Times Colonist

Spokane eyes ban on police sales of guns

Weapons sold by law enforcemen­t linked to crimes

- MARTHA BELLISLE

SEATTLE — The city council in Spokane, Washington, is considerin­g a proposal to stop the police department from selling forfeited firearms, following an Associated Press investigat­ion that found that guns sold by Washington state lawenforce­ment agencies ended up in new crimes.

Councilwom­an Candace Mumm said Thursday that the AP investigat­ion, coupled with a review of the proceeds from the gun sales, inspired the council to want to end the practice.

“They’re putting assault weapons back into the community,” Mumm said. “I felt the benefit of destroying them outweighed the costs.”

Under state law, police and sheriff’s department­s have the option to sell, destroy or trade firearms confiscate­d in criminal investigat­ions, but the law requires the Washington State Patrol to sell the guns. All sales are conducted through a federally licensed gun dealer.

The Spokane Police Department has sold 311 since 2011, according to spokesman Officer John O’Brien. The AP investigat­ion went back to 2010, which included 77 sold guns, bringing Spokane’s total to 388 since 2010.

The department sells its confiscate­d long guns through an auction house located across the border in Post Falls, Idaho, he said. The agency won’t sell any guns used in homicides or illegal firearms such as automatic weapons. They destroy forfeited handguns, he said.

Law-enforcemen­t agencies across Washington state sold more than 6,000 firearms that had been used in crimes between 2010 and the end of 2017, the AP investigat­ion found. More than a dozen of those weapons later turned up in new criminal investigat­ions, according to a yearlong AP analysis that used hundreds of public records to compare serial numbers of sold guns with crime guns.

The guns sold by police, sheriff’s offices and the Washington State Patrol were used to threaten people, seized at gang hangouts, discovered in drug houses, possessed illegally by convicted felons, found in a stolen car, taken from a man suffering from a mental-health crisis and used in a suicide.

The guns sold by Spokane police included Winchester .22-calibre rifles, Remington 12-gauge shotguns, a Colt AR-15, a Bulgarian-made AK47-style rifle, a “Romar assault rifle” and several Norinco SKS, 7.62 x 39 mm semi-automatic rifles. One of the Norincos sold for $180 US, according to police records.

Between 2011 and 2018, the forfeited firearms sales generated $16,787, according to the proposed ordinance. The sales ranged from $633 to about $7,488 in any given year, the ordinance said.

But when the handling costs related to the sales — records, accounting, transfer fees, taxes — are factored in, the sales only brought in several thousand dollars, said Mumm, the councilwom­an who is sponsoring the new ordinance. Each law-enforcemen­t agency must pay 10 per cent of all sales to the Washington state treasurer.

Mumm said she has received emails from some who think the revenue is worth it, “but I’m also hearing from people asking: ‘Why are they selling assault rifles?’ ”

Fresh in the city council’s mind, she said, is the shooting at Freeman High School in September 2017. A student brought a semi-automatic rifle and handgun to the school southeast of Spokane, killed one student and injured three others.

According to the ordinance: “The City of Spokane intends to do all it can to prevent and reduce violent crime in Spokane and has determined that destroying all seized or forfeited firearms rather than reselling them to the public or to gun dealers is a simple, sensible and effective way to reduce access to firearms and help reduce and prevent gun violence.”

The city council is scheduled to hear public comment on the ordinance before voting on the measure Monday night.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sales clerk Tom Wallitner holds up a Mossberg 715T .22-calibre semi-automatic rifle during a 2017 auction at Johnny’s Auction House in Rochester, Washington.
ELAINE THOMPSON, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sales clerk Tom Wallitner holds up a Mossberg 715T .22-calibre semi-automatic rifle during a 2017 auction at Johnny’s Auction House in Rochester, Washington.

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