Our view: Laws on gun sales should be tightened
April
16, 2008
In tracing the source of guns used in Baltimore crimes
in 2006 and 2007, city police kept running into a usual suspect - the Valley
Guns shop in Baltimore County. It didn't matter that owner Sanford Abrams'
license had been revoked in 2004. A loophole in federal law allowed him to sell
off his inventory as a private collector - without any regulation.
That's the kind of loophole that makes a mockery of
reasonable laws aimed at keeping guns out of criminals' hands.
Mayor Sheila Dixon and other big-city mayors brought
their concerns about the so-called fire sale loophole to a congressional
committee yesterday. They want the loophole closed - and for sound reasons.
These private sales take place without criminal background checks and other
documentation required in retail purchases. A collector, especially someone who
has violated gun laws, shouldn't be able to profit from that illegal activity.
But strengthening gun laws is never easy. This year, state lawmakers rebuffed
four Dixon proposals, including a sensible request to require gun owners to
report stolen weapons.
Mayor Dixon has made illegal guns a priority. City
police now seek trace information on every gun recovered - about 3,000 last year
- to try and identify patterns of sales and rogue dealers…But experts say a
small percentage of the nation's licensed gun dealers are the problem. That's
the group the ATF should focus on. In Baltimore, federal authorities revoked the
license of Valley Guns owner Abrams in 2004 after finding he had violated
hundreds of gun sale regulations. But he fought it - and citizens of Baltimore
paid the price. Ms. Dixon said 142 guns traced to Valley Gun were among the
weapons used in crimes in the city during 2006-2007.
Gun shop owners who violate the law don't deserve the
right to remain in the business. The potential consequences are too
great.