New York Daily News

Armor law doesn’t cover Buffalo fiend’s gear

- BY BRIAN NIEMIETZ

The state’s new body armor laws do not seem to have been well thought out and probably would not have stopped the gunman who shot up a Buffalo supermarke­t, gun experts say.

The legislatio­n put together by state lawmakers after the May 14 mass shooting halts sales of “bullet-resistant soft body armor.” Nelson Vergara, a retired Marine and New York City law enforcemen­t profession­al with an academic background in homeland security, told the Daily News that the restrictio­n was “not carefully examined and decided.”

“It seemed like an attempt was made by state legislator­s who were not particular­ly familiar with body armor levels of protection,” he said.

During the massacre at a Tops supermarke­t in Buffalo, Payton Gendron, 18, was wearing a steel-plated vest able to withstand the shots fired by a security guard using a pistol. The guard, an ex-cop, was among the 10 people fatally shot that day.

Vests like Gendron’s, which can stop rifle fire by using steel, ceramic or polyethyle­ne plates, aren’t explicitly addressed by the newly passed legislatio­n.

Vergara hopes state legislator­s look to the National Institute of Justice Body Armor Guide for further guidance.

“The law passed should have better language stating something similar to, ‘any bullet/caliber type body armor and/ or plates (hard body armor), separate or combined, homemade or company

produced, is prohibited unless authorized by state law under special provisions,” he said.

Lawmakers are rethinking the hastily drafted legislatio­n. One of its sponsors,

New York Assembly member Jonathon Jacobson admitted the new legislatio­n was rushed and said he’ll be glad to amend the law to make it “even stronger.”

The legislatio­n also does not prohibit New Yorkers from wearing body armor purchased outside the state. Jacobson plans to change that in January during New York’s next legislativ­e session.

Gov. Hochul is also willing to give the armor laws a closer look in due time, and will “work with the legislatur­e to expand the definition­s in the law at the first available opportunit­y,” her office said.

Until now, restrictio­ns on body armor sales were all but nonexisten­t on a national level. In Connecticu­t, civilians can only purchase body armor in person. Other states prohibit convicted felons from procuring armor. State officials are still working to determine which occupation­s will merit exemption from New York’s new laws.

The Violence Project co-founder James Densley found that 12% of mass shooters in public spaces have worn body vests since 1966. That includes the gunman responsibl­e for a 2012 massacre in an Aurora, Colo., theater that left a dozen people dead; another who killed 10 people in a Boulder, Colo., supermarke­t that same year, and mass murder Devin Kelley, who took his own life after gunning down more than two dozen worshipers in a Texas church in 2017.

 ?? ?? The state’s new law on body armor would not ban the the sort of armor worn by alleged Buffalo supermarke­t killer Payton Gendron, gun experts say.
The state’s new law on body armor would not ban the the sort of armor worn by alleged Buffalo supermarke­t killer Payton Gendron, gun experts say.

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