Holder acts on gun-data sharing and collection
Unilateral moves limited
Not waiting for Congress to
act, Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr.
is moving on gun
control, submitting three measures Monday to increase data sharing and data
collection on firearms and potential gun purchasers — and illustrating the
limitations President Obama's administration has to act
unilaterally on the issue.
The first of Mr. Holder’s proposals would expand access to
information on gun permits to Indian tribal law enforcement agencies; the
second would allow local law enforcement to access the FBI’s national criminal database to conduct
background checks on people they’re transferring weapons to; and the third
would authorize the FBI to maintain records on denied firearms
transactions in a separate database for longer than 10 years.
All three were published Monday in
the Federal Register for comment.
“These proposed changes are
intended to promote public safety, to enhance the efficiency of the National
Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) operations, and to resolve
difficulties created by unforeseen processing conflicts within the system,” Mr. Holder wrote.
Under the Brady Act of 1993,
background checks are required for any gun transfer from a federal firearms
licensee to any unlicensed person. But access to NICS for background checks
unrelated to those outlined in the law currently is limited to providing
information in connection with a firearm- or explosives-related license or
responding to an inquiry from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF).
Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles H. Ramsey said after a meeting
Monday with Mr. Obama, Vice President Joseph R. Biden and Mr. Holder that such measures are
important “low-hanging fruit” even thought they may not get the attention of
more contentious proposals such as on so-called assault weapons or limits on
high-capacity magazines. More
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