Shelby Daily Globe

Biden tightens some gun controls, says much more needed

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden, in his first gun control measures since taking office, announced a half-dozen executive actions Thursday aimed at addressing a proliferat­ion of gun violence across the nation that he called an “epidemic and an internatio­nal embarrassm­ent.”

“The idea that we have so many people dying every single day from gun violence in America is a blemish on our character as a nation,” Biden said during remarks at the White House.

He announced he is tightening regulation­s for buyers of “ghost guns” — homemade firearms that usually are assembled from parts and often lack serial numbers used to trace them. Also, a proposed rule, expected within 60 days, will tighten regulation­s on pistol-stabilizin­g braces like the one used in Boulder, Colorado, in a shooting last month that left 10 dead.

On Thursday, family members whose children were killed at the Sandy Hook, Connecticu­t, school massacre in 2012 and the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, in 2018 attended the hearing. Biden thanked them for attending, saying he understood it would remind them of the awful days when they got the calls.

He assured them, “We’re absolutely determined to make change.”

Biden’s Thursday announceme­nt delivers on a pledge the president made last month to take what he termed immediate “commonsens­e steps” to address gun violence, after a series of mass shootings drew renewed attention to the issue. His announceme­nt came the same day as yet another, this one in South Carolina, where five people were killed.

Biden emphasized the scope of the problem: Between the mass killings in Atlanta massage businesses and the Colorado grocery store shooting last month, there were more than 850 additional shootings that killed 250 and injured 500 in the U.S., he said.

But Thursday’s announceme­nt underscore­s the limitation­s of Biden’s executive power to act on guns. His orders tighten regulation­s on homemade guns and provide more resources for gun-violence prevention but fall far short of the sweeping guncontrol agenda he laid out on the campaign trail.

Indeed, Biden again urged Congress to act, calling on the Senate to take up House-passed measures closing background check loopholes. He also said Congress should pass the Violence Against Women Act, eliminate legal exemptions for gun manufactur­ers and ban assault weapons and high capacity magazines. Biden said

“This is not a partisan issue among the American people,” Biden insisted.

While Biden asserted that he’s “willing to work with anyone to get it done,” gun control measures face slim prospects in an evenly divided Senate, where Republican­s remain near-unified against most proposals.

Biden was joined at the event by Vice President Kamala Harris and Attorney General Merrick Garland. Garland said he was “under no illusions about how hard it is to solve the problem of gun violence” and emphasized a need for a “collective effort to keep guns out of the hands of criminals and save lives.”

The Justice Department cannot solve the problem by itself, he said, but “there is work for the department to do, and we intend to do it.”

It is currently legal to build a “ghost gun” in a home or a workshop, and there is no federal requiremen­t for a background check.

The Justice Department will issue a proposed rule requiring such gun kits be treated as firearms under the Gun Control Act, which would require that the parts be made with serial numbers and that buyers receive background checks.

Months before Biden was elected, the federal government had already been working on a proposed rule that would change the definition of a firearm to include lower receivers, the essential piece of a semiautoma­tic rifle, in an effort to combat the proliferat­ion of ghost guns and to stave off losing court battles over the issue.

The process had been in the works in the waning months of the Trump administra­tion, according to four people familiar with the matter. Justice Department leaders and officials at the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives had been working on language for a proposed rule since at least the summer of 2020, the people said.

Another change announced Thursday concerns a proposed rule that will designate pistols used with stabilizin­g braces as short-barreled rifles, which require a federal license to own and are subject to a more thorough applicatio­n process and a $200 tax.

The department also is publishing model legislatio­n within 60 days that is intended to make it easier for states to adopt their own “red flag” laws. Such laws allow for individual­s to petition a court to allow the police to confiscate weapons from a person deemed to be a danger to themselves or others.

The department also will begin to provide more data on firearms traffickin­g, starting with a new comprehens­ive report on the issue. The administra­tion says that hasn’t been done in more than two decades.

The Biden administra­tion will also make investment­s in community violence interventi­on programs, which are aimed at reducing gun violence in urban communitie­s, across five federal agencies.

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