From the Radio Free Michigan archives ftp://141.209.3.26/pub/patriot If you have any other files you'd like to contribute, e-mail them to bj496@Cleveland.Freenet.Edu. ------------------------------------------------ Subject: Brady II (proposed U.S. anti-gun law) FAQ From: Will Mengarini Version: 1 Contents 1) What is Brady II? 2) What does Brady II say? 3) What is the current status of these bills? 4) Can Brady II become law in the current Congress? 5) Can Brady II become law in the next Congress? 6) Then what? 1) What is Brady II? ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ "Brady II" is an informal term referring to /several/ bills currently before the U.S. Congress. "Brady II" isn't the official name of any of them. HR.3932 is the version in the House of Representatives, and S.1878 & S.1882 are the versions in the Senate (in 2 different committees), of a bill officially named the "Gun Violence Prevention Act of 1994"; aside from verbiage introducing the bills to their respective legislative houses & naming their sponsors, the bills are identical. 2) What does Brady II say? ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ All .45 caliber handgun ammunition is outlawed (Title IV Section 401 relating to paragraph G). [The bill text actually outlaws handgun ammunition greater than .45" in diameter; .45 caliber ammunition has a diameter of .451" or .452".] Note that because the 1994 Crime Prevention Bill outlawed magazines that could hold more than 10 rounds, people have been predicting that .45 caliber pistols would become the private self-defense handgun of choice; this closes that loophole. But anyway, all new magazines, handgun AND shotgun AND rifle, are now limited to at most /six/ rounds (Title IV Section 401 relating to paragraph H). All states are required to define a "Handgun Safety Certificate", which can be acquired only by attending a course TAUGHT BY POLICE. The course must last at least 2 hours & MUST end with a test. The state may set ANY fee for taking the course to get the certificate. Then, all states are required to define a state license to purchase a handgun, administered by state police; this is DIFFERENT from the handgun safety certificate, but the safety certificate is REQUIRED to get the purchase license. The purchase license also may have an ARBITRARY fee, unrelated to the fee for the safety certificate. The purchase license may last AT MOST two years; states are allowed to define it to last ANY SHORTER PERIOD OF TIME. It's illegal to buy a handgun without having the purchase license, which implies that you also must have the safety certificate. (Title I) A lot of gun owners are responding to the new gun bans by just making sure they buy all the /guns/ they think they'll need for the rest of their lives, but the above purchase license and safety certificate are also required for buying HANDGUN AMMO, including ammo for target shooting. This means you can NO LONGER TRAIN WITH GUNS YOU ALREADY OWN without getting that safety certificate from the police, & then, separately, getting the license that must be renewed (whatever that will mean) every 2 years. It becomes illegal for most citizens to possess more than one thousand rounds of all kinds of gun ammunition COMBINED without getting something called a "Federal Arsenal License", which will cost $300 for 3 years (Title II Section 204). It becomes illegal for most citizens to buy or sell more than 1 gun in any 30-day period (Title III Section 301). Lots of this bill is filled with stuff that's incomprehensible without access to a /current/ copy of the U.S Code. For example, new laws pertaining to dealers list a whole bunch of increases in what I assume are prices for various kinds of licenses, but the bill doesn't say /what/ kinds; instead, it gives references to existing paragraph numbers & prices, & what the prices are changed to. The changes are to U.S.C. Title 18 Section 923 (a), as follow: 1 (A) $1,000 becomes $10,000. 1 (B) $50 becomes $1,000. 1 (C) $10 becomes $1,000. 2 (A) $1,000 becomes $10,000. 2 (B) $50 becomes $1,000. 3 (A) $1,000 becomes $10,000. 3 (B) $200 / 3 years with renewal $90 / 3 years becomes $1,000 / 1 year with renewal $1,000 / 1 year. I know the Federal Firearms License fee is in there someplace but I don't know where, or what the other stuff is. If you have any Federal license that matches a fee on the left, it probably becomes the corresponding fee on the right. (Title III Section 303) If you do decide to shell out $10,000 for whatever license government says you need to do business, the BATF has the right to take up to six months to decide whether to license you (Title III Section 304), & if they do license you, to inspect you without warrant or warning up to 3 times in any 12-month period (Title III Section 305). Lots of licensing requirements that used to apply just to selling guns now apply also to selling ammo (Title III Section 307). Also, handgun ammo tax is raised from 10% to 50%, longun ammo tax from 10% to 30% (Title IV Section 402). Newly-outlawed weapons include "Saturday Night Specials", of which a precise definition is given (Title IV Paragraph F) that includes not only cheap revolvers, but all pistols of .25 or .32 caliber. All the new line of Glock polymer pistols are outlawed along with the S&W Sigma clones, because they can fire with the magazine removed, which becomes illegal (Title IV Section 402). Most other current pistols are outlawed because they lack a device to indicate whether a round is in a closed chamber. It becomes illegal for licensed dealers to sell guns at gun shows (Title III Section 309); they may sell only at the address specified on the license. I expect the BATF would interpret this to imply that multiple retail outlets owned by the same owner would each require separate licenses. Laws pertaining to complete firearms are now extended to pertain to any component parts, including magazines (Title III Section 312). There's lots, lots, lots more, most of it incomprehensible because it's just lists of changes of words or punctuation in existing law. This might sound harmless, but there's also a new law (Title III Section 314) that gun dealers are responsible for damages caused by guns sold illegally, & if it's impractical to keep track of what the law /is/, this could be financially very dangerous. Almost all of these new laws have exemptions for law enforcement officers, the professional military, & other government agents. The effect of all these laws together seems to me to be to make the sale of firearms to private citizens financially infeasible, of course excepting the upper classes, who can afford it, & possibly also the upper middle class. Those $10,000/year licenses are realistic for the kind of private clubs politicians keep getting in trouble for belonging to because they exclude blacks, Jews, & women; they're not realistic for Butch's Gun Shop. (as an aside I've read the bill- It also defines ALL hollowpoint handgun ammo as ARMOR PIERCING!!!!!!!!!) 