Drug Control Breeds Gun Control
Two weeks ago (as Radley Balko noted), a Fox News story by William La Jeunesse and Maxim Lott debunked the commonly heard factoid that 90 percent of the firearms used by Mexican drug traffickers come from American dealers. In a front-page story about gun smuggling on Tuesday, The New York Times modified the claim, saying "90 percent of the 12,000 pistols and rifles the Mexican authorities recovered from drug dealers last year and asked to be traced came from [gun] dealers in the United States." But according to La Jeunesse and Lott, that's not quite right either:
In 2007-2008, according to ATF Special Agent William Newell, Mexico submitted 11,000 guns to the ATF for tracing. Close to 6,000 were successfully traced—and of those, 90 percent—5,114 to be exact, according to testimony in Congress by William Hoover—were found to have come from the U.S.
But in those same two years, according to the Mexican government, 29,000 guns were recovered at crime scenes.
In other words, 68 percent of the guns that were recovered were never submitted for tracing. And when you weed out the roughly 6,000 guns that could not be traced from the remaining 32 percent, it means 83 percent of the guns found at crime scenes in Mexico could not be traced to the U.S.
Hence La Jeunesse and Lott's conclusion that "only 17 percent of guns found at Mexican crime scenes have been traced to the U.S." Which sounds a lot less impressive than 90 percent.
Does the percentage matter? Rhetorically, yes, because gun controllers argue that more restrictions should be placed on American gun buyers to reduce smuggling of firearms to Mexico. The Times story implicitly makes an argument for heavier regulation of long gun sales and requiring private sellers to do background checks (a.k.a. closing the "gun show loophole"). It also suggests that the sheer number of retailers, such as the "1,500 licensed gun dealers in the Houston area, easily accessible to Mexico," is a problem.
The story does acknowledge skepticism that limiting Americans' gun rights will reduce violence in Mexico:
With billions in profits from illegal drugs, the cartels can easily obtain weapons on the black market in other countries, [NRA Executive Vice President Wayne] LaPierre and many gun dealers argue. "The cartels have the money to get guns wherever they want," said Charles Fredien, the owner of Chuck's Gun in Brownsville, Tex., on the border "They have grenades, don't they? They don't buy grenades here."
You might think the persistence of the drug traffickers' main business, which consists of transporting and selling products that are entirely illegal on both sides of the border, would give pause to those who think they can block the flow of guns to the cartels. Instead, the violence fostered by drug control feeds demands for equally futile gun control.
In February I noted Attorney General Eric Holder's call for renewing the federal "assault weapon" ban in response to Mexico's prohibition-related violence. The Cato Institute's David Rittgers detects a rhetorical shift from "assault weapons," which was always an arbitrary and fuzzy category, to "military-style weapons," which he says is potentially "a term inclusive of all modern firearms in a back-door attempt to enact a new gun control scheme."
Addendum: Radley Balko points out that President Obama yesterday used the erroneous 90 percent figure during his visit to Mexico, where he reiterated his support for an "assault weapon" ban. "Some 90 per cent of the guns recovered in Mexico come from the United States," Obama said, repeating a claim made by Mexican President Felipe Calderon.
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Drug Control Breeds Gun Control
Shhhhhh! Don't fucking tell them that!
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In other news, what, no coverage of the torture memos?
It's too bad there aren't any laws already on the books which cover transporting weapons across our borders.
Elemenope,
Torture was bad when the previous administration was doing it, but we're not going to prosecute any of those fellows, because dey vus juzt obeyink orders. We don't want to set a precedent or anything if this administration decides to do questionable things.
The numbers are unimportant. All you need to know is that guns are bad, mmmkay?
ProL --
If that were the case, they never would have released the memos in the first place. Knowing now what was in the memos, prosecutions on some level are now probably practically unavoidable.
Observe: "We will not release the memos." [gnashing and wailing from outside] "OK, fine, here are the memos."
...
"We will not prosecute anyone on the basis of the evidence provided in the memos." [gnashing and wailing from outside] "OK, fine, if you insist..."
