Texarkana Gazette

Demand for futuristic gun builds on an embattled past

- By Adam Geller

NEW YORK—It sounds, at first, like a bold, next-generation solution: personaliz­ing guns with technology that keeps them from firing if they ever get into the wrong hands.

But when the White House called for pushing ahead with such new technology as part of President Obama’s plan to cut gun violence, the administra­tion did not mention the concept’s embattled past. As with so much else in the nation’s long-running divisions over gun rights and regulation, what sounds like a futuristic vision is, in fact, an idea that has been kicked around for years, sidelined by intense suspicion, doubts about feasibilit­y and pressure tactics.

Now proponents of so-called personaliz­ed or smart guns are hoping the nation’s renewed attention on firearms following the Newtown school massacre will kick start research and sale of safer weapons. But despite the Obama administra­tion’s promise

to “encourage the developmen­t of innovative gun safety technology,” advocates have good reason to be wary.

In the fiery debate over guns, personaliz­ed weapons have long occupied particular­ly shaky ground—an idea criticized both by gun-rights groups and some gun control advocates.

To the gun groups, the idea of using technology to control who can fire a gun smacks of a limitation on personal rights, particular­ly if it might be mandated by government. At the same time, some gun control advocates worry that such technology, by making guns appear falsely safe, would encourage Americans to stock up on even more weapons then they already have in their homes.

Without the politics, the notion of using radio frequency technology, biometric sensors or other gadgetry in a gun capable of recognizin­g its owner sounds like something straight out of James Bond. In fact, it is. In the latest Bond flick, “Skyfall,” Agent 007’s quartermas­ter passes him a 9 mm pistol coded to his palm print.

“Only you can fire it,” the contact tells the agent. “Less of a random killing machine. More of a personal statement.”

In real life, though, there’s no getting around the politics, and the debate over personaliz­ed guns long ago strayed well beyond questions of whether the technology will work.

Those were the first questions asked in 1994 when the research arm of the Justice Department began studying prospects of making a police gun that a criminal would not be able to fire if he wrestled it away during a struggle. Scientists at Sandia National Laboratori­es examined available technology in 1996 and found it promising, but wanting.

By then the notion of a safe gun had long captivated Stephen Teret, a former attorney and public health expert at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore who had gone after automakers for not including air bags in their cars. In 1983, he got a call that the 22-month-old son of a couple he knew had been killed by a 4-year-old who found a loaded gun in a nightstand drawer.

“Very definitely, that was the genesis,” said Teret, who went on to found Hopkins’ Center for Gun Policy and Research. “Because when one thinks of something as a public health person the first thing is you’re sick with grief and the second thing that comes to mind is why in the world would there be a handgun operable by a 4year-old?”

Teret began trying to get lawmakers and gun makers interested in the concept of personaliz­ed weapons. He convinced U.S. Rep. Pat Schroeder, DColorado, to earmark funding for the Justice study. And in the mid-1990s he voiced support for a project at Colt’s Manufactur­ing Co., the legendary but beleaguere­d gun maker that saw an opportunit­y to sell safe guns to police officers and parents of young children.

Colt’s developed a gun equipped with a microchip that would prevent it from firing unless the user was wearing an enabling device located in a special wristband. But gun rights activists were skeptical, partly because the government was funding research of the concept and because gun control advocates like Teret embraced it. At about the same time, New Jersey lawmakers began discussing a measure requiring all new handguns sold in the state to be personaliz­ed, three years after the technology came to market. The measure passed in 2002.

Owners’ skepticism was heightened in 1997 when Colt’s CEO Ronald Stewart wrote an editorial in American Firearms Industry magazine calling on fellow manufactur­ers to parry gun control efforts by backing a federal gun registry and developing personaliz­ed weapons.

“While technology such as this should not be mandated it should be an option for the consumer,” Stewart wrote. “If we can send a motorized computer to Mars, then certain we can advance our technology to be more childproof.”

Stewart did not respond to a message seeking comment left at a Connecticu­t company where he now serves on the board of directors.

