[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 31 (Tuesday, March 5, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1097-S1098]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STOP ILLEGAL TRAFFICKING OF FIREARMS ACT
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, yesterday the Senate took an important
step forward when it comes to keeping guns out of the hands of
criminals. Senator Pat Leahy, chairman of the Judiciary Committee,
introduced bipartisan legislation to finally crack down on the straw
purchasing and illegal trafficking of firearms. I was happy to join in
introducing this bill. It is a bipartisan group of Senators, including
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, Senator Susan Collins, and my colleague
from Illinois, Senator Mark Kirk. Chairman Leahy's legislation combined
a straw purchasing bill he and I introduced earlier this year together
with a gun trafficking bill on which Senators Gillibrand and Kirk had
been working. We sat down with Senator Collins and crafted a new bill,
the Stop Illegal Trafficking of Firearms Act. It is important
legislation, and the need for it is very clear.
I have met a number of times in recent months with law enforcement
leaders in Chicago and across my State. I asked them what Congress can
do to help better protect our communities and our children, and one
thing I kept hearing over and over again was that we needed to crack
down on straw purchases. Time after time, law enforcement agencies say,
criminals and gang members commit crimes with guns they purchased
through others.
A typical straw purchase happens when someone who legally can
purchase a weapon and pass a background check buys a gun on behalf of
someone who cannot pass that same background check. When a straw
purchaser buys from a licensed gun dealer, the purchaser falsely claims
on the Federal sale form that he is the actual buyer of the gun. Under
current law, it is illegal to lie and buy a gun this way, but the only
charge a Federal prosecutor can bring is for knowingly making a false
statement on a Federal form--an offense which dramatically understates
the gravity of the situation.
We have had several hearings in the Senate Judiciary Committee,
including one I chaired on February 12, where U.S. attorneys have
testified that these paperwork prosecutions are wholly inadequate as a
deterrent for straw purchasing. Some of the critics even on my Senate
Judiciary Subcommittee panel said: Why don't you prosecute more? The
U.S. attorneys told us it's because these paperwork offenses are not
taken that seriously by the court. The new law we have written will be
taken seriously.
The cases, as they stand now, are hard to prove and have little jury
appeal. Even a conviction usually results in a very small sentence
under the current law. The reality is that straw purchasers think they
can make a fast $50 or more by buying a gun from somebody else, and
that the consequences are not that great. We need to change this
equation.
At the hearing I chaired in the Judiciary Committee's Constitution
Subcommittee on February 12, we heard powerful testimony from Sandra
Wortham from the South Side of Chicago. Her brother, a Chicago police
officer, Tom Wortham IV, was murdered in 2010 by gang members with a
handgun that had been straw purchased and trafficked to Chicago from
Mississippi. Almost 1 out of 10 crime guns in Chicago come from
Mississippi. We ask why. Because the standards for sales are lax in
Mississippi, and straw purchasers know they can fill the trunk of a car
with these purchased weapons and head to the Windy City and sell them
on the streets to thugs and drug gangs. Then, of course, they result in
tragedy.
The gang members who killed Officer Wortham were not allowed to buy a
handgun from a dealer because of their age and criminal records, but it
was real easy to get a straw purchased gun on the street. According to
an investigative report by the Chicago Tribune,
[[Page S1098]]
the man who straw purchased the gun that killed Officer Wortham did so
for a quick $100. The Tribune said he gave little thought to what he
was doing. ``I didn't even know what ATF stood for,'' the straw
purchaser said to the Tribune.
That was the gun that was used to kill Officer Wortham, a veteran of
two combat tours in Iraq, a leader in his community, one of Chicago's
finest, and he was gunned down in front of his parents' home. His
father was a retired Chicago police officer.
We need to send a message to those who think that straw purchasing
might be an easy way to make a quick buck. As Sandra Wortham said at
our hearing:
We need to do more to keep guns out of the wrong hands in
the first place. I don't think that makes us anti-gun, I
think it makes us pro-decent law abiding people.
I agree with Sandra Wortham. We can take steps consistent with the
Constitution and the Second Amendment to crack down on straw purchases
and gun-trafficking schemes that provide criminals with guns, and that
is what this bill does.
The bill we introduced yesterday will create a tough Federal crime to
punish and deter straw purchasing. It says that if a straw purchaser
buys a gun from a licensed dealer on behalf of someone else, the buyer
will face the prospect of significant jail time for up to 15 years.
They will face hard time for a Federal crime. The same penalty applies
to straw purchasers who buy a gun from a private seller on behalf of
someone he knows or is has reasonable cause to believe is a prohibited
purchaser.
The legislation also creates a separate Federal offense for firearms
trafficking, which is when someone transports or transfers firearms to
another when he knows or has reasonable cause to believe that transfer
violates Federal law. The bill provides for increased penalties if the
trafficker was a leader of an organized gang.
Cracking down straw purchasing and gun trafficking will help shut
down the pipeline of guns into cities such as Chicago, where gang
members use them on almost a daily basis to commit terrible crimes.
This section of our bill is named in honor of Hadiya Pendleton, the
15-year-old girl in Chicago who was shot and killed by alleged gang
members in January just days after she attended the inauguration of the
President of the United States here in Washington. Both Senator Kirk's
hope and mine is that these reforms--once signed into law--will help
prevent gang shootings and other gun crimes in the future.
It is time to move forward on this legislation and on other
commonsense proposals that will reduce the epidemic of gun violence in
America. This Thursday, the Senate Judiciary Committee will take up
this bipartisan legislation that was introduced yesterday. I hope we
can pass it out quickly with a strong bipartisan vote.
I also look forward to voting in committee for bills to improve our
system of criminal background checks and to stop the flood of new
military-style and high-capacity magazines onto our streets. It is time
for Congress to move forward with these measures to reduce gun
violence. These proposals will not stop every shooting in America--no
proposal can--but they will save lives if we put them into effect.
I again thank my colleagues Chairman Leahy, Senator Kirk, Senator
Gillibrand, and Senator Collins for collectively joining together to
make sure this legislation moves forward. I think we can do something
important, on a bipartisan basis, to make our streets, schools, and
communities safer across America.
I ask unanimous consent that my following statement be placed in a
separate part of the Record.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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