You see, if they looked too willing, they would be accused of political sniping. So they can't. But if they didn't want to, it makes no sense for them to release the memos in the first place.
Obama is just being presidential. Or at least that's what they said on NPR.
Indeed they can not control drug traffic across the border and drugs are illegal. So they think making guns illegal (or more so) will fix the problem. Errrr right.
Can someone please explain to me what is wrong with closing the "gun show loophole"? Correct me if I'm wrong, but I could walk into a gun show and buy a gun on the spot for which I would normally need a waiting period and background check, if I bought that same gun in a gun shop. Just trying to figure out what the debate is here. (I'm against reviving the AWB but I'm totally confused about the gun show debate)
mark --
The debate is whether background checks and waiting periods are reasonable regulation at all. Gun control advocates want to close the gun show loophole, gun rights advocates want to expand the loophole into the universal status quo.
What pisses me off is that Obama says he will now have US citizens searched when entering Mexico.
Of the 5,114, how many can be traced to US government aid to Mexico?
That is one question I would like asked.
mark - there is no "gun show loophole". The law at gun shows is the same as anywhere else. If you are a gun dealer you have to submit the name of the purchaser for a check.
If you are not a dealer, (i.e. a private sale: a widow selling her husbands guns, my buddy selling me his pistol) no check is needed.
If you buy a gun from a dealer at a gun show you need a background check and you need to comply with any waiting periods.
If, on the other hand, you buy a gun from a private individual at a gun show you don't need a background check and you don't need to comply with any waiting periods. Just as you would not have to do those things if you went to the sellers home and made the deal there.
Local and state laws an add additional restrictions but that's another story.
Correction:
Local and state laws can add additional restrictions but that's another story.
James said it first and with more brevity.
What pisses me off is that Obama says he will now have US citizens searched when entering Mexico.
Linky?
"Closing the gun show loophole" = imposing restrictions on private citizens rights to sell their guns in one setting (a gun show), but not in another (their home).
Once the gun show loophole is closed, expect to hear about the "garage sale loophole" or somesuch. Its a ratchet; it only turns one way.
To the gun control advocate, the "gun show loophole" is the mere existence of gun shows.
Seattle closed its own gun show loophole: http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19950630&slug=2128924
If, on the other hand, you buy a gun from a private individual at a gun show you don't need a background check and you don't need to comply with any waiting periods. Just as you would not have to do those things if you went to the sellers home and made the deal there.
I would add that according to BATFE any person who makes more than occasional private sale must be licensed as a dealer and comply with the background check rules. I'd tell you how many guns you could sell and still be "occasional," but the BATFE refuses to answer that question.
Therefore there are no "unlicensed dealers" in the U.S. Only federally-licensed dealers and criminals commercially sell guns here.
Mark,
The guilty little secret of "gun show loophole" hoplophobes is that it isn't just gun shows. Any federal law closing the "loophole" would essentially outlaw all private sales. The better to make sure all guns have paper trails.
Also, what Paul said.
"Therefore there are no "unlicensed dealers" in the U.S."
Which leads one to ask, if there are all these guns in Mexico being traced back to BHO'd "gun stores on the border" why aren't we starting to see arrests of the dealers who are making the sales?
It would not take an investigation of more than a few transactions before one conspirator spilled the beans, I'm thinking.
Actually, what i'm thinking is this particular trade is nowhere near as extensive as announced.
How about the way more likely scenario that corrupt officials in Mexico are diverting arms from police and military arsenals to the cartels. Or that the cartels are buying weapons from channels other than the US. There are countries where the paperwork of firearms transactions are nowhere near as onerous as the US. And plenty of corrupt officials to look the other way.
Addendum: Radley Balko points out that President Obama yesterday used the erroneous 90 percent figure during his visit to Mexico, where he reiterated his support for an "assault weapon" ban.
Never let the truth get in the way of a good story.
Restricting my rights because of lawlessness in Mexico is pure fucking insanity. Anyone who supports such bullshit should be run out of town on a rail.
Obama will tell any lie to foster support for more gun control/abolishment of gun rights.
