Washington’s “universal background check” battle has warmed up with the usual rhetoric, and an arrest last night
in Wednesday’s fatal White Center shooting shows what is wrong with the
push for such checks, while a look at what’s happening in Connecticut shows where gun prohibitionists want to take the Evergreen State.
The King County Sheriff’s office
reported that major crimes detectives arrested an 18-year-old Seatac
man in connection with the deadly shooting that killed a 17-year-old
sitting in a car. A press release from the agency said no other suspects
are being sought.
Under Washington State law, an 18-year-old would not be able to
legally carry a concealed handgun. He certainly would not be able to
purchase one legally, and it’s a safe bet that if the fellow currently
in custody is responsible, he did not go through a background check and
never would.
Ditto the kid who is now charged in last month’s slaying in the Greenwood district of North Seattle.
But backers of Initiative 594 seem reluctant or unable to discuss
this little problem with their proposed law. Instead, the Rev. Sandy
Brown from Seattle’s First United Methodist Church declared that they
want to change the state’s gun laws. Many in the firearms community are
convinced that if I-594 — the 18-page gun control
measure touted as a “universal background check” proposal — passes, it
will open the door to the kind of law now causing trouble in
Connecticut. That kind of law, gun owners believe, is really what the
well-financed anti-gunners want for Washington.
The NBC affiliate in Hartford reported
yesterday that, “Starting April 1, gun buyers will be required to apply
for a certificate from the state before purchasing any long gun from
either a licensed or private seller. State Police warn it could add
weeks if not months to what was a two week process.”
A spokesman for the Connecticut State Police told the news agency
that people with handgun permits are essentially grandfathered in, but
now the law extends to the “private purchase or transfer” of a shotgun
or rifle. And for that, gun buyers will need to get the police
certificate, which — one might argue — is just one or two steps beyond
what would be required under a so-called “universal background check.”
More Here at Seattle Gun Rights Examiner
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