Florida eyes Connecticut’s response to Sandy Hook
After 2012 school massacre, state approved tough laws that have reduced gun crimes
In the aftermath of the rampage at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, where 20 children and six educators were killed in 2012, state lawmakers set out to draft some of the toughest gun measures in the United States.
They largely succeeded — significantly expanding an existing ban on the sale of assault weapons, prohibiting the sale of magazines with more than10 rounds and requiring the registration of existing assault rifles and higher-capacity magazines. The state also required background checks for all firearms sales and created a registry of weapons offenders, including those accused of illegally possessing a firearm.
Now, in the wake of another shooting rampage — this one at a high school in Parkland, Fla., that killed 17 — and in the absence of any federal action, gun-control advocates, Democratic politicians and others are pointing to the success of states like Connecticut in addressing the spiraling toll of gun violence.
Analyses by the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence show that states with the strictest guncontrol measures, including California, Connecticut, New Jersey and New York, have the lowest rates of gun deaths, while those with the most lax laws like Alabama, Alaska and Louisiana, have the highest. The centre is named for former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, a Democratic lawmaker from Arizona who suffered a serious brain injury in 2011 during a mass shooting in which she was the intended target.
After Connecticut’s General Assembly passed the package of gun laws, and Gov. Dannel Malloy, a Democrat, signed it into law, gunrelated deaths started to drop. According to the chief medical examiner’s office in Connecticut, the number of deaths resulting from firearms — including homicides, suicides and accidents — fell to 164 in 2016, from 226 in 2012.
There is no doubt there are limits to state and local gun laws. Cities such as Chicago and Baltimore, with rigorous gun laws, also have two of the highest murder rates in the U.S. The black market for illegal guns has thrived in those cities, with gang members and criminals turning to the streets to get firearms.
And the drop in fatal shootings in Connecticut has occurred in the context of a broad, long-term decline in violent crime across the country. Citing FBI statistics, the Pew Research Center reports that violent crime fell 48 per cent from 1993 to 2016.
Gun-rights groups say the problem is not the guns, but the individuals using them. They argue that laws alone are no panacea, and that social issues such as mental illness and unemployment must be addressed to help curb gun violence. Some gun advocates have also called for more training and security for those who legally and responsibly maintain guns.
Still, with little appetite in Congress to take on gun control, the debate is playing out at the state level, with Connecticut seen as a model for guncontrol advocates.
“Connecticut’s laws are among the nation’s toughest, and homicides are down,” Democrat Sen. Richard Blumenthal said. “Obviously the link is a circumstantial one; cause and effect can’t be proven conclusively. But the numbers are all in the right direction. States like Connecticut can help shame Congress into adopting common-sense measures that keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people.”
State officials say Connecticut has experienced the fastest drop in violent crime of any state over the past four years. Gun-control advocates say the suspect in Florida, Nikolas Cruz, could not have bought the AR-15-style semi-automatic rifle believed used in the attack, or the highcapacity magazines, in Connecticut.
“We really need to do a better job at making sure we have strong gun laws in every state in the country, because we are losing our most valuable resource, which is our children,” said Jeremy Stein, the executive director of CT Against Gun Violence, a nonprofit advocacy group.
Even in Connecticut, where parents of the children killed at Sandy Hook met with lawmakers as they debated the legislation, the measures fell short of what gun-control advocates wanted. For example, the laws did not force residents to relinquish existing assault weapons or limit the number of firearms people could own.
Avery Gardiner, a president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, said that generally, blue states are, not surprisingly, more likely to regulate guns and require background checks and licensing. Connecticut’s sweeping gun laws require residents who already owned high-capacity magazines and assault rifles to register them with the State Police. Today, the registry lists 52,648 assault weapons. A single resident registered 179 assault weapons, while another registered more than 500,000 magazines, exceeding the 10-round limit. Between 2013 and 2017, 248 people were charged with illegally possessing an assault weapon because they either failed to register an existing weapon or had bought a weapon after the law went into effect.
The state also requires that individuals admitted to psychiatric hospitals relinquish their guns, at least temporarily. The state police is notified of such patients by the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services, which maintains a database, and ensures that upon discharge the gun owner turns in the weapon or transfers it to someone eligible for a gun permit. In addition, people who were previously treated in a mental hospital cannot get a permit for up to two years afterward.
The National Shooting Sports Foundation, a lobby group in Newtown, declined to comment on the impact of Connecticut’s gun laws “out of respect for the families, the community and the ongoing . . . investigation” in Parkland. The National Rifle Association did not respond to a request to comment.