"Correct me if I'm wrong, but I could walk into a gun show and buy a gun on the spot for which I would normally need a waiting period and background check, if I bought that same gun in a gun shop."
I don't know what state you live in, but there is no nationwide mandated waiting period, if the instant background check is successful.
Problem: Government solution to previous "problem" isn't working.
Solution: More of the same, but harder! Faster! Stronger!
It's not about solving the problem, is it?
Not surprising that the one person on this thread (I won't mention any names) that knows the least about guns and the existing law is the one pushing hardest for new restrictions.
I'd tell you how many guns you could sell and still be "occasional," but the BATFE refuses to answer that question.
Typical government/law enforcement.
I can't tell you what the law is, but we'll arrest you if you break it.
Meaning that in the agencies eyes, there is somewhere a metric, somewhere a definition that they recognize when the line is crossed.
I still say that in modern times, ignorance of the law is an excuse.
Paul:
"there is somewhere a metric, somewhere a definition that they recognize when the line is crossed."
I think it's more like art. BATFE doesn't know much about gun dealers, but they know 'em when they see 'em.
BATFE doesn't know much about gun dealers, but they know 'em when they see 'em.
You could amend that to include machine guns and explosives. BATFE don't know much about them either, but they'll damn sure try to prosecute you for having them.
Not surprising that the one person on this thread (I won't mention any names) that knows the least about guns and the existing law is the one pushing hardest for new restrictions.
Who is pushing for restrictions?
"I think it's more like art. BATFE doesn't know much about gun dealers, but they know 'em when they see 'em."
I though that was pornography.
Of course most of the liberals I know think gun dealers are obscene.
Since he used the 90% figure yesterday, it's not "erroneous", it's "lying".
Since he used the 90% figure yesterday, it's not "erroneous", it's "lying".
Truthful, but misleading. Not the same as an actual lie.
Truthful, but misleading. Not the same as an actual lie.
Material omissions can make anything a lie. I am quite comfortable that any use of the 90% figure that is not heavily qualified is a lie. A despicable lie, told knowingly to advance a perfidious agenda.
A despicable lie, told knowingly to advance a perfidious agenda.
I think you just summed up politics.
Truthful? It wouldn't be truthful for me to say 90% of people are against abortion, when really 9 out of 10 people I surveyed in a Eucharistic Adoration chapel are against it.
Material omissions can make anything a lie. I am quite comfortable that any use of the 90% figure that is not heavily qualified is a lie. A despicable lie, told knowingly to advance a perfidious agenda.
po TAY to . . . po TAH to . . 😉
Radley Balko points out that President Obama yesterday used the erroneous 90 percent figure during his visit to Mexico, where he reiterated his support for an "assault weapon" ban.
The good and honorable Mr. Balko does not give us the context of the use of the 90% claim.
If POTUS said "a study says . . . " The it would be truthful, but highly misleading. Standard operatind procedure for politics.
If POTUS used no qualifiers, then I would tend more towards R C Dean's position.
How many of these weapons originate from American manufacturers under assumption that they will be used by the Mexican government to fight the drug war? The weapons would still originate from the US, but the current administration isn't going to stop throwing weapons at the "problem," even if most of these weapons eventually end up in the hands of cartels.
The War on Drugs and related abridgement of liberty is getting depressing.
Just in case someone mistakenly thinks Barry invented the technique, Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebels called it "The Big Lie". Tell a whopper and people are more likely to believe it than a little fib, especially if its what they were expecting/wanting to hear.
The real hoot about the "Gun Show Loophole" comes in two parts.
#1. The private sellers can't run a background check if they wanted to. NICS requires a valid Federal Firearms Liscense number as part of the transaction, and they don't have one.
#2. Many of them used to have an FFL, and would be willing and able to run the instant checks, but the Clinton administration, formerly the most anti-gun administration in US history but now a fading second place, coerced about 40,000 FFL holders to give up their liscenses, which brings us back to #1.
DDS, that is incredible! Thanks everyone for clearing up this issue for me.
