Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Money sought to ease gun list backlog

Extra $95K requested for Florida database of mentally ill residents

- By Skyler Swisher Staff writer

Florida’s system for keeping guns from mentally ill people has emerged as a hotbutton issue in the race for U.S. Senate.

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson accused Republican challenger Gov. Rick Scott of failing to address a persistent problem of the state’s court clerks taking too long to put mental health records in a database that is supposed to stop unstable people from buying guns.

“Rick Scott has failed to ensure that mental health records are added to the background check database to prevent people from buying a gun who shouldn’t be able to,” Nelson tweeted Thursday. “I’ve asked the DOJ [Department of Justice] to step in, because Rick Scott is incapable of protecting the people of Florida.”

Scott’s campaign quickly disputed those claims, saying the governor acted swiftly after the Parkland shooting in support of legislatio­n designed to prevent another mass shooting.

The South Florida Sun Sentinel examined problems with Florida’s background

check system in an investigat­ion this past year, finding that clerks were taking up to three years to input names into the database used for gun-purchase background checks and entering incorrect informatio­n for others.

A report from Politico this week cast further light on the issue.

The Democratic senator sent a letter Thursday urging the Justice Department to provide $94,880 in federal funds requested by the state’s Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t to launch a Miami-Dade pilot program that seeks to speed up the process.

A Scott spokesman says the governor’s office was unaware of the problem until now.

“The clerk’s office never brought it to our attention,” said McKinley Lewis, a spokesman for the governor’s office. “The Clerks of Court in Florida are locally elected and the Governor expects them to prioritize their resources to quickly resolve this issue.”

But agency spokeswoma­n Jessica Cary said FDLE, under the governor’s authority, has been working to secure funding to reduce the backlog.

FDLE will continue looking for federal grants to provide assistance to clerks, Lewis said.

An audit found that 17 percent of mental health records filed from June 2014 to February 2016 were submitted to the background check system late — at least a month after adjudicati­on. State law specifics that clerks must electronic­ally submit the records to FDLE within a month. Sixty-one records took more than a year to enter into the system, according to the 2016 audit.

The state establishe­d the database in 2007 to store mental health court orders disqualify­ing residents from buying a gun.

Clerk’s offices have reported that staff shortages are the reason for the backlog, according to FDLE. Molly Kellogg-Schmauch, a spokeswoma­n for the statewide clerk’s organizati­on, told Politico that budget reductions — not misplaced staffing priorities — are the reason for the backlog.

Speeding the process wouldn’t have stopped Nikolas Cruz, 19, from purchasing the gun he used in his attack on Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that left 17 students and staff dead.

Although Cruz had a history of mental illness, Cruz was never adjudicate­d mentally ill in court, and he legally purchased the AR-15 rifle used in the shooting, according to the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

Florida state lawmakers passed a “red-flag law” after the Parkland shooting that makes it easier for police to temporaril­y seize guns from people deemed to be a risk to themselves or others.

Under that law, court clerks are supposed to forward those risk protection court orders within 24 hours to the law enforcemen­t agency, which is responsibl­e for entering the informatio­n into the background check database.

Broward County leads the state in the number of guns seized under the new law.

Two of the Democratic candidates for governor also weighed in Thursday.

“After Pulse & Parkland, I’m deeply worried that our state’s background check system has such a wide informatio­n gap. As Governor I’ll put this problem at the top of my list on Day One to make sure we keep Floridians safe from gun violence,” Tallahasse­e Mayor Andrew Gillum tweeted.

Former Miami Beach Mayor Philip Levine had a similar reaction. “We cannot be known as the state with mass shootings & lax gun laws. It’s time to close loopholes that allow weapons of war to fall into the wrong hands,” he said.

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