Posted on 10/12/2012 9:31:40 PM PDT by neverdem
In the wake of a recent shooting outside an East Village housing complex, local lawmakers gathered alongside community leaders last Friday to call for a special legislative session aimed at passing statewide gun control measures that would make New Yorks gun laws the strongest in the country.
At the heart of that argument was a bill requiring the use of a new techonology called microstamping, which passed the state Assembly in June but has been held up by the state Senates Republican majority since being introduced in 2011.
State Senator Daniel Squadron, one of the sponsors of the microstamping bill, as well as other currently stalled gun control legislation, led a press conference outside Campos Plaza at E. 12th St. and Avenue C the site of the shooting to call for the emergency Senate vote, while also condemning gun industry lobbyists. The Oct. 1 shooting injured one man and is still being investigated.
Theres no issue more important than this right now, Squadron said, and we need to pass these basic, commonsense laws that would make our streets safer.
Microstamping uses lasers to stamp a numeric code onto bullet shell casings, theoretically making it easier for police to track individual casings left at a crime scene back to the gun and the shooter that fired them. The scheme has been met with strong opposition from Second Amendment advocates across the nation, and in recent months some major gun manufacturers have threatened to leave New York if statewide legislation requiring the new technology were to pass.
California is currently the only state to have passed a microstamping law, but it is not actually in use there because, since 2007, the law has been held up on technicalities.
The gun lobby opposes this because they believe any law that places restrictions on any gun seller or purchaser is a bad law, and weve seen the violent effects of that thinking over and over again, said Assemblymember Brian Kavanagh, a sponsor of various statewide gun control measures, at Fridays press conference. People who oppose these laws need to stop victimizing communities at the behest of a wealthy industry, one that basically pays for the kind of violence that we see every day on streets like this.
But Tom King, president of the New York State Rifle and Pistol Association, attempted to cast doubts on the new technologys effectiveness while accusing Squadron and his supporters of grandstanding in the wake of the East Village shooting.
These lawmakers are misrepresenting the whole issue, King said. If Squadron and the others were actually interested in keeping people safe, they would spend more time making sure that the states current antigun laws are being enforced, and that gun criminals are given the maximum prison sentences.
The gun advocate also claimed that microstamping simply doesnt work, and that any legislation requiring it would have a negative impact on licensed, law-abiding gun owners.
Squadron stressed on Friday that implementing the new technology as well as passing other gun control measures, like an expansion of the current assault weapons ban and a limit on the number of firearms someone can purchase per month would not affect licensed hunters or other lawful gun owners, and that micro- stamping would cause the price of each gun to increase by no more than $12.
Theres a real need for it, and claims about excessive cost are irrational, said Jackie Hilly, executive director of New Yorkers Against Gun Violence. The system we use now only gives us about a 2 percent chance of identifying the gun for a given shell casing, and microstamping would make that process at least 25 times more effective.
Advocates on both sides of the issue have presented various expert studies that either support or discredit microstamping technology, which was invented in the 1990s by an engineer named Todd Lizotte.
Hilly was citing a study published in the spring by Iowa State Universitys Ames Laboratory in collaboration with Lizotte himself showing that micro- stamping could be up to 97 percent effective in some cases.
The New York Police Department did not respond by press time to a request for comment on the issue of microstamping and other gun control measures.
At Fridays press conference, Dereese Huff, Campos Plaza Tenant Association president, implored lawmakers to heed Squadrons call for a special session and quickly pass gun control legislation.
Our children and family members are dying from the violence. How long should we continue to bury our own families and friends? Huff asked the gathering. As a tenant leader, I see the pain and fear in the faces of my fellow residents. I hope that our lawmakers hear our voices, our chorus of pain, and act quickly to protect us from the dangers of uncontrolled gun sales.
But after speaking to the public, Huff told this newspaper that what she wants most of all is the increased police presence that public housing tenants have been seeking for years, alongside other security measures, like surveillance cameras and functioning locks on the buildings front doors.
