Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Oregon gun bill focuses on domestic violence

Measure would ban weapons for convicted

- By Andrew Selsky

Fueled by anguished voices in the aftermath of the Florida high school shooting, Oregon’s Legislatur­e on Thursday banned people convicted of stalking and domestic violence or under restrainin­g orders from buying or owning firearms and ammunition.

The passage of the bill by the state Senate on a 16-13 vote appears to mark the first time a state legislatur­e has passed a gun-control measure since the Feb. 14 shooting in Parkland, Florida, said Anne S. Teigen, a criminal justice expert with the National Conference of State Legislatur­es in Denver. The measure was introduced before the Florida slayings.

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown had lobbied for the bill, telling a Senate committee this week to hear the anguished voices rising in the aftermath of the Florida attack in which 17 people were killed. The Democratic governor said she intends to sign into law the measure that the House earlier approved to protect victims of domestic violence.

Passage of the bill also comes as the nation heatedly debates gun control in the wake of the Florida shooting.

A group led by former Arizona Congresswo­man Gabrielle Giffords, who survived a 2011 shooting that left her with a brain injury, applauded the Legislatur­e’s passing of the so-called boyfriend loophole bill.

“Oregon is taking the lead to protect communitie­s from gun violence,” said Robin Lloyd, government affairs director for Giffords’ nonprofit organizati­on that seeks to save lives from gun violence.

Brown praised lawmakers after the bill passed both chambers, observing that “it took the voices and outrage of youth devastated by gun violence to hold decision makers’ feet to the fire.”

The House had approved the bill in a 37-23 vote on Feb. 15, with two Republican­s including gubernator­ial candidate Knute Buehler joining Democrats in voting “aye.”

“I think survivors of domestic violence shouldn’t have to live in fear that their abusers can obtain a firearm,” Buehler had said.

Before Thursday’s vote, Sen. Floyd Prozanski, a Democrat from the university town of Eugene, stood and urged his colleagues to support the bill. His voice cracking, he recalled that his sister was shot dead by her boyfriend in 1973 after she said she was leaving him. He cited statistics saying a woman is five times more likely to die if a gun is present in a domestic violence situation, and 54 percent of mass shootings involve domestic violence.

Opponents said the law would violate Second Amendment protection­s on the right to bear arms. Unlawful possession of guns and ammunition is punishable by a maximum of 364 days’ imprisonme­nt, a $6,250 fine, or both.

One Democrat split from the rest of her caucus and joined the Republican senators in voting against the measure. Republican­s said the bill could have been better crafted and that it was too complicate­d an issue to consider in the short 2018 legislativ­e session.

The bill expands those who could be banned from owning guns and ammunition after a conviction, adding stalking as a qualifying crime, and adding those who are under a restrainin­g order.

 ??  ?? Oregon Gov. Kate Brown lobbied for the gun control bill the state passed Thursday and said she will sign it. Don Ryan The Associated Press
Oregon Gov. Kate Brown lobbied for the gun control bill the state passed Thursday and said she will sign it. Don Ryan The Associated Press

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