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Gun-Show Bill Is Not
What They Say
Alan Korwin, Author Gun
Laws of America
Re: S. 890, The
McCain-Lieberman Bill: "Gun Show Loophole Closing and Gun Law
Enforcement Act of 2001."
Mass media publicity on
the newly proposed gun-show bill is grossly inaccurate.
The bill has almost
nothing to do with what you've probably heard so far. The so-called
"gun-show loophole" headlines are a minor detail and basically
obscure what the bill really does.
I've just finished
studying the eight pages of legalese. Here is it what it calls for:
1. Unprecedented
federal control over gun shows nationwide -- perfectly legal gun shows
become strictly outlawed without prior federal approval, licensing and
registration of each show;
2.
Centralized federal licensing and registration of every gun-show promoter in
the nation;
3. Centralized
federal registration of every vendor -- including non-gun vendors -- at any
gun show in the country. In order for me to sell my BOOKS at a gun show I'll
have to pre-register and prove who I am, or face arrest; a private
individual looking to sell a single gun would be treated as a vendor under
this law and must be registered even if the gun isn't sold;
4. Centralized
federal registration of EVERY PERSON who attends a gun show in America,
whether or not they make purchases of anything at all -- you won't be
allowed in without registering;
5. Centralized
collection of "any other information" on gun-show attendees, as
determined solely by the Secretary of the Treasury;
6. Imprisonment
for attending a gun show and failing to give up any information required by
regulations of the Secretary of the Treasury;
7. Imprisonment
of any gun-show promoter who fails to register a single vendor;
8. Imprisonment
of gun-show promoters who cannot prove they notified every person attending
a gun show of the new rules, and obtained from attendees any information the
Secretary of the Treasury mandates by regulation;
9. Centralized
collection of "any other information" the Secretary of the
Treasury decides, by regulation, is necessary on vendors, attendees, and the
gun show itself;
10. Submission
by gun-show promoters of vendor registration logs a) 30 days before any gun
show, and b) additional submission of updated vendor registration logs 72
hours before any gun show, and c) additional submission of vendor
registration logs within five days of the close of any gun show, under
penalty of arrest and imprisonment for non-compliance;
11. Identification
of vendors only by use of federally approved photo ID that may include use
of a social security number, electronically encoded data, or "biometric
identifiers" such as fingerprint, voice print, retina scan, iris scan,
or similar (as defined under 18 USC 1028(d)(2));
12. Creation
of a new license (in addition to a gun-show-promoter license), similar to
FFLs, for individuals who want access to the NICS national background check
system for facilitating gun-show sales for private citizens;
13. Regulations
to be issued by the Secretary of the Treasury on the procedures, data
collections, methods and implementation of the entire process to federally
control gun shows, in addition to the requirements made by the proposed
statute; such regulations will not be known, drafted or even suggested,
until after the McCain-Lieberman law is enacted;
14. The
proposed bill also puts pressure on state governments to make at least 95%
of their law enforcement records for the past 30 years openly available to
the federal government; and
- makes unlimited
funds available for the states to comply with these federal goals;
- requires annual
federal review of states' compliance;
- increases penalties
(up to ten years imprisonment) for record-keeping violations;
- grants states
permission to make even more restrictive requirements without being out
of compliance with these new federal laws (and by implication, puts
states that resist these rules in federal trouble);
- provides hundreds of
millions of taxpayer dollars for more law enforcement under numerous
programs including project Exile and others;
- hires 200 more
Federal BATF Agents;
- provides $10 million
to the National Institute for Justice to give out for research on
"technologies that limit the use of a gun to the owner"; and
- provides for annual
reports (in great detail) by the Attorney General to Congress on whether
the Brady law is working;
15. Enlargement
of the federal bureaucracy and appropriation from taxpayers of "such
funds as are necessary" to license, register and monitor an estimated
ten million non-criminals who attend the thousands of gun shows held
annually in America; and
16. Oh
yes, I almost forgot about the so-called "loophole" part the media
is so excited about -- the McCain-Lieberman bill will make an honest private
citizen a criminal for transferring a gun to another honest private citizen,
without first registering the transfer with, and getting permission from,
the federal government (represented by the FBI at its data complex in
Clarksburg, West Virginia).
Transfer or possession
of a firearm to or by a criminal (a "federally prohibited
possessor") is completely unaffected by the McCain-Lieberman
"loophole" bill, so I guess it's accurate to characterize it as a
loophole bill.
To sum up: Perfectly
legal gun sales -- with no victims or criminal activity of any kind -- are
outlawed at gun shows by the McCain-Lieberman bill, unless the sale is
pre-registered with the federal government; real crimes are totally
unaffected; and your friends in the federal government take over full
control of gun shows -- which have been previously free of government
infringement for more than 200 years.
Please write your local
news outlet and politely request a correction.
Permission to circulate
or use any or all of this report is granted, provided my credit and contact
information is included.
Alan Korwin, Author Gun
Laws of America
alan@gunlaws.com
http://www.gunlaws.com
"We publish the gun laws." |