Post Tribune (Sunday)

Gun applicants face new screening

Those in NY will have to list social media accounts

- By Marina Villeneuve and Maysoon Khan

ALBANY, N.Y. — As missed warning signs pile up in investigat­ions of mass killings, New York state is rolling out a novel strategy to screen applicants for gun permits. People seeking to carry concealed handguns will be required to hand over lists of their social media accounts for a review of their “character and conduct.”

It’s an approach applauded by many Democrats and national gun control advocacy groups, but some experts have raised questions about how the law will be enforced and address free speech concerns.

Some of the local officials who will be tasked with reviewing the social media content also are asking whether they’ll have the resources and, in some cases, whether the law is even constituti­onal.

Sheriffs haven’t received additional money or staffing to handle a new applicatio­n process, said Peter Kehoe, the executive director of the New York Sheriffs’ Associatio­n. The law, he asserted, infringes on Second Amendment rights, and while applicants must list their social media accounts, he doesn’t think local officials will necessaril­y look at them.

“I don’t think we would do that,” Kehoe said. “I think it would be a constituti­onal invasion of privacy.”

The new requiremen­t, which takes effect in September, was included in a law passed last month that sought to preserve some limits on firearms after the Supreme Court ruled that most people have a right to carry a handgun for personal protection. It was signed by Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, who noted shooters

sometimes telegraph their intent to hurt others.

Increasing­ly, young men have gone online to drop hints of what’s to come before executing a mass killing, including the gunman who killed 19 children and two teachers at an Uvalde, Texas, elementary school.

Under the law, applicants have to provide local officials with a list of current and former social media accounts from the previous three years. It doesn’t specify whether applicants will be required to provide access to private accounts not visible to the general public.

It will be up to local sheriff ’s staff, judges or county clerks to scroll through those profiles as they check whether applicants have made statements suggesting dangerous behavior.

The law also will require

applicants to undergo hours of safety training, prove they’re proficient at shooting, provide four character references and sit for inperson interviews.

The law reflects how the Supreme Court ruling has shifted responsibi­lity to states for vetting those who carry firearms in public, said Tanya Schardt, senior counsel and director of state and federal policy for gun control advocacy organizati­on Brady.

Her group said it was not aware of any other states requiring gun permit applicants to submit social media profiles.

The new approach, however, comes amid growing debate over the policing of social media posts and a legacy of unwarrante­d surveillan­ce of Black and brown communitie­s.

“The question should

be: Can we do this in an anti-racist way that does not create another set of violence, which is the state violence that happens through surveillan­ce?” said University of Pennsylvan­ia social policy, communicat­ions and medicine professor Desmond Upton Patton, who also founded SAFElab, a research initiative studying violence involving youths of color.

Gun rights advocates are blasting the law.

“You’re also going to have to tell them your social media accounts because New York wants to thoroughly investigat­e you to figure out if you’re some of those dangerous law-abiding citizens who are taking the country by storm and causing crime to skyrocket,” Jared Yanis, host of the YouTube channel Guns & Gadgets, says in a widely

viewed video on the new law. “What have we come to?”

Hochul, who also has tasked state police with rooting out extremism online, didn’t immediatel­y respond to a list of questions about the social media requiremen­t, including how the state will address free speech and privacy concerns.

“Often the sticking point is: How do we go about enforcing this?” Metro State University criminal justice professor James Densley, co-founder of research initiative The Violence Project, said. “I think it starts to open up a bit of a can of worms because no one quite knows the best way to go about doing it.”

It can be tricky, he said, to decode social media posts by younger people, who could be expressing themselves by posting a music video.

“Where this will get tricky is to what extent this is expression and to what extent is this evidence of wrongdoing?” Densley said.

Spokespeop­le for the social media platforms Facebook, Twitter, 4Chan and Parler didn’t respond to requests for comment.

New York should instead consider giving the job to a trained group tasked with figuring out how to best reach out to people online who are showing signs of radicaliza­tion or trauma and may need help, Patton said.

“There’s a lot of nuance and contextual issues. We speak differentl­y; how we communicat­e, that could be misunderst­ood,” Patton said. “I’m concerned we don’t have the right people or the right tools in place to do this in a way that’s useful in actually preventing violence.”

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER/AP ?? New York Gov. Kathy Hochul speaks during a June 6 ceremony to sign a package of bills to strengthen gun laws in New York.
MARY ALTAFFER/AP New York Gov. Kathy Hochul speaks during a June 6 ceremony to sign a package of bills to strengthen gun laws in New York.

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