Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

‘ENOUGH,’ QUIGLEY AND OTHERS IN CONGRESS TELL ATF, DEMANDING DATA ON GUN DEALER INSPECTION­S

- BY CHAMPE BARTON Champe Barton reports for The Trace, a nonprofit news organizati­on covering gun violence in America, and produced this story in partnershi­p with USA Today.

U.S. Rep. Mike Quigley, D-Ill., and other lawmakers are demanding that the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives turn over more detailed data from the past five years on inspection­s of gun dealers.

That’s in response to an investigat­ion by The Trace and USA Today published by the Chicago Sun-Times last month that found the agency repeatedly went easy on gun dealers in the Chicago area that violated federal regulation­s.

“At a time when gun violence and crime are rising, it is unacceptab­le for bad actors to repeatedly avoid accountabi­lity,” Quigley and 26 other U.S. representa­tives, all Democrats, said in the letter to the ATF, which also said they “are concerned that ATF has failed to hold repeat offender gun dealers accountabl­e.”

The letter comes as the country reels from the elementary school massacre in Uvalde, Texas, in which 19 children and two adults died and the racist attack in a Buffalo, New York, grocery store that killed 10 people.

The mass killings have prompted renewed demands for universal background checks for gun-buyers and other reforms. But the letter, written by Quigley, focuses on the ATF’s ability to shut down lawbreakin­g gun dealers that supply weapons to people legally barred from having them.

“It is imperative that the federal government explore every tool at our disposal to reduce gun violence,” the Northwest Side congressma­n said. “Lax enforcemen­t of the gun laws already on our books has let some of the nation’s most notorious gun sellers off the hook, turning a blind eye to business practices that contribute to flooding the streets with guns that are then used in crimes.”

The Trace investigat­ion looked at ATF inspection records for 13 gun dealers singled out by the city of Chicago as having sold a disproport­ionate number of “crime guns” that had been recovered in the city. It found that, over the past 10 years, the gun dealers routinely got off with little or no punishment even after they violated the agency’s own guidelines for enforcemen­t. In several cases, dealers failed to conduct background checks, falsified ledgers and didn’t record gun sales. The ATF never gave any of them a penalty more severe than a warning.

That report followed a broader investigat­ion by The Trace and USA Today last year that included a similar analysis of more than 2,000 gun dealer inspection­s across the United States between 2015 and 2017 and documented a pattern of severe proposed penalties being downgraded by ATF supervisor­s.

The members of Congress who signed the letter asked the ATF for informatio­n on how many federal firearms licensees were given warnings during the past five years, how many had licenses revoked and how many had penalties downgraded by supervisor­y agents. They also want to know how many inspection­s the agency plans to carry out this year and next.

Last June, following the initial investigat­ion, President Joe Biden announced steps to ramp up penalties for lawbreakin­g gun shops that included a gun-traffickin­g strike force for five cities, including Chicago, and a “zero-tolerance” policy for dealers that willfully violate certain laws. The administra­tion also called on Congress to increase ATF funding to toughen inspection­s.

Soon after, House Democrats introduced the Keeping Gun Dealers Honest Act, which would eliminate a requiremen­t that the ATF must prove that a gun retailer intentiona­lly violated the law before revoking its license and take other steps to increase the ATF’s authority. The bill hasn’t made it out of committee.

“The gun industry does not take the agency seriously as an enforcer of those laws, and violent crime is on the rise around the country,” the letter authored by Quigley said.

Past analyses of ATF data suggest that 5% of gun dealers in the 1990s were responsibl­e for as many as 90% of guns recovered from crimes. More recent data is unavailabl­e because of a budget rider called the Tiahrt amendment that prohibits the ATF from releasing detailed gun-trace informatio­n. Quigley wants the Tiahrt amendment repealed.

“Americans have had enough,” Quigley said. “It’s time for the ATF to step up.”

 ?? ?? A front-page report that appeared in the Sun-Times last month detailing lax enforcemen­t by the ATF in the Chicago area.
A front-page report that appeared in the Sun-Times last month detailing lax enforcemen­t by the ATF in the Chicago area.
 ?? MANDEL NGAN-POOL/GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. Rep. Mike Quigley, D-Ill., on lax enforcemen­t of law-breaking gun dealers: “Americans have had enough. It’s time for the ATF to step up.”
MANDEL NGAN-POOL/GETTY IMAGES U.S. Rep. Mike Quigley, D-Ill., on lax enforcemen­t of law-breaking gun dealers: “Americans have had enough. It’s time for the ATF to step up.”
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