3) What is the current status of these bills? ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ S.1878 is in the Senate Finance Committee. S.1882 is in the Senate Judiciary Committee, which passed it on to its Subcommittee on the Constitution. HR.3932 has been referred to 3 different House committees: the Committee on Energy & Commerce, which passed it on to its Subcommittee on Health & the Environment; the House Judiciary Committee, which passed it on to its Subcommittee on Crime & Criminal Justice; & the House Ways & Means Committee. All of these referrals were made in March 1994, & no further action has been taken on any of the bills since March 1994. 4) Can Brady II become law in the current Congress? ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Probably not. The current session of the U.S. Congress is scheduled to adjourn on Fr 07 Oct 94, giving them just two more weeks. Normally, a bill gets to the floor of the House or Senate only after the committee to which it was referred (or its subcommittees) holds hearings on it, & then the committee votes; & there's just not enough time left. In particular, in the House, all 3 committees to which the bill has been referred would need to hold hearings on the bill, according to a source in a nearby Representative's office. However, there's something called a "discharge petition", which allows a bill to be forced from committee to the floor of a legislature. A legislative aide told me that in the U.S. House of Representatives, this would require 218 votes, which is 50% + 1 vote. I suppose it's possible that if some horrifying gun-abuse tragedy occurred in the final days of this Congress, the bill could be rushed thru. This may have been the scenario the anti-gun lobby was allowing for, & they may keep the same plan for future Congresses. If so, we've already seen what kind of media coverage to expect. The mainstream media are owned by the upper classes, who mostly support gun control because they fear the masses but don't fear the government (because they can afford to bribe^H^H^H^H^H contribute to the campaigns of legislators). This year's big gun-control bill was the "Crime Prevention Bill of 1994". The media universally referred to the bill's gun-control measures as "the assault rifle ban". Well, we (me too) thought, I don't own or want to own any assault rifles, so I don't have a problem with that. But I only found out two days before the Crime Bill passed what REALLY mattered about it to a citizen who wants a gun for self-defense: the outlawing of magazines containing more than 10 rounds. The day AFTER it passed, I told an NRA member about the 10-round limit; she was flabbergasted. Brady II contains a bunch of flamboyant measures for protecting children from adult negligence in gun storage; the media will probably focus on those, & give no coverage to the financial provisions that restrict gun accessibility to rich people. There's a congressional election coming up in November 1994. This will be an "off-year election"; that's an election in which a President isn't also being elected. In off-year elections, the President's party almost always loses some\ seats in the legislature, because the reality of what a political party delivers to its constituents is never as satisfying as what they hoped for. That means that there will be more Republicans in Congress next year than there are this year, & Republicans generally oppose gun control. Sounds good, but... On Tu 27 Sep 94 the Republican Party publicly declared that it expects to take over both houses in the next U.S. Congress. This expectation is widely considered realistic, because of President Clinton's unpopularity. Consequently, it seems that an unusually large number of Democrats now in Congress may see themselves as lame ducks with nothing left to lose. Furthermore, Republicans who voted for the Crime Bill already know for certain that they've lost all possible support from constituents who take full responsibility for their own self-defense, so they too have nothing left to lose by going the rest of the way and voting to make guns financially inaccessible to the masses; but they have everything to gain, because the financial support of the upper classes may make it possible for them to get re-elected in spite of losing the self-defense vote. I suppose a combination of distorted media coverage with a now-or-never nothing-left-to-lose attitude could allow these bills to be slammed thru this Congress in its last days, especially if a precipitating gun-abuse tragedy occurs; in that event, rapid public education about the true contents of the bills will be essential, which was one of my motives for getting this FAQ out right away. However, it's much more likely that all the bills will just die in committee this year. 5) Can Brady II become law in the next Congress? ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Probably not, because there will probably be too many Republicans. 6) Then what? ^^^^^^^^^^ More of the same, I guess. Clinton could be re-elected in 1996 if his opponent is an aggressively fundamentalist Christian, & if that happens, the Democrats will probably gain seats in both houses, altho they probably won't get back up to current strength. If the Republicans nominate a more libertarian candidate, they'll probably win, but the Christians will probably take back the Republican party eventually, & when they do, the Republicans will lose the government. It'll be gun freedom versus abortion freedom for as far ahead as we can see, because the Supreme Court's abortion-freedom vote is too frail to be trusted, & could be weakened by any future Republican presidency. -- "Thoughtcrime was not a thing that could be concealed forever. You might dodge successfully for a while, even for years, but sooner or later they were bound to get you." -- George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four ------------------------------------------------ (This file was found elsewhere on the Internet and uploaded to the Radio Free Michigan site by the archive maintainer. Protection of Individual Rights and Liberties. E-mail bj496@Cleveland.Freenet.Edu)