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Council eases D.C. gun laws

By: Michael Neibauer
Examiner Staff Writer
September 17, 2008

Mayor Adrian Fenty, right, speak to reporters in July after Washington, D.C., repealed its ban on handguns. Examiner File Photo
The D.C. Council adopted emergency legislation Wednesday allowing residents to register semiautomatic handguns and keep the weapons unlocked and loaded in their homes and businesses.

The U.S. House of Representatives, meanwhile, was poised to pass National Rifle Association —  and White House-backed legislation that would essentially wipe out the District’s firearm laws, to the dismay of D.C. leaders.

“There’s every reason to think we’re moving in the direction of responsible solutions to this,” Council Chairman Vincent Gray said. “We have the capability to make responsible decisions, and we should be allowed to do so.”

Wholesale changes to the District’s gun laws come three months after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the city’s 32-year-old handgun ban.

The council’s unanimous vote Tuesday to ease restrictions on firearm ownership — allowing semiautomatics instead of only revolvers — was an attempt not only to comply with the high court ruling, but also to head off impending congressional action.

“I would hope that in the rational debate Congress would be mindful that we have dealt with the most important issues they and others have raised,” said at-large Councilman Phil Mendelson, who drafted the legislation in consultation with Mayor Adrian Fenty’s administration.

The House was nevertheless advancing a gun rights measure offered by Rep. Travis Childers, D-Miss. Backed by 50 conservative Democrats, most Republicans, the NRA and the White House, the Childers bill would abolish gun registration requirements, eliminate the ban on semiautomatics and allow D.C. residents to purchase guns in Maryland or Virginia.

There is no reason for Congress to give the District “even more time to drag its feet and remain noncompliant with the directives of the highest court in this land,” said Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Texas, who led an assault on gun restrictions implemented by D.C. Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton accused the NRA of endangering the public, including the president, and “pointing a proverbial gun” at the re-election of her fellow Democrats.

Rep. James McGovern, D-Mass., described the Childers amendment as “one big, fat, wet kiss to the National Rifle Association.”

The council’s emergency legislation lifts the ban on semiautomatic handguns, erases the requirement that all guns remain unloaded and either trigger-locked or disassembled — the “safe storage” provision — establishes a criminal penalty for gun owners who allow a child access to a firearm, permits guns in businesses, and removes the “one gun per household” rule.


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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Vietnam Veteran (DC)

Sep 17, 2008

As a resident of the District for 39 years, I have watch for 32 years the leadership of the District trample over the 2nd amendment rights of the citizens of this city. It took the Supreme Court to remind them that we do have rights. What do they do, they continue the same violation with a slight twist, lacking any common sense judgement of the Supreme Court decision while at the same time demanding equal representation and voting rights for DC residents. Now when they are slapped in the face by the Congress the Leadership of the District is crying foul. They again, insert foot in mouth and shoot them self in the foot

 

Vietnam Veteran (DC)

Sep 17, 2008

As a resident of the District for 39 years, I have watch for 32 years the leadership of the District trample over the 2nd amendment rights of the citizens of this city. It took the Supreme Court to remind them that we do have rights. What do they do, they continue the same violation with a slight twist, lacking any common sense judgement of the Supreme Court decision while at the same time demanding equal representation and voting rights for DC residents. Now when they are slapped in the face by the Congress the Leadership of the District is crying foul. They again, insert foot in mouth and shoot them self in the foot

 

eddie

Sep 17, 2008

The Counsel must get CIVIL RIGHTS themselves,to rid the city of the real problems that lurks havoc on the world and that's an Uncivil,eluding CIVIL Obedience group of fugitives,that must be vacated from the Federal premises at once;for the Safety of The Republic and for which it Stands;One Nation under GOD;individual and liberty and justice for all...that's it,the last 40yrs has been torture,and CIVIL RIGHTS will be the main stay,instead of a bunch of molesters,unlawful,and obstructionist,with a racist conspiring white racist media,and a negro with no CIVICS is Unpatriotic in nature,and Bush needs to publicly apologize for the falterings,for being hoisted into public with no CIVIL RIGHTS qualities,thoughts,genders,not even rice,which is white

 

Concerned Resident

Sep 17, 2008

Of course under the Council's legislation DC residents will still not be able to purchase guns because there are no gun stores in DC and federal law prohibits purchases in other states. The Congressional legislation fixes that.

 


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