Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Kaul correct on gun background checks

- Eric Litke Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN

Gun control is yet again — tragically — up for debate in Wisconsin.

After mass shootings at an El Paso, Texas, Walmart and a Dayton, Ohio, entertainm­ent district left 31 dead, Wisconsin leaders have raised questions about “loopholes” in state law.

Democratic lawmakers introduced legislatio­n in August that would require background checks for nearly all gun sales. Gov. Tony Evers, a fellow Democrat, has threatened to call a special session on the matter if Republican legislativ­e leaders don’t take up the bill.

This comes as 80% of state residents support universal background checks — including 75% of gun owners — according to a Marquette University Law School poll conducted in mid-August.

So how is that different from what Wisconsin has now?

The state’s Democratic attorney general offered an example.

“Because we don’t have universal background checks, people who are a danger to others — including people who have been convicted of a dangerous felony or are subject to a domestic violence restrainin­g order — currently can buy a firearm without going through a background check,” Josh Kaul said in an Aug. 15 tweet.

State Sen. Jennifer Shilling, D-La Crosse, raised the same point with a tweet earlier that day.

Can someone in those circumstan­ces really purchase a gun without a background check?

Most gun buyers go through a background check

A convicted felon or someone with an active restrainin­g order connected to domestic violence would not pass a criminal background check to qualify for a firearm purchase.

Such background checks are required under federal law for any purchase of a firearm from a federal firearm licenses dealer — which would include any retailers or others engaged in gun sales as a profession.

In Wisconsin, the state Department of Justice handles background checks for handgun sales, while long gun sales

go through the National Criminal Background Check Systems, said DOJ spokeswoma­n Gillian Drummond.

This two-pronged system covers the “vast majority” of firearm purchases in the state, Kaul said during an Aug. 9 appearance on Wisconsin Public Television’s “Here and Now.”

This is the process gun rights advocates refer to when noting background checks already exist.

But it’s not the only way to buy a gun.

Private sales treated differentl­y

A 2015 study found 22% of gun owners bought their most recent firearm without going through a background check.

That’s because gun sales in Wisconsin between private parties (those without a federal firearms license) aren’t subject to reporting, waiting period or background check requiremen­ts.

The U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives does not regulate private sales as it does those involving dealers. And Wisconsin is one of 29 states that does not impose any state-level regulation­s either, according to the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, a research and advocacy organizati­on that seeks “laws, policies, and programs proven to save

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lives from gun violence.”

Websites such as Armslist — a Craigslist-style firearms marketplac­e — connect private sellers and are heavily used. A search in September showed more than 2,000 firearms for sale from private parties in Wisconsin.

Two guns used in high-profile shootings here were purchased through Armslist by people under court orders not to possess guns.

In October 2012, Radcliffe Haughton killed three people including his estranged wife and injured four others, before killing himself at Azana Salon & Spa in Brookfield. A day before the shooting, he purchased a .40-caliber handgun in the parking lot of a Germantown McDonald’s after connecting with the seller on Armslist. Two days before that, a judge had issued a restrainin­g order that barred Haughton from owning a gun.

In January 2018, Robert Schmidt bought a Glock 9 mm handgun in a Walmart parking lot after connecting with the seller on Armslist. Days earlier he had been released on a bond that prohibited him from having a gun. The next night Schmidt used that gun to kill his wife and then himself at a home just outside Appleton.

Our ruling

Kaul said felons and people subject to domestic abuse restrainin­g orders are able to buy guns in Wisconsin without going through a background check.

All purchases from firearms dealers are subject to state and federal requiremen­ts that include a criminal background check. But Kaul is right that Wisconsin is among the states with no oversight of gun sales between private parties.

That has allowed people in the circumstan­ces he described to buy guns, in some cases with tragic results.

We rate this claim True.

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