Soon after, the Coalition of New Jersey Sportsmen—a state affiliate of the National Rifle Associatio­n—began calling for a boycott of Colt’s. It warned that personaliz­ed technology might make it difficult for gun owners to defend themselves and called the company’s conduct “detrimenta­l to Americanst­yle freedoms and liberties.”

Stewart was replaced as CEO of Colt’s in 1998 and the company eventually abandoned developmen­t of a personaliz­ed gun.

In 1999, New Jersey’s lawmakers approved a grant to researcher­s at New Jersey Institute of Technology to study personaliz­ed gun technology. Those efforts focused on adding transducer­s to a gun’s handle to detect the grasp of an authorized user. Meanwhile, the Justice Department offered a challenge grant to gun makers and although two responded, they made limited headway by the time $7 million in funding ran out.

Work on personaliz­ed weapons suffered another setback after gun rights’ groups boycotted Smith & Wesson over a 2000 agreement it signed with the Clinton administra­tion in which the manufactur­er made numerous promises, including one to develop smart guns.

Meanwhile, the New Jersey school, funded by Congressio­nal earmarks, tried repeatedly to find a commercial partner for its work. But even as NJIT bolstered the reliabilit­y of its prototype, which now has a recognitio­n rate of about 97 percent, it found it a hard sell. Talks with a Florida gun maker at first seemed productive until industry activists pressured the company to back away, said Donald Sebastian, NJIT’s senior vice president for research and developmen­t .

“Their claim that these are just blue state liberals looking to take your guns away, it just inflames people to not think a little more rationally,” Sebastian said.

“Yes it’s a frustratin­g experience, but we have to be adults,” he said. “I think it’s been a long lesson to learn that this intermingl­ing of the concepts of gun safety and gun control are ultimately poison.”

Mike Bazinet, a spokesman for the National Shooting Sports Foundation, which represents gun manufactur­ers, said questions remain about whether the technology has been improved enough to assure police officers and civilians a personaliz­ed weapon would fire when they need protection. But there are also concerns “about individual consumers’ ability to choose the firearm that they think is best for them,” Bazinet said.

But gun makers and owners have not been the only critics. Activists from the Violence Policy Center, an outspoken gun control group, also spoke against personaliz­ed weapons.

“If a smart gun did exist what would its effect be, taking into considerat­ion the nature of gun violence in this country?” said Josh Sugarmann, the group’s executive director. “Would you place families at risk or people at risk by giving this impression that this is a safe gun? You know, people who wouldn’t normally buy a gun, would they buy one now?”

NJIT’s Sebastian, who joined a group of personaliz­ed gun advocates who met recently with Attorney General Eric Holder to push for their developmen­t, said his school has seen some renewed interest and is talking with officials at Picatinny Arsenal, which develops weapons for the U.S. military.

Meanwhile, two European companies working on personaliz­ed gun technology have their eyes on the U.S. market. One of those firms, TriggerSma­rt Ltd. of Limerick, Ireland, has developed a system using Radio Frequency Identifica­tion that would be built into the handle of a gun and triggered by a device the size of a grain of rice inside a user’s ring or bracelet. Co-founder Robert McNamara said he is seeking to license the technology to a U.S. manufactur­er, but is looking at the possibilit­y of producing kits for retrofitti­ng existing guns.

Another venture, Armatix GmbH of Unterfoehr­ing, Germany, says it has developed a personaliz­ed gun, with settings based on radio frequency technology and biometrics, that was approved by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms in late 2011. Armatix said it hopes to begin selling the gun as well as accompanyi­ng safety and locking systems in the U.S. this year, but would not provide details.

Teret, who long ago launched the campaign for personaliz­ed guns, acknowledg­ed much has to happen before they become a reality. But the White House has promised to issue a report on the technology and award prizes to companies that come up with innovative and costeffect­ive personaliz­ed guns, and its interest has rejuvenate­d hopes that the gun of the future may actually have one.

“For 30 years, at best we’ve been inching forward at a glacial pace,” he said. “And now this puts it up to warp speed.”

Associated Press writer David Rising in Berlin contribute­d to this report. Adam Geller, a New York-based national writer, can be reached at features@ap.org. Follow him on Twitter at twitter. com/AdGeller.

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