Virginia Citizens Defense League, Inc.
PO. Box 513, Newington, VA 22122 • 804-639-0600 • 703-372-3285 • 757-271-3705 • 540-446-5783
08/12/09 - VCDL Update 8/12/09 - Part 3
The Sotomayor vote and the successful filibuster of state reciprocity for right-to-carry laws are being hailed as gun-control victories. The two votes supposedly show that politicians "can vote against the NRA and still win, and win in gun-friendly areas," as Paul Helmke, president of the Brady Campaign, phrased it. But a new Zogby poll suggests that things are a little more complicated. Zogby found that 52 percent of American voters would be against the re-election of any senator simply because he supports confirming a Supreme Court nominee "who does not believe in the right to keep and bear arms." Just 26 percent would support that senator. Mr. Helmke is right to believe that Judge Sotomayor is against gun ownership, and the Supreme Court is closely divided on the issue. What the poll tells us is that senators who voted for her should worry when their constituents find out about it. The polls on concealed handguns confirm the pro-gun attitudes of most Americans. Eighty-three percent support letting citizens carry concealed handguns; only 11 percent oppose it. Even among Democratic voters, the support is extremely high: Eighty percent of those who voted for Barack Obama for president support the right to carry a handgun. This reality is not just what voters tell pollsters. People are now packing heat in record numbers, according to USA Today. The positive results in the 39 states with right-to-carry laws have made a big difference in the popularity of the concealed-carry movement. The pro-gun views of the public suggest that the reciprocity bill for right-to-carry laws -- which was shot down on July 22 -- will be brought up again. The 58-39 majority in the Senate in favor of reciprocity was just two votes short of overcoming a Democratic filibuster. The NRA will have a chance to reload soon enough. ************************************************** 23. John Burnett at it again ************************************************** NPR reporter says U.S. 'weapons supermarkets' fueling Mexican drug violence http://tinyurl.com/nexmr7 August 1, 2009 Crackdown On Smuggled Guns Hindered By U.S. Laws by JOHN BURNETT For years, Mexican drug traffickers have used gun stores and gun shows in the U.S. as their weapons supermarkets. The world's most murderous drug mafias operate on a border with a country that has the most permissive gun laws in the developed world. Mexican President Felipe Calderon met with President Obama in April and asked the U.S. to do more to curb the flow of weapons smuggled into Mexico. The crackdown has begun, but it's hindered by the liberal U.S. gun laws. Last November, law enforcement in Reynosa, Mexico, just across the Rio Grande from Hidalgo, Texas, made this astonishing find: "500,000 rounds of ammunition, 300 assault rifles -- mainly [AK-47s] and [AR-15s] -- two grenade launchers, and 287 grenades," says Victor Trevino, the Mexican consul in Brownsville, Texas. "That's just in a single seizure." What's Reported None of these weapons has been traced yet. But a report released last month by the Government Accountability Office, based on traces done by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives on crime guns recovered in Mexico in 2008, states that nearly 90 percent originated in the U.S. The report acknowledges the data are incomplete because Mexico doesn't submit all its confiscated weapons for electronic tracing. The report's authors criticized U.S. federal law enforcement for the lack of a coherent campaign against weapons trafficking. The ATF is trying to do something about that now. Officials have created "gun-runner" task forces in Houston and south Texas dedicated to firearms trafficking. And they are targeting what's known as "straw purchases" -- when drug traffickers pay U.S. residents who don't have criminal records to buy the guns for them, then smuggle the weapons across the border to Mexico. "We typically will see a straw purchaser go from gun shop to gun shop on the same day and be paid $50 a gun sometimes, buy 10 different guns, make $500 in one day," says Dewey Webb, the special agent in charge of the ATF field office in Houston. Relaxed reporting requirements for arms purchases make it difficult for his agents. For instance, if you buy two handguns within five days, the dealer must report it to the ATF. But you can buy all the rifles you want, and the dealer doesn't have to report it. Then there's ammunition. Ammo is not just untraceable, Webb says, it's virtually unregulated. "You can go into any place that sells ammunition -- be it a gun store, or, I mean, even some gas stations and bait shops sell ammunition -- and you just buy as much as you want," Webb says. In a 2006 case, two Mexican nationals walked into Kirkpatrick Guns and Ammo in Laredo, bought 12,570 rounds of assorted ammunition and got caught only when an off-duty ATF agent walked in and arrested them after he learned they were not U.S. citizens. Gun Dealers: On The Defense Gun dealers in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas are defensive about the idea that they're somehow contributing to the cartel war. Charles Fredien, a longtime gun dealer and gunsmith in Brownsville, says if he suspects a customer is buying a weapon for somebody else, he won't sell it to the person. "We go through and check everything that's supposed to be done by the letter, and that's all we can do," Fredien says. "I don't have a crystal ball to look into and see if this guy's legitimate or not." Second Amendment defenders like the National Rifle Association have seized on the ATF's incomplete Mexican tracing data and asserted that many illegal weapons seized in Mexico could be coming from the international arms market. Grenades and grenade launchers, for instance, are not sold by U.S. gun dealers, but they are available on the black market in Central America. Ed Jones, a gunsmith in Fredien's store, says it seems the cartels have limitless resources. "They have the money; they can buy weapons anywhere in the world," Jones says. "They don't have to buy them secondhand off the United States." The ATF is using its additional agents in border states to investigate more gun trafficking cases and to make house calls on buyers of multiple weapons to see if they're legitimate. Addressing Trafficking But the problem, says Tom Diaz of the Violence Policy Center, a Washington gun control group, is that once the purchases are made, the horse is out of the barn. "It's really asking a bit too much to ask ATF, through its resources, to stop a problem that really is a systemic problem springing from our wide-open civilian gun market," Diaz says. Mexico has asked the U.S. not just to pursue gun traffickers on the border, but change the laws. But so far, the Obama administration has shown little interest in taking on the gun lobby. ************************************************** 24. Gym shooter bought from sites that sold to college gunmen ************************************************** CNN blames Internet gun dealers for mass murders The ignorance of the press on guns can be breathtaking. They are trying to find some kind of thread between gun sales over the internet and mass killings by bad guys. The best they could come up with is that Sodini bought some magazines and a magazine loader from a popular online firearms store. But CNN is missing the real key. What I can concerned about, and what has me tossing and turning at night, is: WHERE did Sodini buy his SHOES? Were they bought over the internet? If so, did any of the other mass killers buy their shoes over the internet from the same store? Is there some shoe bizarre online that sells shoes to killers in order to make sure they can get to the scene of mass murders comfortably? Perhaps they sell some type of "assault shoe?" What about shoe accessories? Could it be that the mass murderers all got shoehorns or shoestrings from the same internet store? Surely the key to such murders MUST lie in accessories and shopping habits! http://tinyurl.com/mldfqs ************************************************** 25. FYI -- Canadian Gun Laws ************************************************** Overview of Canadian firearms laws for those of you who might be visiting there: http://tinyurl.com/nspwzv ------------------------------------------- ***************************************************************************
Home
Our Accomplishments
VCDL in Action
Virginia Politics
Official Letters
Downloads & Reading
Newsletter
VA-ALERT
VCDL Calendar
VCDL Blog
Video Library
Follow VCDL on
VA Concealed Carry
VCDL Store
Sponsors
Gun Friendly Lawyers
Gun Owner Unfriendly
Links
Gun Shows
Meetings
Firearms Safety Policy
Join VCDL
Donate To VCDL
Donate To VCDL PAC
Contact Us