Where's the D.A.?
As expected, the National Rifle Association sprinted
into court and got a temporary hold yesterday on the five gun-control laws
enacted in Philadelphia.
Unexpected, however, was District Attorney Lynne M.
Abraham's announcing that she wouldn't prosecute anyone charged under the new
ordinances.
Call it selective prosecution.
Fed up with the daily shootings in Philadelphia, the
City Council passed - and Mayor Nutter promptly signed - ordinances last week
that limit handgun purchases, target gun trafficking, and subject gun ownership
to much-needed greater oversight by the Police Department.
Kudos to Council and the mayor for their strong stand.
Too bad Abraham refused to stand by them.
Abraham believes the new laws are unconstitutional. She
may be right. But with all due respect to wannabe Judge Abraham, she should
enforce the laws on the books, not interpret them.
Nutter rightly says he'll deal with the legal fallout.
The mayor and Council are well-aware of a 1996 Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruling
that says only the state General Assembly has the power to regulate firearms.
Nutter also is aware of the 392 murders in the city last
year - many committed with stolen handguns. He doesn't plan to fiddle while
lawmakers in Harrisburg look the other way.
Nutter is outraged by the shootings, and frankly, so are
many others in the city and the suburbs - including gun owners. Polls show the
public favors reasonable gun-control measures.
Council's unanimous passage of the gun laws was intended
to highlight the inaction in Harrisburg. Last month, state lawmakers rejected a
measure requiring owners to report lost and stolen guns.
Despite the setback, and the city efforts, the best
chances for gun-control reform remain in the state capitals.
New Jersey passed its anti-trafficking gun-reporting
law, and nearly a dozen states are at work on similar proposals. All told,
dozens of gun-safety reforms are being promoted in nearly half the states.
The fight for better gun-control laws should continue in
Harrisburg. That's the best way for gun-plagued communities across the state to
get help...