Yuma Sun

‘Second Amendment Sanctuarie­s’ are the Right’s new gun push

- BY JOHN L. MICEK

When one of the Pennsylvan­ia Legislatur­e’s most conservati­ve members announced her desire to pass “Second Amendment Sanctuary” ordinances that defy state and federal gun laws, the temptation at first was to laugh and shake your head in disbelief.

In barely a year in the state House, Rep. Stephanie Borowicz, a Republican who hails from rural Clinton County, has proven to be anything but shy when it comes to courting controvers­y. So when Borowicz dropped her press release on “Second Amendment Sanctuarie­s,” it barely registered as a ripple on Twitter.

But as The Trace, a site that tracks gun violence-reduction efforts reports, there’s plenty of reason to pay attention. That’s because Borowicz has quietly inserted herself into a movement that stretches across “more than 400 municipali­ties in 20 states.”

If the term “Second Amendment Sanctuary,” sounds familiar, there’s a reason for that. As The Trace reports, backers purposeful­ly modeled them on so-called “Sanctuary Cities,” where local officials decline to cooperate with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s.

“We’re just stealing the language that sanctuary cities use,” Bryan Kibler, the state’s attorney in Effingham County, Illinois, told the Associated Press in 2018, according to The Trace.

The county approved its own “gun sanctuary” in April 2018, according to published reports, saying gun laws then under considerat­ion by the Illinois General Assembly were unconstitu­tionally broad.

As The Daily Item of Sunbury, Pa. reported earlier this month, the state branch of a group called Gun Owners of America has volunteers working statewide on such ordinances. Officials in Bradford County, along the New York state border enacted such a resolution last December. Another northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia municipali­ty is reportedly considerin­g its own resolution.

In her statement, Borowicz said she was “expressing my complete support” for efforts in two counties in her district to protect law-abiding … residents against unconstitu­tional gun control laws imposed in Harrisburg or Washington, D.C.”

Among those measures are a proposed “red flag” law now before the Legislatur­e that would allow police, acting on a court-order, to temporaril­y seize someone’s weapons if they believe they pose an immediate threat to themselves or to public safety.

These “extreme risk protection order” laws, as they’re formally known have been shown in other states to have reduced gun crimes and suicide.

While legal experts and others believe “Second Amendment Sanctuarie­s” are mostly symbolic and not legally binding, others say that they could lead to expensive litigation for local government­s that decline to enforce state and federal gun laws.

“To the extent that police chiefs and especially prosecutor­s view these actions by local government­s as reflection­s of widespread community sentiment, they may feel more comfortabl­e in adjusting their own exercise of discretion in making arrests and in charging decisions,” George Mason University law professor Nelson Lund told The Daily Item. “At least in that sense, it is probably not accurate to characteri­ze them as mere ‘publicity stunts.”

Ultimately, the final battle over these local ordinances will be waged in the courts.

“The proper procedure if law enforcemen­t officers and local government­s have issue with new laws is to bring legal action in the courts, and have courts determine whether those laws are constituti­onal,” Jonathan Lowy, the vice president of the legal action project at the gun reform group Brady, told The Trace.

There is no small irony here that the very legislator­s and officials pursuing these “sanctuary” protection­s are those who kick back the hardest when local officials, tired of federal and state-level inaction on gun violence-reduction issues, move to enact ordinances stronger than those in existing federal law.

Such was the case when officials in Pittsburgh enacted tough local ordinances in the wake of a murderous spree at the Tree of Life Synagogue in 2018 that claimed the lives of 11 people.

Pennsylvan­ia state Rep. Daryl Metcalfe, a Republican and outspoken gun-rights activist, called for Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto’s impeachmen­t as a result.

Republican­s already have an image problem with voters when it comes to gun issues. They’ll have even more explaining to do when a mass shooting erupts in one of their Second Amendment paradises.

Copyright 2020 John L. Micek, distribute­d by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. An award-winning political journalist, John L. Micek is Editor-in-Chief of The Pennsylvan­ia Capital-Star in Harrisburg, Pa. Email him at jmicek@penncapita­l-star.com and follow him on Twitter @ByJohnLMic­ek.

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