Arab Times

Disparitie­s in state gun laws increase since Newtown

In Washington, push for laws likely to be watered down

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WASHINGTON, April 13, (RTRS): While Washington politician­s battle over new gun-control measures, state legislator­s have already passed dozens of new firearms laws since the Newtown school massacre ignited a national debate in December.

The new state laws, a small fraction of the 1,500 or so gun-related bills that have been proposed at state level, reflect the vast political and ideologica­l difference­s in the debate over gun rights — a gulf that helps explain why lawmakers in Washington find it so difficult to reach a consensus on the issue.

Several Democrat-controlled states have tightened their already tough gun laws, while a dozen Republican-leaning states have loosened the few restrictio­ns they have on the constituti­onal right to bear arms.

The net effect has been to increase the disparitie­s in the nation’s patchwork of gun laws, and widen the divide between urban areas where gun ownership is viewed with suspicion and rural regions where guns are firmly embedded in the culture. In New York, a new law authorizes police to track ammunition sales and prevents gun owners from buying ammunition magazines that hold more than seven bullets.

Under a new Maryland law, gun buyers will have to be fingerprin­ted and licensed. In Connecticu­t, where the massacre of 20 young children and six teachers at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown inspired the gun-control legislatio­n now before the US Senate, those who own high-capacity magazines will have to register with the state.

Moving

In many southern and western states, however, legislator­s are moving in the opposite direction.

Arkansas now allows guns in churches, bars and liquor stores. A new law in Wyoming allows judges to carry guns in their courtrooms. South Dakota school administra­tors will be able to arm teachers.

State legislator­s have introduced more than 1,500 gun-related bills since January, according to the Sunlight Foundation. Roughly half of these new proposals would strengthen gun laws, while the other half would weaken them, the nonprofit group found. Of those, around 50 have been enacted into law.

Because weapons can be easily carried across state lines, states that try to impose tight controls on gun purchases can be undercut by other states that are more permissive, analysts say.

“There’s no metal detectors at the borders,” said Northeaste­rn University criminolog­ist James Alan Fox. “Any state’s ability to deal with the gun problem is limited by that fact: They’re not isolated islands.”

Gun-control advocates say that’s one reason Congress needs to strengthen federal background checks of prospectiv­e gun buyers, limit the size of magazine clips and ban military-style “assault” weapons.

Risk

“State legislatur­es that enact irresponsi­ble laws truly do put lives at risk not just in their own state but in neighborin­g states as well,” said Laura Cutilletta of the Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence.

Gun-rights activists say states are rightly fulfilling their roles as “laboratori­es of democracy,” allowing policymake­rs to see what approaches work and what doesn’t. They say the difference­s in laws also mean that gun owners can move to states with expansive gun rights, if they wish.

“I think diversity is good,” said Joseph Tartaro, president of the Second Amendment Foundation. “From a personal liberty standpoint, any time you have more options you’re better off.”

The Second Amendment of the US Constituti­on guarantees the right of individual­s to own firearms, but courts have ruled that right is not unlimited even as they have struck down some of the most restrictiv­e laws, such as the District of Columbia’s handgun ban.

In Washington, gun-control advocates scored a victory on Thursday when the Senate began debate on new gun control legislatio­n. But measures that enjoy broad public support — such as an expanded background check system that would include sales made online and at gun shows — could be weakened or made unpalatabl­e to many lawmakers during the weeks of debate coming up in the Senate.

Even if they clear the Senate, such pro- posals face a more difficult path in the Republican-controlled House of Representa­tives. Other measures, such as an assault weapons ban and limits on large-capacity magazines, are widely seen as unlikely to pass either chamber.

Gun-control advocates say that whatever happens in Congress, the action at the state level shows that momentum is on their side.

While many of the pro-gun laws that have passed so far have been incrementa­l expansions of rights that already exist, the new laws in Colorado, New York, Maryland and Connecticu­t would impose major new restrictio­ns.

“We’re hopeful that the rest of the country will follow our lead, both for their sake and our sake,” said Vincent DeMarco, president of Marylander­s to Prevent Gun Violence, who pushed for his state’s new requiremen­t to fingerprin­t and license handgun buyers.

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