[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 65 (Wednesday, May 9, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H2455]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MULTIPLE SALES REPORTING
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Quigley) for 5 minutes.
Mr. QUIGLEY. Mr. Speaker, last week the ATF announced the results of
the first 8 months of its Multiple Sales Reporting program, or MSR, for
semiautomatic rifles. The numbers prove the MSR is already an
invaluable tool in fighting gun trafficking along the southwest border.
There were more than 3,000 reports accounting for the purchase of 7,300
rifles between Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California. These
reports resulted in more than 120 criminal investigations; and,
subsequently, 25 cases involving 100 defendants have been recommended
for prosecution. The ATF also reported a decline in large volume rifle
purchases, indicating that traffickers are altering their criminal
activity due to the new reporting requirement.
The MSR program was created to counteract the dangerous trafficking
of guns along our border with Mexico. These guns fuel the cartels' war
in Mexico, destabilizing our southern neighbor and third-largest
trading partner. According to ATF data, 70 percent of the firearms
recovered and traced from drug cartel crimes in Mexico originated in
the United States.
So in light of the positive impact the MSR has had, what is the House
voting to do just this week? That's right, repeal the measure. A policy
rider in the Commerce, Justice, and Science 2013 appropriations bill
would cut off funding for reporting the sale of multiple semiautomatic
rifles. Yes, this House will vote to block funding that is successfully
removing semiautomatic rifles from the underground gun trade. These are
the guns that endanger Americans along the border and fuel an all-out
war in a neighboring country. Ending the MSR requirement is not about
protecting anyone's rights.
Reporting the sale of multiple semiautomatic rifles does not infringe
on Second Amendment rights. In fact, a similar Multiple Sales Reporting
requirement has been in place for handguns for over 20 years. The
necessary paperwork takes gun dealers 12 minutes to complete, but can
give law enforcement crucial intelligence on straw purchased rifles.
A George Bush-appointed Federal judge upheld the MSR requirement,
finding that it did not disturb the balance between regulation and a
gun owner's right to privacy. So the gun lobby has now turned to
cutting its funding because why allow programs successfully fighting
gun trafficking to continue undisturbed? This has become an all-too-
familiar event for the ATF, which has operated under temporary
leadership since 2006 due to blocked confirmation in the Senate. But
it's beyond just that administration.
According to The Washington Post, in 2010, the ATF had the same
number of agents it had in 1970 while the FBI has grown by 50 percent
and the DEA by 233 percent. Gun ownership records are kept on paper
because the NRA has successfully lobbied against funding computerized
records.
With recordkeeping from the fifties and funding from the seventies,
it's no wonder law enforcement struggles in 2012. So maybe it's not
surprising the MSR program would encounter such heated opposition. An
effective investigative tool for law enforcement with only a negligible
effect on gun dealers, that would be evidence of regulatory solutions
that can work for everyone--the dealers, the buyers, and, most
importantly, the public. And that's exactly what the gun lobby doesn't
want.
If commonsense solutions like Multiple Sales Reporting can stand,
what's next? Requiring background checks for sales at gun shows, which
69 percent of NRA members support? Denying people on the terrorist
watch list the right to buy a gun?
To the gun lobby, there's nothing scarier than common sense winning
out. So this week, let's scare them. Let's win one for common sense.
Let's keep reporting the sale of multiple semiautomatic rifles like we
do with handguns. Let's allow the ATF to continue making progress
against dangerous gun trafficking on our southwest border. Let's make a
choice that's best for law enforcement, our security, and for common
sense.
____________________