The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Irish PM joins St. Patrick’s Day parade

Echoes of Al Capone heard in today’s gun-control debate

- By Allen G. Breed and Sharon Cohen Breed reported from Raleigh, N.C.

CHICAGO » It was 1934. Mobsters armed with fully automatic “Tommy guns” had left a trail of bloodstain­ed sidewalks and pockmarked walls across the country, and the new president had narrowly escaped assassinat­ion the year before. It was time for action on gun control. And the National Rifle Associatio­n seemingly agreed.

“I do not believe in the general promiscuou­s toting of guns,” then-NRA President Karl T. Frederick told members of the House Ways and Means Committee. “I think it should be sharply restricted and only under licenses.”

The resulting National Firearms Act — passed five years after the infamous St. Valentine’s Day Massacre in Chicago — taxed, rather than banned, machine guns. But it was a pivotal moment in America’s history, marking the first comprehens­ive federal gun-control law.

It was also a big moment for the NRA, founded in 1871 by two Civil War veterans. The group had managed to get a seat at the table — helping to gut most of the bill’s original provisions and establishi­ng itself as a key player in Washington, D.C.

Now the survivors of a modern-day Valentine’s Day massacre — last month’s rampage in Parkland, Florida — are demanding that members of Congress sever their ties with the NRA and do something about assault rifles like the legally purchased AR-15 Nikolas Cruz allegedly used.

As it was in 1934, the debate over gun control is essentiall­y the same — whether civilians should have access to certain kinds of firearms.

“Americans then believed you had a right to have a gun in your house for personal protection,” says Adam Winkler, a professor at the UCLA School of Law and author of “Gunfight: The Battle over the Right to Bear Arms in America.” “What they didn’t believe was that you had a right to have the most deadly forms of weapons.”

Introduced too late for World War I, the Thompson submachine gun was marketed as the perfect self-defense weapon — “ideal ... for the protection of large estates, ranches, plantation­s, etc.,” read one 1920s advertisem­ent from its manufactur­er. “Full automatic, fired from the hip, 1,500 shots per minute.”

Despite assurances the weapon would only be sold “to responsibl­e parties after a thorough investigat­ion,” many found their way into the hands of bootlegger­s and bank robbers. Gangsters Al Capone, John Dillinger and George “Machine Gun” Kelly began terrorizin­g the nation, and forensics tied two Tommy guns to the Feb. 14, 1929, incident in which seven men associated with mobster George “Bugs” Moran were gunned down by Capone men dressed as police.

Then in February 1933, during a visit to Miami, President-elect Roosevelt emerged miraculous­ly unscathed from a barrage of five bullets from a .32-caliber pawnshop revolver. Hearings on the National Firearms Act began in April 1934.

The original bill proposed registrati­on and steep taxation on all firearms.

There were also provisions for taking fingerprin­ts and tracking future gun transfers.

Then-Assistant Attorney General Joseph B. Keenan readily acknowledg­ed that criminals would ignore the law. But by requiring taxes and registrati­on, he said, “we do hope to make it a simple matter ... to put them behind the bars when they violate these regulation­s.”

The NRA had been pushing a measure in state legislatur­es to regulate machine guns, but worried Congress was trying to go too far. During hearings, the Second Amendment was not mentioned by name, but its spirit was certainly invoked.

NRA Executive Vice President Milton Reckord accused the government of seeking to regulate firearms “under the subterfuge of a tax bill” and warned against legislatin­g “15 million sportsmen into criminals.” A pistol or revolver is “only dangerous in the hands of the crook,” he said. “It is not dangerous in the hands of the honest citizen.”

The final law imposed a $200 tax on the making and sale of machine guns, silencers, and shotguns and rifles with barrels of less than 18 inches. Handguns and “sporting arms” were exempted, as the NRA wished.

Despite the general aura of collegiali­ty and collaborat­ion in 1934, historian Patrick Charles says the NRA was doing then what it does now — fighting to thwart any significan­t restrictio­ns on guns.

“The whole time the NRA is saying, ‘We support reasonable firearms laws, and we’re just trying to help you.’ Basically, what they did is they got their hands in the cookie jar to write the law for Congress, and they commandeer­ed the whole law and made it the way they wanted to,” says Charles, author of “Armed in America: A History of Gun Rights from Colonial Militias to Concealed Carry.”

Over the ensuing eight decades, mob killings, assassinat­ions, crime waves and politics have dictated federal gun laws. The NFA was followed by the Federal Firearms Act of 1938, the Gun Control Act of 1968, the “Brady Law” of 1993 and the Federal Assault Weapons Ban of 1994. That last expired in 2004. Numerous attempts to renew it have failed.

Like many, Charles thought the 2012 slaughter of 26 students and teachers in Newtown, Connecticu­t, was another of those moments in “the shooting cycle” that would spur new federal gun control. It wasn’t.

Survivors of the Parkland shooting are vowing that this time will be different. They want an outright ban on assault-style rifles, which Stoneman Douglas senior Samuel Zeif, in a White House meeting with President Donald Trump, called “a weapon of war.”

But Alan Gottlieb, founder of the Second Amendment Foundation, says this is not 1934, and there’s no equivalenc­y between assault rifles and machine guns. While the Parkland students make “some very sympatheti­c messengers,” he doesn’t foresee anything changing.

“No gun rights group is going to support a ban,” he says. “A gun doesn’t have a finger to pull its own trigger or a brain to hate with. There’s where our problem is.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? John Dillinger, center, strikes a pose with Lake County prosecutor Robert Estill, left, in the jail at Crown Point, Ind., in 1934. Dillinger was awaiting trial for the murder of police officer Willliam Patrick O’Malley when Dillinger robbed the First...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS John Dillinger, center, strikes a pose with Lake County prosecutor Robert Estill, left, in the jail at Crown Point, Ind., in 1934. Dillinger was awaiting trial for the murder of police officer Willliam Patrick O’Malley when Dillinger robbed the First...
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chicago gangster Al Capone has his photo taken while in custody in Philadelph­ia on charges of carrying concealed weapons. It was gangland violence by Capone and others that spurred Congress to pass the first significan­t federal gun-control law in 1934.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chicago gangster Al Capone has his photo taken while in custody in Philadelph­ia on charges of carrying concealed weapons. It was gangland violence by Capone and others that spurred Congress to pass the first significan­t federal gun-control law in 1934.
 ?? HARRY L. HALL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Prohibitio­n-era bloodbath known as the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre took place in this nondescrip­t building in Chicago, shown. The gang hit attributed to Al Capone was one of many violent acts that spurred Congress to pass the nation’s first...
HARRY L. HALL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Prohibitio­n-era bloodbath known as the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre took place in this nondescrip­t building in Chicago, shown. The gang hit attributed to Al Capone was one of many violent acts that spurred Congress to pass the nation’s first...

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