Dayton Daily News

Ohio gun advocates upset at Biden’s proposed gun control

- By Céilí Doyle

Tyler Hendricks has talked a lot of angry customers off the ledge in the last few days.

The manager of Metal Gear Armory, a gun shop in Lancaster, says folks are responding to President Joe Biden’s proposed gun control measures in one of two ways.

“We have a lot of people who talk very big — some claim they will be up in arms, literally. They feel like it would be a tyrannical step, too big of an infringeme­nt, so they would want to fight back I guess,” he explained. “And other customers are like, ‘I guess I’ll have to comply because that’s the world we live in.’”

Last week, on the heels of two mass shootings within a week of one another in Atlanta and Colorado, Biden announced that he would pursue executive action on two specific gun control measures.

The president seeks to curb the sale of firearms assembled from DIY kits called “ghost guns” and require stabilizin­g braces — an accessory designed to improve a shooter’s accuracy that transforms a pistol into a gun something more akin to a rifle — be subject to stricter regulation under the National Firearms Act.

Gun owners and advocates in central Ohio are increasing­ly frustrated, but not surprised, by Biden’s decision to pursue gun control measures that they say punish law-abiding citizens, while Statehouse legislator­s are split on how effective those measures will actually be.

‘Restrictin­g our rights’

From the Metal Gear Armory gun shop in Lancaster to the Columbus-based L.E.P.D. Firearms, Range and Training Facility, gun owners across the state argue that Biden’s executive actions will have little to no impact on gun violence, and have the potential to turn millions of legal gun owners into felons overnight.

“We all want crime to stop and to keep guns out of the hands of bad guys,” L.E.P.D. co-owner Eric Delbert said.

But Delbert is skeptical of how much ghost gun kits are contributi­ng to violence. Biden directed the Justice Department to stop the proliferat­ion of these kits, which can be purchased without background checks and allow a weapon to be assembled without a serial number, rendering the guns untraceabl­e.

Delbert also works in law enforcemen­t in central Ohio but did not identify where as he did not want to speak on behalf of his department. He said ghost guns have not been a major issue in the Columbus area, as far as he knows.

L.E.P.D. does not sell the 80% receiver kits (named for the percentage of material already assembled), but Delbert added that any individual has had the right to manufactur­e their own gun since 1934.

“What we would like to ask:

Is that truly something that’s turning up in crimes?” he said. “But I suspect that’s not the case. I think it’s a shock value – people will say folks are buying guns without serial numbers.”

The Buckeye Firearms Associatio­n’s lobbyist, Rob Sexton, said that most gun owners do not purchase ghost gun kits, and the rare minority who do build firearms from scratch pursue the practice as a hobby.

“They’re recreation­al shooters, and it’s a very expensive hobby and pastime for people,” he said. “You just can’t show me evidence that has some connection with crime wave over the last year when it comes to homicides.”

He predicted that their restrictio­n won’t make Americans safer.

“It’s just stripping the rights of the law-abiding citizen,” Sexton said.

Both Sexton and Delbert are also worried that a potential ban on stabilizin­g braces would turn 15 to 20 million legal owners of the device into criminals. The executive order targets these braces, which are added onto AR-15 style pistols similar to the one used by the man who shot and killed 15 people in a Boulder, Colorado, grocery store last month.

“In contradict­ion to what the president said (last week), it doesn’t make a gun more deadly,” Delbert said. “It doesn’t change the characteri­stic of the gun.”

Will it make a difference?

Ohio lawmakers across the aisle are stuck in opposing camps when it comes to addressing gun violence.

State Sen. Cecil Thomas still wears a red “Do Something” button pinned to his suit jacket before he walks into committee.

It’s a reminder of the promise that Gov. Mike DeWine made following the August 2019 mass shooting in Dayton’s Oregon District, where a crowd gathered for a candle-lit vigil chanted at the governor, demanding he take action.

DeWine drafted a serious response but backed down from mandatory universal background checks and his initial red flag proposal, which would have enabled a court to issue a “safety protection order” and direct police to seize a person’s guns if they were deemed a threat.

Ohio’s Republican-controlled legislatur­e hasn’t voted on a single gun control measure since the shooting.

Other representa­tives, including Thomas, a Cincinnati Democrat and former police officer, are all for Biden’s executive actions.

“For every ghost gun that does not get out there that can be used to cause carnage, that’s one less gun and several lives that are saved,” he said. “We’re always saying that the person who’s gonna do what he’s gonna do will get his hands on a gun, but we want to make it as difficult as possible.”

 ?? JOSHUA A. BICKEL / COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Eric Deibert, co-owner of L.E.P.D. Firearms, Range and Training Facility stands inside his store on Tuesday in Columbus.
JOSHUA A. BICKEL / COLUMBUS DISPATCH Eric Deibert, co-owner of L.E.P.D. Firearms, Range and Training Facility stands inside his store on Tuesday in Columbus.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States