[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 49 (Friday, March 26, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S2159]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CLOSING THE GUN SHOW LOOPHOLE
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, on March 4, 2010, John Patrick Bedell, a
36-year-old Californian with a history of mental illness, arrived at
the Pentagon after a manic, cross-country journey. At 6:40 pm, Mr.
Bedell, armed with two 9mm handguns, walked to the security checkpoint
at the Pentagon entrance and started shooting. Three Pentagon security
officers, Colin Richards, Jeffrey Amos and Marvin Carraway, returned
fire and brought down Mr. Bedell, who later died from his injuries. Mr.
Amos and Mr. Carraway were wounded in the exchange, but thankfully have
fully recovered. If not for the decisive action taken by these brave
officers, this apparently random attack could have claimed more
victims. And while I am pleased the Pentagon's security system worked
in this instance, I remain deeply troubled by the fact that Mr. Bedell
was able to acquire firearms in the first place.
Since the shooting, law enforcement officials have been able to
partially trace the firearms used by Mr. Bedell. One handgun was sold
last year to a private individual at a Las Vegas gun show, and that
person later resold the gun to a third person. At that point, according
to authorities, they were not able to further trace the gun's ownership
history until Mr. Bedell opened fire on March 4. This murky trail
perfectly illustrates the danger of unregulated, private firearm
transactions.
Under the Brady Law, before an individual can purchase a gun from a
licensed dealer, they must pass a background check to ensure they are
not legally prohibited from purchasing a firearm. In 2008, 9.9 million
background checks were conducted for firearm purchases, 147,000 of
which were rejected. The majority of these denials were the consequence
of a prior conviction, indictment or a history of mental illness.
However, when an individual purchases a handgun from a private citizen,
who is not a licensed gun dealer, there are no requirements to ensure
that the purchaser is not in a prohibited category. Neither the Las
Vegas gun show sale, nor the subsequent private transactions that
ultimately resulted in Mr. Bedell acquiring the firearm, were
regulated. Due to this ``gun show loophole'' in federal law,
authorities were not aware of, or able to block this string of private
sales, which led to Mr. Bedell purchasing the weapon and using it to
attack the Pentagon. In fact, according to news reports, Mr. Bedell
attempted to buy a gun from a licensed firearm dealer in California,
but the sale was blocked because he fell into a prohibited category.
Because private party transactions account for approximately 40
percent of all gun sales, current Federal background check requirements
have a limited impact on the overall rates of gun related violent
crime. To better protect our communities from gun related violence,
background checks should be required for all prospective firearm
transactions, including private transactions. To that end, I am a
cosponsor of the Gun Show Background Check Act of 2009, S.843, which
was introduced by Senator Frank Lautenberg. This bill would extend the
protections of the Brady Law to purchases made at gun shows, thereby
closing the loophole that currently permits gun sales without criminal
background checks. I urge my colleagues to take up and pass this
commonsense legislation.
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