The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Gun storage among priorities

Plan to close ‘unloaded’ loophole

- By Clarice Silber and Jake Kara

A measure to tighten Connecticu­t’s firearm storage law is expected to be on a shortlist of gun reform bills tackled in the upcoming legislativ­e session.

The proposal will likely come amid advocates’ attempts to shepherd other legislatio­n banning untraceabl­e ghost guns and 3Dprinted plastic guns through the legislativ­e process. Advocates hope to build on the momentum of past gun control efforts that, according to the Giffords Law Center, have left Connecticu­t with the third strongest gun laws in the country.

“What we should be looking at is the number of gun deaths … because we have among the strictest gun laws, we also have among the lowest gun deaths. They are linked,” said Connecticu­t Against Gun Violence Executive Director Jeremy Stein.

Stein said his organizati­on will focus on getting those three gun reform measures passed in the next legislativ­e session.

State Rep. Sean Scanlon, DGuilford, announced the proposal to tighten the state’s firearm storage law on Tuesday with the parents of Ethan Song, a 15-yearold Guilford teenager who accidental­ly shot and killed himself at a friend’s house last January.

The proposal, called Ethan’s Law, would close a perceived loophole in the state’s current gun storage legislatio­n. The current statute requires only loaded firearms to be properly stored if a minor is likely to gain access to them. The bill would amend the law to require that all firearms, even those that are unloaded, be stored properly. It would also raise the age of those considered a minor from under the age of 16 to 18.

Massachuse­tts is the only state that requires that all firearms be stored with a locking device, according to the Giffords Law Center. California and New York, like Connecticu­t, impose the requiremen­t in certain situations.

Waterbury State’s Attorney Maureen Platt said in a report on Ethan Song’s death that under current Connecticu­t law, the gun owner could not be charged because there was no proof the handgun was loaded.

“There is no evidence that the gun used was loaded at the time it was stored within the closet. However, ammunition for the gun was located within the same small cardboard box next to the weapon used, inside of the Tupperware container,” the report said.

An unidentifi­ed juvenile was charged with manslaught­er this week in connection with the shooting.

“I think there is a very, very large loophole in the current law, which is why this man is not being charged in this incident,” Scanlon said. “It would bring us more in line with a commonsens­e approach to tackling gun violence and keeping communitie­s safe.”

The measure would help reduce urban gun violence, suicides, accidental shootings, and school shootings, Stein said.

Po Murray, chairwoman of the Newtown Action Alliance, said her organizati­on has long been an advocate for safe storage laws on a federal and state level.

“We must ban 3D-printed guns and ghost guns—I hope we can pass those laws in the next legislativ­e session,” Murray said.

Stein’s organizati­on will also examine ways to potentiall­y strengthen the state’s “red flag law,” which allows two law enforcemen­t officers, or one state’s attorney, to petition the court for an “extreme risk protection order” to temporaril­y take away an individual’s guns.

Connecticu­t statute does not explicitly allow family members to petition the court, unlike other states that have approved or are considerin­g extreme risk protection orders.

Scott Wilson, president of the Connecticu­t Citizens Defense League, the state’s largest gun group, said the organizati­on will be meeting with Scanlon to discuss the measure and raise some concerns.

Wilson said the group has always strongly supported keeping children safe by making sure guns are securely stored, but noted that some gun owners “may have a need to use firearms in the middle of the night if there’s a home invasion or intrusion of some type.”

In May, the legislatur­e passed a bill later signed by Gov. Dannel P. Malloy that bans the sale and ownership of bump stocks in Connecticu­t, joining a growing number of states that have prohibited the rapid-fire accessory used by the Las Vegas shooter who killed 58 people and injured hundreds at an outdoor music festival last year.

Bump stocks allow semiautoma­tic rifles to fire at a rate similar to that of machine guns. The Connecticu­t bill also banned trigger cranks and other rate-of-fire enhancemen­ts.

Connecticu­t has more firearm laws than almost every other state, according to an inventory by Boston University researcher­s.

In some cases, researcher­s might identify Connecticu­t as lacking a specific provision according to how the researcher­s classified the laws, but a different provision or combinatio­n of provisions might have a similar effect.

Researcher­s who compiled the data wrote this in a 2016 report: “Other resources may provide users with a deeper understand­ing of individual provisions, while our database serves as an efficient way to compare the broad scope of state firearm laws across the country.”

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