|
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: May 8, 2003
SCHUMER MOVES TO RENEW FEDERAL BAN ON ASSAULT WEAPONS
With ban to expire in 2004, White House is set to work with
Schumer, Feinstein, Chaffee, and Boxer on re-authorization effort
US Senators Dianne Feinstein, Chuck Schumer, Lincoln Chafee, Barbara
Boxer, and Dick Durbin today introduced legislation that would reauthorize
the federal assault weapons ban and close a loophole in the law
that has allowed millions of large-capacity ammunition clips to
be imported into this country. The 1994 assault weapons ban was
authored by then-Representative Schumer in the Hosue and by Feinstein
in the Senate. The ban will expire in September 2004, and manufacturers
would once again be able to make the assault weapons that have been
banned for almost 10 years.
President Bush has indicated support for the assault weapons ban,
and just a few weeks ago, his spokesman Scott McClellan reiterated
his support for reauthorizing the ban when he said: “The President
supports the current law, and he supports reauthorization of the
current law.” The President has also indicated his support
for banning the importation of high capacity ammunition clips. Schumer
issued the following statement:
"Ten years ago, the US Congress took the courageous and historic
step of banning the sale of assault weapons in the United States.
Ten years later, the ban is set to expire. We stand here today announcing
our intent to keep this smart, sensible, and fair law in place.
I know the first question you will ask us is: In a Washington where
the NRA has virtual control of Congress, does this bill have a snowball's
chance in Hades of going anywhere? It's going to be a hard fought
effort but we think it does. And we're counting on some help from
an ally who lives on Pennsylvania Avenue.
The President made a promise to support the re-authorization of
the assault weapon ban and recently renewed support for doing so.
We hope the President will not just say he supports the ban but
will work to get it passed. This will be a good measure of the compassion
in his compassionate conservatism. The bottom line is that if the
President wants this bill to become law, it will.
The NRA and other opponents of this legislation have little ammunition
in their arsenal against this bill. The ban has been in effect for
nearly a decade, and not one hunter has lost his right to hunt,
not one homeowner has lost his power to defend his home. We have
proven that the Second Amendment can thrive while we take limited
and reasonable measures to protect Americans from gun violence.
But the NRA has never been known to adhere to reality, and has
shown time and time again to be more than willing to twist the facts
to make its case – even if it means sticking its thumb in
the eyes of law enforcement.
The NRA's opposition to this common sense law is an affront to the
sacrifices made by police officers throughout the country who have
fallen in the line of duty, working to enforce the ban and keep
these deadly weapons off our streets. It's an affront to the families
of Detectives Rodney Andrews and James Nemorin who were murdered
just this past March, investigating a gun-running ring that was
importing assault weapons into New York City.
The NRA audaciously complains that the law doesn't go far enough
and that it is ineffective. Well, if Mr. LaPierre wants a broader
ban, all he's got to do is pick up the phone and call. We're ready
to work with anyone we can to better protect Americans from gun
violence by keeping all of these guns out of the hands of criminals.
The fact of the matter is that there is no legitimate use for these
weapons. That was as true in 1994 as it is today. But in a post-9/11
world, the assault weapons ban carries even greater urgency.
With terrorists on American soil looking for ways to attack us
at home, giving them carte blanche to pick up a Tec-9 with a high
capacity clip is just plain stupid. It makes no sense. Sometimes
the most basic and sensible laws are the most effective measures
against terrorism that we have. I'd have to say this legislation
fits that category.
So we are going to look for every opportunity to turn this bill
into law. If Sen. Frist refuses to bring it up, we'll look for every
opportunity to attach it to legislation. President Bush says he
supports the bill and I take him at his word. When he told me that
New York would get $20 billion to help recover from the disastrous
effects of 9/11, he came through. So I fully expect he will put
the power of the White House behind this legislation and we will
be standing in the Rose Garden watching President Bush sign this
bill before the ban expires next September."
The legislation would reauthorize the 1994 assault weapons ban
by striking the sunset date from the original law. This would: Maintain
the ban on the manufacture and importation of 19 types of common
military style assault weapons – for all time; maintain the
ban on an additional group of assault weapons that have been banned
by characteristic for 8 years; continue to protect some 670 hunting
and other recreational rifles for use by law-abiding citizens; and
preserve the right of law enforcement officials to use and obtain
newly manufactured semi-automatic assault weapons -- helping to
prevent instances when law enforcement agents are outgunned by perpetrators.
The goal of the original bill was to drive down the supply of these
weapons and make them more difficult to obtain. In the years following
the enactment of the ban, crimes using assault weapons were reduced
dramatically. According to the most recent statistics made by the
ATF, in 1993, assault weapons accounted for 8.2 percent of all guns
used in crimes; By the end of 1995, that proportion had fallen to
4.3 percent; and by November 1996, the last date for which statistics
are available, the proportion had fallen to 3.2 percent.
In addition, the legislation introduced today would close a loophole
in the 1994 law, which prohibits the domestic manufacture of high-capacity
ammunition magazines, but allows foreign companies to continue sending
them to this country by the millions. A measure that would have
closed this loophole passed the House and Senate in 1999 by wide
margins, but was bottled up in the 1999 Juvenile Justice conference
report due to an unrelated provision. Since 1994, the ATF has approved
the importation of almost 50 million high capacity ammunition magazines
from some 50 countries.
####
|