Big-city mayors and handgun-safety advocates have every right to be fed up
with President Obama's track record so far on initiatives to help end the
carnage from gun violence on the nation's streets.
Even in the aftermath of a number of grisly mass murders, the president made
clear that his administration would not push to reinstate the assault-weapons
ban that Congress and former President George W. Bush allowed to expire in
2004.
Now, Obama has taken a pass on repealing the Bush-era laws that shield gun
traffickers and their suppliers. In cities such as Philadelphia and Camden,
that's like reaffirming a death sentence for the hundreds of people slain each
year by gunfire.
Last week, handgun-control advocates revealed that the president's 2010
budget reaffirms the so-called Tiahrt Amendment, which hamstrings law
enforcement in tracing guns used in crimes.
The rules require records on gun background checks to be destroyed within 24
hours and bar law-enforcement officials from sharing gun-trace data with the
public, advocates, or even criminal-justice scholars.
One good change proposed in the rules by Obama would free the hands of
law-enforcement agencies somewhat in pursuing illegal gun deals, but the
administration leaves most of the Tiahrt Amendment provisions in place.
"This policy has allowed guns to remain in the hands of hundreds of
criminals," said Paul Helmke, president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun
Violence. Indeed, without good tracking data on handgun sales, police, federal
authorities, and the public have a tough time learning "where the guns are going
and which gun dealers are selling to traffickers," explains Bryan Miller, head
of Ceasefire NJ.
The Tiahrt Amendment doesn't need to be tweaked; it needs to be scrapped - if
the nation has any hope of stemming the flow of illegal guns. An updated
assault-weapons ban should accompany that move, along with a federal ban on
gun-show weapons sales without background checks. In New Jersey and
Pennsylvania, monthly limits on legal handgun purchases should be enacted.
All of these gun-safety efforts deserve the president's full
support.