By RUSSELL BERMAN
Staff Reporter of the Sun
April
15, 2008
WASHINGTON — Mayor Bloomberg, having had little success
drawing federal lawmakers to his fight against illegal guns, is turning his
attention to the nation's largest firearms seller.
The mayor yesterday announced what he characterized as a
groundbreaking partnership with Wal-Mart to beef up its standards for gun sales
at 1,100 locations nationwide. The 10-point voluntary agreement is aimed at
enhancing the chain's ability to keep guns away from criminals and the mentally
disabled.
"Wal-Mart clearly shares our goals, and their commitment
to public safety really is commendable," Mr. Bloomberg said at the outset of the
third annual summit of the Mayors Against Illegal Guns coalition he formed in
2006. The mayor said he hoped the agreement would establish a "Wal-Mart
standard" of best practices for gun dealers across the country.
The partnership gives Mr. Bloomberg a key private sector
ally in his campaign against illegal firearm sales, which has drawn the fury of
gun rights groups and manufacturers. The mayor has struggled to get Congress to
sign on to his agenda, and he was stymied last year in an aggressive push to
repeal a law that restricts the use of gun tracing data by law enforcement.
Under the pact, Wal-Mart will videotape all gun
purchases at its stores and keep the tapes for six months, and it will conduct
criminal background checks on all employees selling or handling firearms. The
chain will also implement a computerized alert system to flag customers with
suspicious purchasing histories. Other aspects of the agreement include enhanced
inventory checks and security measures to prevent lost and stolen guns, along
with more stringent checks of customer IDs. "This code is an avenue for Wal-Mart
to strengthen our standards, and we hope other retailers will follow suit," a
senior vice president of Wal-Mart and its chief compliance officer, J.P. Suarez,
said. The company, he said, shares "the goal of making sure that guns don't
reach the wrong hands."
Wal-Mart has tried without success to open its first
store in the five boroughs, but Mr. Suarez told The New York Sun that the
partnership with Mr. Bloomberg and his coalition would have no impact on those
efforts. "We're doing it because we believe it's the right thing," he said. As
for a potential Wal-Mart in New York City, he said: "We continue to evaluate
sites."
Ms. Bloomberg suggested Wal-Mart was more than welcome.
"Companies that understand that they have an obligation to the people that they
sell to and the communities that they exist in are the kind of companies that we
want in New York City," he said, "and I think every city should
want."