So can all those confiscated Mexican guns be traced to American dealers and then to the individuals who bought those very guns? If that's true I see no need for additional legislation.
Or more generally, is there already some national standard for keeping track of the chain of custody of a regulated gun? I'm just trying to figure out if there are already adequate laws and practices in place to 1) keep guns out of the hands of criminals/traffickers and 2) find and prosecute those who sell guns to aforementioned criminals?
I know the AWB has nothing to do with gun smuggling to Mexico, and having my President lie about the issue in order to pass unrelated and useless legislation is enough of a reason not to vote for him again, but I'm still concerned about criminals having easy access to guns, as I'm sure most of you are.
Mark, your concern is already obsolete. All the criminal has to do is manufacture his own gun if he can't get it on the black market. Digital fabrication has already made that easier. Don't get me started on Universal Assemblers.
Mexican citizens who are able to afford it have armed security guards protect their families, in their homes and out. So Obama wants Americans to give up their rights to buy and own guns to fight drug cartels in Mexico.....while Mexicans hire people to protect them. Unbelievable....
He wants to take away our second amendment rights - - time for impeachment considerations.
Certain states and cities have registration but there is no federal registry of ownership of a particular firearm (because they generally lead to gun confiscation). Finding all previous owners of a particular weapon usually requires individual detective work.
No, not really, or at least not in the way you are. First off, what crime exists that would entail someone needing to be kept away from guns yet not be kept in prison? I can see keeping guns away from someone with severe psychological problems, but that's not a crime. Also, keep in mind that guns are very much equivalent to drugs in that they are relatively cheap and easy to smuggle (and thus easy to have a black market form). So if people with nefarious plans in mind can easily circumvent the law to obtain a weapon, who is affected by these laws? For every story of a murderer who exploited the "gun-show loophole" you could probably find a story about someone murdered waiting for the 5-day background check to allow him/her to legally protect him/herself.
Mark,
If you look at the most gun-unfriendly places on earth, places where gun ownership has either never been allowed or severely restricted, THERE IS STILL GUN CRIME. Look at Britain as an example.
No Federal law depriving legitimate gun owners of their rights will have the slightest effect on criminal activity. Anyone who thinks it will is delusional.
I suspect, however, that those who push such ideas are not at all delusional; they simply know they wish to promulgate and enforce laws that most Americans would not support. Knowing that they might face armed revolt should the anger rise high enough, they wish to preempt this possibility.
The first step is to make ownership difficult and expensive; once there are fewer legitimate gun owners, the next step will be confiscation.
Maybe you don't remember Diane Feinstein's comment about wanting to be able to say "Mr. and Mrs. America, turn them all in" some years back. I DO remember it, and I know the gun-grabbers will stop at nothing to get what they want. No lie is too dirty, no associate too despicable--as far as their concerned the end justifies the means, and that goes for whatever means are required.
Or more generally, is there already some national standard for keeping track of the chain of custody of a regulated gun? I'm just trying to figure out if there are already adequate laws and practices in place to 1) keep guns out of the hands of criminals/traffickers and 2) find and prosecute those who sell guns to aforementioned criminals?
New guns have a paper trail from the manufacturer or importer down to the individual gun dealer and the original individual purchaser. After that, a firearm may be sold to another individual without any record.
However, you should check out the prices of new firearms in a gun store. Criminals don't need to pay that kind of money. They buy stolen guns for a fraction of the new cost. So the bottom line is that few criminals buy guns through dealers.
We can't keep drugs out of the hands of those who want them, and those are completely illegal. I can't think of any way to keep firearms out of the hands of criminals.
I've heard that we (the US gov't) sell Mexico weaponry.
What percentage of the weapons that turn up at crime scenes are the weapons their own security forces have "lost?"
My home state is rattling the cages of the anti-gun people: http://www.helenair.com/articles/2009/04/16/legi/top/65st_090416_statesrights.txt
Even most liberal Democrats here don't want to be associated with gun control.
