Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Tougher gun laws could create GOP divide

- By Dara Kam News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E – Orlando’s Pulse nightclub. The Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport. Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland. A Sebring bank. A yoga studio in Tallahasse­e. A naval air base in Pensacola.

At least 81 people have been killed in mass shootings scattered throughout Florida since 2016, and the death toll keeps rising from other gun violence that, in some pockets of the state, has become almost the norm.

As state lawmakers prepare for Tuesday’s start of the 60-day legislativ­e session, Republican­s are split on how — or even if — to address one of the nation’s most divisive political and policy issues: guns.

Two years ago, the Republican-dominated Legislatur­e passed gun-control laws for the first time in decades. The hastily approved measures came just weeks after the horrific 2018 Valentine’s Day massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that left 17 students and faculty members dead and another 17 people injured.

Now, Senate President Bill Galvano, who played a major role in crafting the 2018 legislatio­n, wants to go further and shut down what he and many other people consider loopholes in state laws regarding background checks and gun sales.

“There are myriad things in play, but the background checks are very much being looked at,” Galvano, R-Bradenton, told The News Service of Florida in a recent interview.

Galvano pointed to what is known as the “gun-show loophole,” which allows people who buy firearms to avoid the three-day waiting period and background check required when guns are purchased from federally licensed dealers.

“I think we need to really take a look at that,” he said.

The Senate also could consider “some modificati­ons” to the “red flag law,” which was part of the legislatio­n spurred by the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting.

The law allows guns to be removed from people found to pose a threat to themselves or others. Under the statute, law enforcemen­t officials can seize weapons after obtaining “risk protection” orders from judges.

Some states allow family members, school administra­tors or health care profession­als to directly petition courts to remove guns from people who pose a threat.

According to the Office of the State Courts Administra­tor, Florida’s red-flag law has been used more than 2,400 times since it went into effect in mid-2018. Judges have approved the requests, according to court filings.

But while Galvano might back enhancemen­ts to the red-flag law or other gun-control measures, the House is likely to thwart any efforts perceived as anti-gun, especially in an election year.

“[House members] are very pro-Second Amendment and they’re going to be very hostile towards gun control or gun restrictio­ns because they know that gun control and gun restrictio­ns aren’t the answer,” state Rep. Anthony Sabatini, R-Howey-in-theHills, told the News Service

in a phone interview.

Such restrictio­ns “don’t actually decrease crime, anywhere,” he added.

Sabatini is sponsoring two controvers­ial gun measures. The first would allow people to openly carry guns without concealedw­eapons licenses. The second would allow individual­s to bring guns onto college campuses.

“There’s no rational relationsh­ip” between gun violence and gun-control laws, Sabatini said, expressing an opinion shared by many of his House Republican colleagues.

“It’s what I call a red herring,” Sabatini, a lawyer, said.

Rep. Cord Byrd, a Neptune Beach Republican and attorney who specialize­s in Second Amendment law, said Florida, like other states, has plenty of statutes governing firearms.

“Most of the time when we pass new gun legislatio­n, because there’s a ton of law already on the books, it ends up infringing on the rights of law-abiding citizens,” Byrd told the News Service. “The criminals by definition are going to break the law anyway.”

Byrd, whose clients includes people fighting risk protection orders, said Florida’s red-flag law has “got problems.”

“It needs to be fixed. It does not need to be expanded,” he said. “It’s ruined people’s lives. People have lost jobs. I’m not saying we don’t need a mechanism in place, but the mechanism we have now needs to be improved.

Byrd also said expanding background checks for gun sales — which he said results in litigation that comprises the bulk of his work — isn’t the solution, either.

The background checks “are only as good as the data” in the state and national databases used to conduct the screenings, Byrd said.

“There are a lot of people that have to hire an attorney to get mistakes that are in the background system fixed,” he said. “It sounds good, but time after time after time in these shootings, these are people that have passed the background check.”

Galvano’s not only facing resistance from the House. Marion Hammer, the National Rifle Associatio­n’s longtime Florida lobbyist, scoffed when asked if the gun-show loophole should be addressed.

“There is no gun show loophole. That term is nothing more than a stalking horse for imposing a myriad of gun-control measures that deny due process to law-abiding citizens for the convenienc­e of government,” Hammer, a former national president of the NRA, said in a phone interview. “The gun-show loophole term is used to apply to anything that people who hate guns want to do connected to background checks.”

Echoing Byrd, Hammer said officials are failing to enforce laws that are already on the books.

For example, she said it is a federal felony for people to sell a gun or give a gun to a person they know or reasonably should know is not eligible to purchase or possess a firearm.

Byrd suggested Florida lawmakers could consider addressing what he called “stranger-to-stranger” gun sales but also stopped short of advocating for background checks.

Dara Kam writes for the News Service of Florida.

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP ?? As state lawmakers kick off the 60-day legislativ­e session, Republican­s are split on addressing guns, one of the nation’s most divisive political and policy issues.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP As state lawmakers kick off the 60-day legislativ­e session, Republican­s are split on addressing guns, one of the nation’s most divisive political and policy issues.

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