traveled to Virginia,
purchased multiple handguns, and then took them back to Gotham City to sell on
the black market. Ever since the Gun Control Act of 1968 (which banned handgun
purchases outside one's state of residence), such purchases were federal
felonies, with especially strict penalties for trafficking of multiple handguns.
(The statutes are found in volume 18 of the U.S. Code, sections 922(a)(1) & (5),
924(b).)
Besides the comic book, the other major evidence used to
portray Virginia as the main source of New York City crime guns was Project
Lead, a BATF firearms tracing operation. According to anti-gun advocates,
Project Lead showed that 41% of New York crime guns came from Virginia.
Project Lead had traced 6% of the firearms recovered by New
York City police in 1991 and 1992 (1,231 of the 13,382 recovered firearms). Of
firearms found at the scenes of violent crimes in New York City, 32 (17% of
traced violent crime guns) had been originally sold at retail in Virginia. Of
these 32 guns, three guns originally sold in Virginia were found at homicide
scenes.
Project Lead was unable to determine whether traced firearms
had been stolen from the original buyer, or how they had entered New York City.
Most of the Virginia guns appeared to have been associated with non-violent
crimes, including violations of New York City's near-prohibitory handgun
licensing ordinances.
After an intense legislative struggle, the normally pro-gun
Virginia legislature enacted a law making it a misdemeanor of persons (other
than licensed firearms dealers) to purchase more than one handgun in a 30 day
period. The law contained provisions for persons to obtain waivers if the
multiple purchase was part of a collection (e.g., the purchase of a pair of
matched pistols), for bulk purchases from estates sales, if a person's guns had
been lost or stolen, or for similar reasons.
Perhaps the decisive factor in Governor Wilder's success was
convincing the Virginia business community, especially in Richmond, that the
absence of a gun rationing law was nationally embarrassing to Virginia.
In that same legislative session, the Virginia legislature
required proof of residence for driver's license applicants, thus making it
harder for out-of-staters to unlawfully buy guns in Virginia.
After the victory in Virginia, Handgun Control, Inc.
(originally known as the National Council to Control Handguns, and later renamed
the Brady Campaign), pushed very hard for gun rationing in other states. Intense
lobbying in Delaware has come close, but has not yet succeeded. Maryland enacted
gun rationing in 1996 after extensive legislative arm-twisting by Governor
Parris Glendenning and Lt. Governor Kathleen Kennedy Townsend.
California followed suit in 1999, as a direct result of the
Columbine school murders. A key legislator who had opposed gun rationing
announced that he was switching his vote because of Columbine. The logical
connection between the California one-handgun-a-month law and Columbine was
tenuous, since the Columbine killers had used only a single handgun (plus three
long guns), in a murder spree that had been planned for over a year.
But in the post-Columbine atmosphere, the logic of particular
anti-gun laws was less relevant than the atmosphere of hatred and panic incited
by prohibitionists such as Rosie O'Donnell and President Clinton. Congress
appeared to be ready to pass a national gun rationing bill, although NRA
lobbying managed to turn the tide sufficiently so that the bill was never
brought to a formal vote.
What has been accomplished by gun rationing laws? In 1995,
Captain R. Lewis Vass, of Department of State Police, testified to a Virginia
crime commission that the gun rationing law had "not significantly affected ...
the number of multiple handgun purchases within the Commonwealth." According to
Captain Vass, 95% of applications for multiple handgun purchases are approved.
The laws' main benefit is supposed to be reducing interstate
gun trafficking, rather than as controlling local crime. Certainly South
Carolina achieved no crime reduction for itself with the 1975 law, as the
state's already high crime rate violent crime rate more than doubled over the
next two decades.
A 1996 gun trace study conducted by Handgun Control, Inc.,
researcher Douglas Weil, found that after the Virginia law was enacted, the
number of guns traced to a group of four southeastern states including Virginia
declined. (D.S. Weil & R.C. Knox, "Effects of Limiting Handgun Purchases on
Interstate Transfer of Firearms," 275 JAMA 1759-1761.)
But study that same year by the office of Rep. Charles Schumer
(simply reporting the results of BATF gun traces) found that Virginia and South
Carolina were two of the three states which supplied the most guns to New York.
(Office of Rep. Charles Schumer, "War Between the States: How Gunrunners Weapons
Across America.")
