Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Kelly overreache­s with gun claim

- D.L. Davis Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK - WISCONSIN

In the race for a seat on the state Supreme Court, Justice Daniel Kelly and challenger Dane County Circuit Judge Jill Karofsky have clashed on many fronts, but perhaps especially so on guns and the Second Amendment.

Kelly faced criticism after hosting a fundraiser at a Brookfield gun range the day after the Molson Coors shooting. At a March 12 forum hosted by the Milwaukee Bar Associatio­n, Kelly called the criticism a cheap political hit.

Meanwhile, at the same forum, Karofsky called Kelly posing with an assault-style rifle “a clearly partisan move.”

Even before that, Kelly’s campaign made a stronger accusation in a March 3 email sent to supporters, in which Kelly claimed: “Judge Karofsky and her radical liberal allies want to disarm law abiding citizens.”

Is the assertion correct?

The evidence

When asked to back up the claim, Kelly campaign manager Charles Nichols first pointed to a series of Karofsky tweets.

“In December 2019, Jill Karofsky called for increased gun control laws on Twitter following two incidents in Wisconsin schools,” Nichols said in an email. “Law enforcemen­t later revealed that the weapons used in both incidents weren’t actually guns. Karofsky’s tweet called on lawmakers to put forward stricter gun laws.”

But putting forward stricter gun laws is not the same as wanting to “disarm law abiding citizens.” For instance, one often-discussed legislativ­e proposal is to tighten background checks, which would fall far short of disarming citizens.

Let’s take a closer look.

On Dec. 2, at Waukesha South High School, an “angry” 17-year-old student pointed a pellet gun at the head of a fellow student, pulled a pellet gun again later when officers arrived, and then was shot three times by police, according to news reports.

The following day, at Oshkosh West High School, a 16-year-old student with an “edged weapon” stabbed a school resource officer and the officer shot the student.

The Karofsky tweets in question all came on Dec. 3, beginning with this one:

“As a mom of two teenagers, my

heart races every time I hear about yet another school shooting. I’m relieved that no one was killed in yesterday’s shooting at Waukesha South High School, and today’s shooting at Oshkosh West High School.”

She went on to refer to families in Sparta and at Waukesha North who “had to deal with lockdowns” and a “hit list in Shorewood.” She thanked first responders, and said parents should not have to worry about the safety of their kids at school.

Pretty straightfo­rward.

Then she got to what the Kelly campaign is citing.

“It’s up to the policy-makers to decide what the law should be, and judges like me are here to apply and interpret the law. But I know action is needed,” she tweeted.

Then she added: “We can respect constituti­onal rights and at the same time take steps to make every family safer. It’s way past time for lawmakers to step up to the plate.”

So, as evidence, the tweets don’t really stand up.

Karofsky did not advocate any specific changes, noted it’s up to policymake­rs to decide what laws to advance and talked explicitly about respecting constituti­onal rights in the process. As in a trial, we view the burden of proof as falling on the one who makes the charges. So far, Kelly clearly falls short.

More evidence

Nichols, the Kelly campaign manager, also pointed to a Jan. 24 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel article that laid out the views and records of the candidates on a series of hot-button issues.

In a section on guns, the article described

the candidates and their views on a 2008 U.S. Supreme Court decision known as Heller, which held the right to bear arms in the Second Amendment of the Constituti­on is an individual right, rather than a collective right for groups like militias.

“I’ve read it carefully, and I’ve not identified any errors,” the article quoted Kelly as saying of the decision.

Meanwhile, the article offered this position from Karofsky:

“I think that there are ways that are constituti­onal that we are able to limit people’s possession of firearms so that we’re able to live in a country where we don’t have to send our kids to school for code-red drills.”

As with the tweets, that stops well short of what Kelly claimed. What’s more, it specifically describes finding ways that are constituti­onal to make any changes.

“Judge Karofsky has made it clear throughout this campaign that she supports the Second Amendment and the precedent establishe­d in the Heller decision,” Karofsky spokesman Sam Roecker said in an email. “Dan Kelly knows this precedent requires judges to uphold the law and an individual’s right to own a gun.”

Our ruling

Kelly claimed Karofsky wants “to disarm law abiding citizens.”

Rather than cite any past rulings as evidence, Kelly points to a series of tweets and a Karofsky quote in a newspaper story on the race.

In both cases, Karofsky indicates she feels lawmakers should take steps to reduce gun violence — even calling on them to “step up to the plate.”

But nowhere did she call for disarming residents. Indeed, in both places she framed the comments around abiding by the Constituti­on, even noting it’s up to policymake­rs to “decide what the law should be.”

As evidence, that’s pretty thin. Our definition of Mostly False is a “statement contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression.”

That fits here.

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