These concerns have been highlighted multiple times over the past year, as the New York City Housing Authority continues to sit on $42 million of taxpayer money specifically earmarked for security upgrades. NYCHA is also the only landlord in the city required to pay for policing its property, and has paid more than $70 million annually for those services since 1994, as the result of a memorandum of understanding with the N.Y.P.D.
An unexpected presence on Friday was that of Brad Hoylman, the Democratic candidate for the state Senate seat soon to be vacated by Tom Duane. Hoylman spoke at the press conference, even though he will not officially take the seat he is running unopposed until Jan. 1, 2013.
It would be great to pass these bills before you have a chance to vote on them, by going for a special session, Squadron told Hoylman. But if we cant, I know youre going to be one of the leaders once you get to Albany.
sure, but one doesn’t exclude the other.
The law presents no solution to their basic issues.
I find that revolvers are still a great technology.
Yes, but it is really difficult to mount the sights on a revolving cylinder so that the gun can be presented sideways.
The magazine issue is easily resolved by bringing more revolvers.
A sideways presentation could facilitate a quicker reload.
Heh, excellent point ^^
“I find that revolvers are still a great technology.”
They always work when you need them to and never leave their micro stamped casings behind... unless if you have to reload.
So how much have all their other "basic common sense" laws improved things?
That does seem to be a winning stratergy.
So a new gun law would have stopped this shooting?
These people are idiots.
You already have some of the hardest guns laws in the country. How come they did not work????
Well, if tyranny and violation of God-given Constitutional rights is strong, then yeah. Personally, I don't associate tyranny and violation of my civil rights with strength, but to each his own.
“So how much have all their other “basic common sense” laws improved things?”
That’s the point. Common sense was a one size fits all set of ideas that we all shared. Today, common sense is relative, so, common non-sense is a more appropriate term. But to answer your question, I can’t think of any “basic common sense” laws that have done any good, other than to make some people feel good because they got to give them really good names.
Should this silly Micro-stamping of Casings pass and spread throughout the Country, the following will occur.
1. Sales of Revolvers will go through the roof.
2. There will no noticeable decrease in “Gun Crime”, but Littering will be decreased.
3. Criminals will pickup the spent Casings after they commit their Crime or they will substitute their spent Casings for those owned by someone else.
4. The term “I've been framed” will be a common refrain in Courtrooms throughout the land.
5. The Libtards will figure out another Gun Law to implement once it's determined this one was an Epic Fail.
I went to see the 1:30 PM showing (first was 10:30 AM). I was first in the theater at 12:50. The audience filtered in. Mostly elderly who stumbled and fumbled their way to seats.
The casting and production was first rate. Technology was current and relevant to the current day. Gas prices were only 10x current CA prices. The streets were full of "occupy" types railing about the "2%", the rich and "fair share". Like a page from the current Obamaville newspapers.
The Hank Rearden in Pt 2 looks more the part of a business man with "hands on" experience. The guy in Pt 1 seemed just a little too much like a "city boy" who never go t his hands dirty. I liked the Eddie Willers character better in Pt 2 than what I had perceived when reading the book.
>>Mostly elderly who stumbled and fumbled their way to seats.<<
WTH?
Someday, you’ll be there too.
**Existence is Identity, Consciousness is Identification.**
I was concerned about where this shooting happened till I read it happened in alphabet city. That area has always been unsafe. If, for some reason I had to live there, I’d purchase a gun.
This is an attack on guns more so pushing microstamping. Some company needs money.
Shoot the criminals. What is so difficult to understand?
That is a solution which is 100% effective, yet libs go crazy if you mention it. There was a judge somewhere (OH?) who advised people to arm themselves. I think we will be seeing more such stories in the coming years.
The problem with all of these pols passing gun laws is that not owns one. There should be a law that anyone who passes anti 2A legislation loses all their armed security.
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