Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lawmen join Giffords to fight 2 bills on guns

- CLARENCE WILLIAMS

WASHINGTON — A group of law enforcemen­t leaders and gun-control activists led by former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and her husband Mark Kelly launched a lobbying effort Tuesday to oppose legislatio­n that would decrease federal regulation of silencers and nationaliz­e concealed-carry permitting. The coalition argues that the bills would make law enforcemen­t less safe.

In a memo expected to be sent to the White House, Capitol Hill and activists during National Police Week, the Law Enforcemen­t Coalition for Common Sense details its opposition to two bills and renews a call to close loopholes in the background check system.

“[Congress] needs to reject irresponsi­ble calls to mandate the unrestrict­ed concealed carry of firearms and allow free access to dangerous silencers, which present a new menacing threat to our communitie­s and law enforcemen­t profession­als,” the memo says. “It is clear that guns in dangerous hands make law enforcemen­t officers more vulnerable.”

The coalition of active and retired police chiefs, sheriffs and federal agents was put together by Americans for Responsibl­e Solutions, the organizati­on founded by Giffords, a victim of gun violence, and Kelly. Prince George’s County, Md., Chief Hank Stawinski and former D.C. Police Chief Charles H. Ramsey serve on the 20-person advisory committee which leads the coalition.

The memo notes that 21 of 64 officers killed in 2016 gunfire were victims of “ambush style” attacks, sentiments that President Donald Trump echoed in a speech delivered Monday to the National Peace Officers Memorial Service.

“More officers were slain last year in ambushes than in any year in more than two decades,” Trump said. “The attacks on our police is a stain on our society.”

Still, gun-control proponents are concerned about a bill that would allow states to recognize concealed-carry permits from all states nation- wide. The coalition memo says the ” Constituti­onal Concealed Carry Reciprocit­y Act” would effectivel­y undermine or make ineffectiv­e state laws with different or stricter guidelines for permits.

David Chipman, a retired 25-year Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agent and senior policy advisor for the Giffords group, said Trump’s comments supporting law enforcemen­t on Monday were interestin­g but didn’t address longstandi­ng concerns by the law enforcemen­t community.

“We want more than words. We want action. These are things law enforcemen­t are concerned about and have been for some years,” Chipman said in an interview Monday. “This is really putting law enforcemen­t in danger.” Chipman said that most law enforcemen­t officers are private gun owners, but seek a balance between Second Amendment rights and laws that make their jobs more difficult or dangerous.

Specifical­ly, Chipman said the lobbying push is designed to defeat an effort to roll back federal regulation of silencers, which muffle the sounds of gunfire. The bill is entitled the “Hearing Protection Act of 2017” and would amend the federal criminal code to preempt state or local laws that tax or regulate firearm silencers.

Silencers have been regulated since 1934 under the National Firearms Act, during an era when police officers were killed at much higher rates, the law enforcemen­t coalition said. In the past few years, the numbers of registered silencers has reached more than 300,000, the memo said.

Stawinski said he is particular­ly focused on this bill as his department was the target of a coordinate­d attack on a county police station, which left Det. Jacai Colson killed by friendly fire. “Silencers only exacerbate the danger because it makes it difficult for officers to figure out where gunfire is coming from,” Stawinski said in an interview. “That by itself in the era of the active shooter is a concern.

“This is not the moment to change,” Stawinski said.

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