New York Daily News

The good guys vs. the gun lobby

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Under the twisted vision of the Supreme Court majority, states and localities are now barred from deciding who can get a permit to carry a concealed weapon. While it’s allowed to ban felons, require training and the like, six justices’ absolutist interpreta­tion of the Second Amendment rules out requiring people to show a specific need to be armed in public. That will soon leave police facing a fresh flood of gun-wielding people on the city’s streets, above and beyond the thousands of illegal weapons already being recovered as shootings surge.

Lest we leave our cops and civilians defenseles­s, New York leaders must push back — which is thankfully what three top pols did yesterday.

Credit first goes to Attorney General Tish James and Mayor Adams. Their simultaneo­usly filed city and state lawsuits, relying on purchases over many years by undercover investigat­ors, accuse gun distributo­rs of evading the law by willfully delivering thousands of banned “ghost gun” firearm components to New Yorkers over many years, without serial numbers on them or a background check on their purchasers.

James’ and Adams’ aim is true: The documentat­ion of brazen illegality, including the breaking of New York’s relatively new statute deeming gun makers and distributo­rs liable for the harm they cause when they irresponsi­bly market their products, is exhaustive.

This necessary labor in the courts must be complement­ed by smart new laws, robustly enforced. The extraordin­ary legislativ­e session called by Gov. Hochul looks to far more broadly designate “sensitive places” where concealed carry will be barred, including creating a presumptio­n that concealed carry will not be allowed in private businesses; to toughen up safe-storage laws; to require a permit for the purchase of ammunition; and to build a new system of strong but legally bulletproo­f requiremen­ts for getting a concealed-carry permit. Good going on all counts.

The Supreme Court openly dismisses the notion that rising gun violence, including mass shootings, can be a legitimate rationale for states to restrict the concealed carry of firearms. Six justices can be willfully obtuse; New York’s top elected officials must keep their eyes wide open.

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