[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 160 (Thursday, October 5, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6351-S6352]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AUTOMATIC GUNFIRE PREVENTION ACT
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, yesterday I introduced the Automatic
Gunfire Prevention Act of 2017.
First, I would like to thank Senators Blumenthal, Murphy, Schumer,
Durbin, Leahy, Cortez Masto, Van Hollen, Gillibrand, Klobuchar, Markey,
Casey, Reed, Hassan, Merkley, Carper, Cardin, Coons, Franken, Harris,
Booker, Whitehouse, Hirono, Sanders, Warren, Cantwell, McCaskill,
Nelson, Murray, Udall, Kaine, Warner, Bennet, Schatz, Wyden, Brown,
Duckworth, Menendez, and Baldwin for cosponsoring this legislation.
Their support for this bill is deeply appreciated.
Just days ago, in Las Vegas, NV, we experienced the worst mass
shooting--in terms of the number of victims--in our Nation's history.
There are now at least 58 dead and nearly 500 wounded as a result of
that attack. The grief and pain of so many victims and their loved ones
is overwhelming and all too familiar to gun violence victims and
survivors all across America.
What makes this mass shooting particularly devastating is that the
shooting was done by a single gunman. Within minutes, the gunman
exacted devastating firepower on hundreds of people, terrorizing
concertgoers and an entire community.
How was this possible?
While facts are still being uncovered, we know that this particular
gunman had amassed a vast arsenal. He had at least 23 firearms and
hundreds of rounds of ammunition in his hotel room among which were 12
semiautomatic rifles enhanced with ``bump-stock'' devices.
These bump-stock devices are typically used to turn semiautomatic
rifles into functional machine guns, capable of shooting hundreds of
bullets per minute.
A semiautomatic rifle's rate of fire is usually 45 to 60 rounds per
minute. With a bump-stock device attached, these semiautomatic weapons
can fire up to 700 rounds per minute. Bump-stock devices are readily
accessible. They can be purchased online or at a store by anyone for
merely $100.
Anyone who has seen YouTube video clips of semiautomatic rifles
outfitted with these devices knows just how devastating they are.
The number of bullets that can be sprayed into a crowd within minutes
is staggering.
Because they are so dangerous, automatic machine-gun-like weapons
have been categorically banned in America since 1986 under the National
Firearms Act.
This law was a direct response to the Prohibition Era's mobster
crimes during which machine guns were used to kill their victims at a
deadly rate.
One seminal event during this period was the St. Valentine's Day
Massacre of 1929.
That tragic day was marked by the murder of seven men in a garage on
the North Side of Chicago. The massacre was the culmination of a feud
between an Irish American gang and another gang led by Al Capone.
Organized crime was rampant during that era, and fully automatic
weapons were the weapons of choice for gangsters. Indeed, the men who
committed the St. Valentine's Day Massacre used Thompson submachine
guns, known as ``Tommy guns,'' to mow down their victims.
The St. Valentine's Day Massacre, which remains in infamy, clearly
demonstrated that elected leaders must do something about this violence
and get these fully automatic guns out of the hands of killers.
As a result, the National Firearms Act was enacted in 1934. When
originally passed, it heavily regulated machine guns, imposing a tax on
the making and transferring of machine guns and other lethal weapons.
It also imposed a special occupational tax on those engaged in the
business of importing, manufacturing, and dealing in firearms regulated
under the National Firearms Act.
It also required the registration of all machine guns and other guns
regulated under the National Firearms Act with the Treasury Secretary.
Later, in 1986, the National Firearms Act was amended to ban all
future automatic weapons from private possession, except for those
legally owned and registered as of May 19, 1986.
Therefore, today, automatic weapons are generally banned for civilian
use--and rightfully so. They are absolutely lethal weapons of war and
have no business being in our homes, our schools, our businesses, and
our streets.
Notwithstanding this outright ban, there is a loophole in the law
that allows bump-stock devices to configure legal semiautomatic weapons
so that they can function like a fully automatic weapon. This loophole
must be closed.
If automatic weapons are banned, these devices should be banned.
There is no functional difference between automatic weapons and a bump-
stock enhanced semiautomatic weapon. Such devices are simply not needed
to hunt
[[Page S6352]]
or to use in a private home for self-defense.
Like we saw in Las Vegas, these bump-stock devices allow those with a
motive to kill to use fully legal firearms to wreak havoc and kill
large numbers of people within minutes.
The bill I have introduced is straightforward. It closes the loophole
that allows civilians to purchase and use devices that convert
semiautomatic weapons into machine guns. Specifically, it bans the
sale, transfer, importation, manufacturing, or possession of bump fire
devices, trigger cranks, or anything that accelerates a semiautomatic
rifle's rate of fire.
The bill further provides an exception to this ban, by allowing for
the lawful possession of these devices by law enforcement and the
government.
Those who violate the ban would be subject to the same penalty
available to those who illegally possess a machine gun under current
law.
Closing this loophole should not be a partisan issue. Anyone who has
seen footage from the shooting in Las Vegas should recognize that
weapons that are altered to emulate automatic gunfire should not be
permitted in our communities.
In my view, this bill is a modest proposal. It was one that was
included in the Assault Weapons Ban legislation that I proposed 4 years
ago, which we failed to pass in 2013.
Tragically, had that legislation been enacted in 2013, it could have
perhaps saved lives in Las Vegas.
Indeed, when the police dispatcher was first contacted in Las Vegas
at 10:09 PM local time, it took 11 minutes until the last shots were
fired and the suspect was neutralized.
Think of that for a moment. If automatic gunfire had been impossible
for the gunman, less shots would have sprayed through Las Vegas that
night, and less people may have died. That is extraordinarily sobering.
I recall standing here on this floor nearly 4 years ago, urging my
colleagues to adopt the assault weapons ban, pleading that it could
possibly save lives.
That was on the heels of one of the darkest days in American history,
when 20 beautiful children and 6 educators had their lives taken at
Sandy Hook Elementary School. It is an absolute travesty that Congress
refused to act back then.
It is my strongest belief that when our Nation is faced with dire
situations--like sickness, or job stagnation, or human trafficking--it
is our job, our solemn oath as lawmakers, to try to solve these
problems.
We utterly forsake that solemn oath when we simply do nothing; when
we yield to cynicism or to a single lobbying faction.
If we do not act today, we are failing the American people. We are
failing our communities. We are failing responsible gun owners.
I urge all of my colleagues to support this bill. We must act. Now is
the time.
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