[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 107 (Tuesday, July 5, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H4199-H4200]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AND THE NEED FOR UNIVERSAL BACKGROUND CHECKS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Maryland (Ms. Edwards) for 5 minutes.
Ms. EDWARDS. Mr. Speaker, years before coming to Congress, as many of
my colleagues know, I cofounded and served as the executive director of
the National Network to End Domestic Violence.
Twenty years ago, we worked with a bipartisan Congress to pass the
Domestic Violence Offender Gun Ban. It became law in 1996. It was known
as the Lautenberg amendment, after the late Senator Frank Lautenberg of
New Jersey.
{time} 1245
Since that time, we have made a lot of progress in preventing
domestic violence, but, sadly, there are several Mack Truck-size
loopholes that prevent the law from coming to its full effect. In fact,
just last week, in a fight against the gun lobby, yet again, over these
last 20 years, the Supreme Court upheld the domestic violence offender
gun ban in a 6-2 decision.
As many know, leaving an abusive relationship is the most dangerous
time for a domestic violence victim, and adding a firearm to that
situation severely heightens the risk of injury or death. In fact, in
America, the majority of fatal domestic violence homicides are
committed with firearms. At least 52 percent of American women murdered
with guns are killed by intimate partners or family members.
Despite impressions from media coverage, mass shootings in which at
least four people are murdered with a gun
[[Page H4200]]
are also typically acts of domestic or family violence. An Everytown,
USA, analysis of every mass shooting between 2009 and 2015 found that
57 percent were committed by intimate partners or the family of
victims.
Research shows that commonsense gun laws have a marked effect on
improving women's safety from gun violence. In States that require
background checks for all handgun sales, 46 percent fewer women are
murdered with a gun by an intimate partner. And State laws ensuring
that convicted abusers or those subject to domestic violence
restraining orders are separated from their firearms are also
associated with reductions in gun violence against women. But because
of loopholes in these laws and failures to enforce them, they do little
to curb the uniquely lethal American problem of guns and violence
against women.
Four gaps in the law are particularly harmful. First, Federal law
does nothing to keep guns out of the hands of abusive dating partners
or convicted stalkers. The Federal law prohibits domestic abusers from
buying or owning guns but doesn't apply to dangerous people convicted
of misdemeanor stalking offenses or to dating partners, even though
more women in the U.S. are killed by their dating partners than their
spouses.
Second, in 35 States, State law does not prohibit all people
convicted of misdemeanor domestic violence crimes and all people
subject to restraining orders from buying or using guns.
Third, and importantly, Federal law allows domestic abusers and
stalkers to easily evade gun prohibitions by purchasing guns from
unlicensed private sellers. That is the Mack Truck loophole. Federal
law only requires background checks for gun sales at licensed dealers.
Sixteen States require checks on all handgun sales, but in the
remaining States, prohibited abusers seeking to avoid a background
check have very little trouble purchasing a gun from an unlicensed
dealer they meet online, at a gun show, or in a parking lot.
Prohibited domestic abusers know about this loophole and they have
taken advantage of it to deadly effect. And, in fact, in a first-of-
its-kind investigation of illegal gun sales, Mayors Against Illegal
Guns found that one in four prohibited purchasers seeking guns online
had a domestic violence arrest.
Finally, 41 States do not require prohibited abusers to relinquish
the guns they already own, so I have joined in legislation to prohibit
these guns from falling into the hands of domestic abusers. We know
that a proven way to help with people who are not eligible to purchase
guns, such as felons and domestic abusers, is to expand and strengthen
universal background checks on all firearms sales no matter where that
sale takes place. And, very tragically, our lax gun laws make it easier
for abusers to acquire a firearm than it is, in fact, to purchase a box
of Sudafed.
So you ask, Mr. Speaker, why do we protest? Why did we take the
dramatic action of taking to the floor of this House?
It is because we have had enough, and we know that, working together,
we can and must change the fact that women across this country lose
their lives to gun violence by their domestic abusers.
Nine American women are shot and killed by their husbands and
intimate partners every single week. We can do something about it.
Let's close the gun show loophole.
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