Albuquerque Journal

Illinois shooter’s permit was revoked

Police failed to seize gun he used Friday

- BY DON BABWIN AND JULIE WATSON ASSOCIATED PRESS

AURORA, Ill. — An initial background check failed to detect a felony conviction that should have barred the man who killed five co-workers and wounded six others at a suburban Chicago manufactur­ing plant from buying the gun.

Months later, a second background check of Gary Martin found his 1995 aggravated assault conviction in Mississipp­i involving the stabbing of an exgirlfrie­nd. But it prompted only a letter stating his gun permit had been revoked and ordering him to turn over his firearm to police — raising questions about the state’s enforcemen­t to ensure those who lose their permits also turn over their weapons.

A vigil for the victims, including a university student on his first day as an intern and a longtime plant manager, was scheduled for Sunday in Aurora, about 40 miles west of Chicago.

New Mexico lawmakers are

considerin­g a slate of gun-control proposals, including a bill that would expand requiremen­ts for background checks on private gun sales. Another measure would allow for courts to order people deemed threatenin­g to temporaril­y surrender their guns to law enforcemen­t.

The background-check initiative has cleared both chambers of the Democrat-led Legislatur­e, and a Senate vote is pending on a bill that would make it easier to take guns from people deemed suicidal or bent on violence.

Martin, 45, was killed in a shootout with officers Friday, ending his deadly rampage at the Henry Pratt Co. in Aurora. His state gun license permit was revoked in 2014, Aurora Police Chief Kristen Ziman said.

But he never gave up the .40-caliber Smith & Wesson handgun he used in the attack. Investigat­ors are trying to determine what law enforcemen­t agencies did after that letter was sent, Ziman said.

Illinois lawmakers who support more gun control measures said Martin was able to keep the gun because of a flaw in the 1968 law that requires residents to get a Firearm Owner’s Identifica­tion card, or FOID card, to purchase firearms or ammunition. They must pass a background check, but the law doesn’t mandate that police ensure weapons have been removed if a red flag is raised later.

Legislatio­n was introduced in 2016 to require police go to the homes of gun owners with revoked FOID cards and search for the weapons, but it failed over concerns it would overtax police department­s, said Democratic Rep. Kathleen Willis. She wants a similar measure introduced. “Let’s use some common sense. If you have someone with a felony, obviously they are not the best law-abiding citizens who are going to follow through when they get the letter and go, ‘oh, yeah, here’s my gun’ ” Willis said. “We have to have oversight. That’s the biggest flaw in the whole system. We’re asking people who already have done something wrong, to do something right.

Last year, Illinois joined other states like California in passing a law that allows a family member to petition to have a gun removed from a home and a person’s permit revoked if they believe they might use it to harm themselves or others.

Lawmakers are also working to add teeth to restrictio­ns on the transfers of gun ownership from a person whose permit has been revoked, Willis said. The change follows a 2018 shooting at a Tennessee Waffle House involving a man who had to give his guns to his father after his Illinois FOID card was revoked, but his father later gave them back to him.

Legislator­s want people who obtain such weapons to sign an affidavit vowing to not return the weapons to the original owner.

Martin was no stranger to police in Aurora, where he had been arrested six times for what Ziman described as “traffic and domestic battery-related issues” and for violating an order of protection.

After an initial background check failed to detect his felony conviction, Martin was issued his FOID card and bought the Smith & Wesson handgun on March 11, 2014. Five days after that, he applied for a concealed carry permit. That background check, which used digital fingerprin­ting, flagged his Mississipp­i felony conviction and led the Illinois State Police to revoke his permit.

Records stemming from his 1995 conviction in Mississipp­i described an extremely violent man who abused a former girlfriend, hitting her with a baseball bat and stabbing her, the Washington Post reported Saturday.

After serving less than three years, he moved to Illinois and landed a job at Henry Pratt. The conviction was not detected in a company background check.

Authoritie­s said Saturday that Martin pulled out the gun and began shooting right after hearing he was being fired from his job of 15 years at the industrial valve manufactur­er for various workplace violations.

Martin killed three people in the room with him and two others just outside, Ziman said. Among the dead was a college student starting a human resources internship at the plant that day. Martin also wounded a sixth worker, who is expected to survive.

After wounding five officers, Martin hid in the back of the building, where officers found him about an hour later and killed him during an exchange of gunfire, police said. All of the wounded officers are expected to live.

Trevor Wehner, 21, the new intern and a Northern Illinois University student, was on the dean’s list at NIU’s business college and was on track to graduate in May with a degree in human resource management.

 ?? NAM Y. HUH/AP ?? A woman places flowers at a makeshift memorial Sunday, in Aurora, Ill., near Henry Pratt Co. manufactur­ing company where five people were killed Friday.
NAM Y. HUH/AP A woman places flowers at a makeshift memorial Sunday, in Aurora, Ill., near Henry Pratt Co. manufactur­ing company where five people were killed Friday.

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