If the Schumer study is correct, then the South Carolina and
Virginia laws were miserable failures, since gun rationing failed to change the
status of either state as a prime source of illegal guns for New York. A pair of
journal articles which I have authored (and which are cited at the end of this
article) argue that neither the Weil study nor the Schumer study are reliable,
since they both depend on BATF trace statistics, but BATF firearms traces
involve only a small and unrepresentative sample of crime guns.
The conventional wisdom in Virginia was summed up by a pair of
newspaper headlines. In 1992, the Richmond Times-Dispatch announced: "Virginia
gun-running is 'embarrassment'." In 1998, an article by the same author was
headlined, "Virginia Gun Limit has Enthusiastic Following: But State Still Ranks
High as Weapon Source."
It should not be surprising that there is so little evidence
for the effectiveness of gun rationing laws, since there are several better
programs in place which help prevent the purchase of guns for illegal interstate
trafficking. The BATFE's Multiple Purchase Reporting Forms already alert BATFE
about every multiple handgun sale, and BATFE can use these forms to focus on
genuinely suspicious transactions (such as repeated large quantity purchases of
firearms by an individual). The National Shooting Sports Foundation runs a
firearms dealer education program which helps dealers detect "straw purchasers"
who may be acting as a surrogate of for someone who is legally barred from gun
ownership. And of course every single retail purchase of any kind of firearm
requires prior authorization from the FBI or its state equivalent, under the
National Instant Check System.
As soon as the 1993 Virginia gun rationing law was enacted,
anti-gun lobbyists began to push for similar legislation in West Virginia. They
did not succeed statewide, but did win an ordinance in Charleston. Charleston
law, however, was erased when the legislature passed a law making the existing
statewide firearms preemption statute (banning local anti-gun laws) even more
explicit and comprehensive.
Now, the original gun rationing law, the South Carolina
statute, may also be headed for the ash heap of failed restrictions on civil
liberty. As this article is written in early April, the South Carolina House of
Representatives has voted to repeal the state's gun rationing law, and Governor
Mark Sanford has voiced his support for repeal.
This would not be the first time that South Carolina's
legislature has acted to undo civil liberties restrictions from the past.
Following the assassination of President William McKinley by an anarchist, South
Carolina in 1902 banned pistol sales to anyone except sheriffs and "special
deputies" (e.g., Klansmen, company goons, and similar insiders). In 1966, the
South Carolina legislature forthrightly acknowledged that the law restricting
civil rights was wrong, and the pistol ban was repealed.
While the debate about gun rationing often focus on empirical
issues, civil rights attorney Stephen Halbrook believes that empirical data are
irrelevant when constitutional rights are at stake. In a 1993 article for West
Virginia Law Review (www.saf.org/LawReviews/Halbrook2.htm
), Halbrook asked:
"May a constitutional right be limited by a legislature's
determination of whether, to what extent, or how many times within a given
time period a person has a 'need' to exercise that right? Would it be
consistent with the freedom of the press, for instance, to make it a crime to
purchase more than one Bible. . .each month? Who, other than dealers in books,
really 'needs' more than one such book per month?... it could hardly be argued
that the Sixth Amendment right to the assistance of counsel in criminal cases
would not be violated if crime decreased as a result of not allowing an
accused person to consult with counsel more than once each month. A bill of
rights guarantee cannot be disregarded under the guise that its existence
contributes to increases in crime or that its absence would make it harder to
extract confessions.. . .The essence of a bill of rights is that the issue of
whether a person 'needs' to do a protected act is removed from legislative
proscription."
This is why the gun rationing issue is so important to every
gun owner-including the woman who owns just one rifle and has no plans to ever
buy a second gun. Gun rationing is one of the tools being used to eliminate
firearms ownership as a human right which belongs to all law-abiding American
citizens, and to replace that right with a government-granted privilege which
can be exercised no more frequently than the government decides there is a need.
This article is based in part on Kopel's entry on
One-Gun-per-Month Laws for Guns in American Society: An Encyclopedia of History
Politics and Law (ABC-Clio, 2002), for which Kopel served on the Editorial
Board. For more on gun tracing and its relation to gun rationing, see David B.
Kopel & Paul H. Blackman (NRA Research Coordinator), "Firearms Tracing Data from
the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms: An Occasionally Useful Law
Enforcement Tool, but a Poor Research Tool," 11 Criminal Justice Policy Review
44 (Mar. 2000); David B. Kopel, "Clueless: The Misuse of BATF Firearms Tracing
Data," 1999 Law Review of Michigan State University Detroit College of Law
Review 171,
www.davekopel.com/2A/LawRev/CluelessBATFtracing.htm
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