Coming to you directly from the Hart Senate Office building
where the Senate Judiciary Committee is conducting the
first hearing on
gun regulation since the Newtown mass shooting, entitled, “What
Should America Do About Gun Violence?”
Chairman Leahy’s (D-VT) exchange with NRA Executive VP Wayne
LaPierre has been the most interesting so far. Mr. Leahy challenged
Mr. LaPierre to answer a yes-or-no question of whether the latter
believed background checks for sales at gun shows should be
extended to those between private individuals, which are currently
exempted under the so-called “gun show” loophole. “Do you
support instant criminal background checks at gun shows, yes or
no?” He had begun his line of questioning by noting that, in 1998,
Mr. LaPierre stated that he did.
After much dancing and dodging, Mr. Leahy threw down a gauntlet,
insisting that Mr. LaPierre answer the question directly. Should we
have mandatory checks for all gun sales, he asked. Does the NRA
believe that?
“No, we do not,” Mr. LaPierre finally conceded, parrying, “I do
not believe that the way the laws are working at present,” it would
make sense to extend the background check requirement to private
sales. He referred to at least 44 laws on the books related to
illegal possession and use of firearms, and specifically decried
cases under said laws which “this administration is failing to
prosecute.” (Later on, fellow-witness David
Kopel referred to a University of Syracuse study that
found a dramatic decline in such prosecutions since their 2004 peak
under the Bush Administration.)
Mr. LaPierre made a few other points. Mr. Leahy eventually cut
him off — “my time has expired” — but took a few moments to add,
smiling, that that was not the question he was asking. There was
laughter from the public gallery.
Not as many sparks are flying as might have been anticipated,
but they are certainly not absent.