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NATIONAL GUN VIOLENCE PREVENTION GROUPS VOICE CONCERN ABOUT DANGEROUS COMPONENTS OF BILL TO IMPROVE BACKGROUND CHECK SYSTEM |
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Washington, D.C. - Leading gun violence prevention organizations today expressed their strong concerns about little-noted additions to the "NICS Improvement Act of 2007." Originally introduced by Rep. Carolyn McCarthy (D-NY) on January 5, 2007, the bill seeks to improve the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) by providing states with grants to submit disqualifying records to the database. The current version of the bill was negotiated with the assistance of Rep. John Dingell (D-MI), who worked with the National Rifle Association (NRA) to secure their support for the legislation. The NRA was permitted to make last-minute changes to the bill just hours before it passed in the House on June 13, 2007, with little debate. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-VT) is now prepared to offer companion language as part of his "School Safety and Law Enforcement Improvement Act of 2007," which is scheduled for mark-up by the committee tomorrow, July 26. While the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence (CSGV), Violence Policy Center (VPC) and Legal Community Against Violence (LCAV) strongly support the bill's goal of improving the mechanism by which mental health and other records are added to the NICS, they are concerned that components of the bill would create new loopholes for potentially dangerous individuals to possess firearms. In expressing their concerns, the groups cited three key changes that were made to the original bill, including:
In addition, the Senate companion bill weakens the compromise language even further. In the Senate bill the definition of "record" in 212(b)(1)(C)(iii) adds a completely new requirement-not contained in the existing statute or regulation-that raises the standard for identifying a person who is an "unlawful user of, or addicted to a controlled substance" and therefore disqualified from gun possession. Also, section 212(b)(2) shortens the scope of time for which states must submit records to be eligible for a waiver from events occurring within the prior 30 years under the House-passed bill to 20 years in the Senate version. This will create an incentive for states to focus on only the most recent records. Coalition to Stop Gun Violence Executive Director Joshua Horwitz states, "This bill takes a 'relief from disabilities' program the federal government already scrapped because it was expensive and risky, and foists it on any state that takes the grant money to improve its NICS mental health reporting. None of the grant money can even be used by a state to set up this relief program. Why should any state that wants to reduce the risk of arming people who shouldn't have guns have to spend its own money on a relief program that increases that risk?" Violence Policy Center Legislative Director Kristen Rand adds, "So many mass shootings in American history have involved disturbed individuals-many of them veterans-who did not, or could not, get the care they needed. As studies increasingly reveal the fragility of our national mental health system, Congress owes it to American families to produce a final version of this bill that will ensure public safety." Legal Community Against Violence Executive Director Robyn Thomas comments, "The bill's original intent, to increase reporting of state records to the NICS database, is an important objective that would improve enforcement of federal laws governing persons prohibited from possessing firearms. The amendments proposed by the NRA risk undermining those laws, and we call on the Congress to have a full debate on the merits of this legislation." |
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| The Coalition to Stop Gun Violence was founded in 1975 and is composed of 45 civic, professional and religious organizations and 100,000 individual members working to reduce gun violence. Our mission is to stop gun violence by fostering effective community and national action. For more information about the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence, visit www.csgv.org. |
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