Albuquerque Journal

Law enforcemen­t killed by political correctnes­s

We need to address the psychologi­cal aspects of what makes a killer

- DIANE DIMOND Crime and Justice www.DianeDimon­d.com; email to Diane@DianeDimon­d.com.

Oh, the empty rhetoric that spewed from politician­s in the aftermath of the worst mass shooting in U.S. history!

Stop all foreign Muslims from coming to the United States. Stop people on the no-fly list from buying guns. Enforce tougher background checks for gun buyers. Restore the ban on AR-15 assault rifles.

Really? Not one of those suggestion­s would have stopped what happened in Orlando, Fla.

The killer who perpetrate­d the awful mass murder at the Pulse nightclub was an American citizen. So a ban on incoming Muslims is not only an ugly suggestion, it is completely beside the point. The killer was never on a no-fly list — he was briefly on a terror watch list — so that would not have stopped him from buying the two guns he used during the attack. He was a security guard, so passing any background check was a snap. Finally, he did carry the mass killer’s favorite firearm, an AR-15-type assault rifle, but he also carried a handgun. I suppose he could have been armed with more pistols instead of that particular rifle and done just as much damage during his three-hour spree.

Could we please learn lessons from these tragedies rather than just toss around the same old stale suggestion­s that never get passed by Congress anyway?

More gun control laws? At this point in our history, it would be like putting toothpaste back in the tube. Even if all gun manufactur­ing was halted immediatel­y there are already more than 300 million privately owned guns in America. Among them there are easily several million AR-15-style assault rifles, even though the AR-15 was banned by federal law from 1994 to 2004.

While I can see no good reason for anyone to own one of these rapid-fire, high-capacity rifles, here’s a question: Say legislatio­n is passed to re-institute the AR-15 ban, then what? Do we rely on citizens to turn in their AR-15s for destructio­n? Do we police private homes looking for them? And what do we do with those found in possession of a gun they bought legally, but is suddenly outlawed — toss them into our already overpopula­ted prisons?

A retired FBI veteran who has worked posts around the world told me, “It’s not the guns. It’s the people. (More laws) are gonna stop the weapons? They haven’t stopped drugs. How are they gonna stop weapons when they can’t stop drugs?” The truly criminal or disturbed, he said, do not pay attention to laws.

A federal law enforcemen­t source in the Southwest suggested we look to the European example for the answer. Publicly owned guns have long been illegal there, but the law didn’t stop Islamic terrorists from getting weapons and gunning down 130 innocents in a Paris soccer stadium and streetside cafes last November.

So maybe it’s up to behavioral scientists to do a better job identifyin­g those who will commit mass murder. Maybe the FBI needs to work harder to infiltrate terror cells.

“It’s become harder to do the job right since the only reaction from the administra­tion during/after these events has been, “Islam is a religion of peace,” and, “We will not tolerate Islamophob­ia,” a federal prosecutor who insisted on anonymity told me. “Political correctnes­s is killing effective law enforcemen­t.”

It was a theme echoed by FBI sources across the country. “Their hands are cuffed right now from continuing investigat­ions, I can tell you that,” a retired agent on the east coast said. “That’s the dominant theme amongst folks here. They have to be so careful, so politicall­y correct. They can’t give out the perception that they are targeting a certain group.”

Jim Clemente worked with an elite group of criminal profilers at the FBI and says, “It is not possible to predict human behavior with certainty. No matter how you ‘profile’ active shooters, you cannot account for free will or hidden agendas.”

And with the Orlando killer there seems to have been so many identity conf licts! He was a Muslim, but perhaps more than that, he was an angry man who regularly beat his wife. He identified with radical rants against America and homosexual­s but, by several accounts, he was a gay (or bisexual) man himself.

“My personal opinion,” a 16-year FBI veteran and former member of the terror task force said, “I think the guy was so torn with his homosexual tendencies and he couldn’t fight it, couldn’t take it anymore. I think he may have used his religion as an excuse to kill all these people because … he was disgusted with himself and so this is the way he handled the demons inside of him.”

So, with all this in play — radical Islamic thoughts, sexual identity issues, gun violence — why is it we only discuss tackling the hardware part of the problem? When do we get serious about the psychologi­cal part of the equation? The part that makes an angry individual pick up a weapon, be it a gun, knife or a crowbar, and take the life of another. Simply throwing around the old-saw solutions stated above gets us nowhere. And we’ve been on that path far too long.

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