There's an old rule in journalism that three of anything
equals a trend story. So allow me to suggest, using the examples below, that
commonsense gun-law proponents are gaining ground in this scared state.
Last spring, I wrote about Pennsylvania towns' enacting
gun measures in defiance of the powerful National Rifle Association and wimpy
state legislature. In a matter of months, nine cities - including Lancaster,
Pittsburgh, and Erie - attacked illegal gun trafficking by making it a crime not
to report a weapon that's been lost or stolen.
Last week, after unrelenting protests by the faith-based
group Heeding God's Call, the U.S. Attorney's Office filed charges accusing
Colosimo's Gun Center of selling to straw buyers. In days, Colosimo's owner
pleaded guilty and Philadelphia's most notorious gun shop was out of
business.
Now, the NRA is lashing out at the surging ranks of a
group called Mayors Against Illegal Guns.
The mayors' group aims to honor the right to bear arms
while "fighting to keep criminals from possessing guns illegally." The NRA
suspects the mayors really want to gut the Second Amendment.
So earlier this month, the gun lobby launched a mass
mailing accusing the mayors of harboring a more radical agenda. Some politicians
buckled, but most decried the "smear campaign" to scare them into silence.
Vineland, N.J., Mayor Robert Romano - a 34-year police
veteran and proud gun owner - was so steamed he held a news conference and posed
with his weapons.
"The NRA is not being truthful," Romano told me. "They
view this organization as a threat. And now they want to dismantle us."
Strength in numbers
Of the 450 members of Mayors Against Illegal Guns (www.mayorsagainstillegalguns.org),
125 are from Pennsylvania. Michael Nutter stands up for the cause. So does Joe
Cisco, longtime mayor of Ellport Borough, population 1,700.
"Please don't take this the wrong way," Cisco told me,
"but we don't want our small community to end up like Philadelphia."
Cisco, a Western Pennsylvania hunter and retired
steel-mill worker, saw the group as a way to keep big-city violence at bay.
"Then I got this postcard saying I'd joined an elite
antigun group," a still-disgusted Cisco said. "It just slandered us up and
down."
NRA members all over Ellport received the same postcard
and dutifully followed instructions to harass Cisco. The harshest threats were
anonymous; those who left a name got a call back offering a personal visit from
the mayor to "tell my side of the story."
NRA spokeswoman Alexa Fritts would not say how many
postcards went out, but she insisted the "education campaign" was not meant to
intimidate.
Still, Fritts said that survival-minded mayors did have
cause for concern: "They know it's not smart to be on the wrong side of the gun
issue."
Who's crying now?
A funny thing happened amid all the fearmongering:
Fourteen Pennsylvania mayors left the group, but 25 joined in spite of the
pressure.
Akron Borough's John McBeth quit in disgust, even though
he's running unopposed in his Lancaster County town of 4,000.
"I don't need the hassle," he said.
With time to think about the "smear campaign," McBeth
wonders if the one on the wrong side of the gun issue isn't the NRA.
He feels momentum building for municipal lost-and-stolen
laws. Eventually, we agree, leery legislators will have enough political cover
to pass a state law.
And if that happens, could a one-gun-a-month law be next?
Who knows, the NRA's treacherous tactics could fuel a legislative trend.
"I had about eight NRA members call me. I had 60 people
tell me they wished I would have stayed in or that they do not feel favorably
about the NRA," McBeth noted. "If I was simply doing the popular thing, I would
have stayed in."
Contact Monica Yant Kinney
at 215-854-4670 or
myant@phillynews.com.