One thing that hasn't received much attention is that Iran has established a rather large embassy in Nicaragua. http://www.nysun.com/foreign/iranians-plant-their-flag-in-wilds-of-nicaragua/70934/
While they may be interested in trade, the Iranians have some experience in smuggling weapons to insurgent groups. There's also a revenge angle in that we have done rather little to stem the flow of opium from Afghanistan to Iran.
Since they were able to trace these guns, that means that they know what type the guns are. Why is that not in the report?? They should be able to produce a list of the guns and identify them.
The Admin. also just signed up to push the UN's International Small Arms Treaty fiasco. This is a back door way to get at your guns and the market for them and blame someone else.
They will blame the UN and "international" entities. Which will warm the heart of Justice Ginsburg, being the ever inclusive internationalist herself.
And we will riot in the street.
A weapons ban won't come until after the next round of elections. The democrats are already scared they are going to lose seats and more than a few of them are in their seats due to pro gun points of view.
This is all actually a cunning plan by Big O to stimulate the economy. The price of ammo and the waiting time for lower receivers that are even remotely assault oriented are astronomical. I think some places have started give wait times in weeks using scientific notation. See he's putting machinists and ammo packers to work!!
Instapundit is linking to those under the title "BUSTING OBAMA FOR gun/drug falsehoods."
Now, I hesitate to inform Reason and Insty of this, but BHO is never going to read this post. Approximately 99.9999% of Americans will never read this post.
If Jacob Sullum wants to bust Obama for real and not just for play, he should go to one of Obama's events and ask him a question about this issue to his face on video.
Yet, Reason has consistenly avoided doing anything like that, instead using their crack video team to make lame joke videos instead of actually doing something effective.
In case anyone coming here from Instapundit wants to see the effective way to oppose BHO that Insty refuses to push, click here.
The end objective of the "gun control" lobby is to confiscate all firearms owned by private citizens.
All of the issues under debate - "assault weapons bans", gun show "loopholes", microstamping of ammunition, etc. - are simply a reflection that they don't yet have the political power to do this openly and honestly, so they have adopted an incremental approach.
They are notably dishonest regarding both the facts and their goals.
Not a bad site (24ahead) but not exactly rocking the word with its traffic. I guess you get points for the plug. Do you get a free t-shirt as well?
Something else in the William La Jeunesse and Maxim Lott article was the number of guns AR-15(full auto) sold by Colt to the Mexican government with U.S. Govt approval. It also stated that over 150,000 Mexican sildiers deserted (taking their weapons with them??)I wonder how many of these were included in "the count"?
I'd love to see the actual breakdown of those 5,114 guns that can be traced back to the US. How many were delivered directly to the Mexican government? How many were burglarized from homes in the US? How many came from police department evidence lockers? You get the idea....
Technically, it could be said that all of those could be traced back to dealers in the US (with the exception of a handful of pre-'68 pieces that had never gone through a dealer).
Reading through the thread I was becoming anxious that no one had made the point that The Basseteer eventually made @ 11:48. BTW, Mexican govt (military and Federales) weapons are overwhelmingly, if not exclusively, U.S. made.
Obama repeats the "90 percent" lie IOT keep faith with his anti gun supporters; Calderon says the same IOT to wipe away the stigma of Mexican corruption, incompetence and cowardice.
"I'd love to see the actual breakdown of those 5,114 guns that can be traced back to the US."
So would I, but I suspect that the actual origin of these weapons would undermine the Admin's case.
If only a small percentage of these guns originated with a gun dealer or were purchased from a gun show, I suspect that both the outrage and emotional elements of the Admin's case would be lost.
Apparently, they have established a method for determining the origin of those weapons that were issued to members of the Mexican Army. Most of these guns have never been fired and were only dropped once.
We get the illegals, they get the guns ? Sounds like a poor trade to me. How about we send them back all the defective Mexicans, and they send us back whatever guns came from here ?
With the momentum that the pro-2nd Amendment forces now have, it should take only mild resistance to ensure that no more gun bans go through. I'd say, let Obama squander the small amount of political capital he has left, so that more insidious invasions don't take place. The worst possible thing that libertarians could do is to squeal like stuck pigs.
There's missing information still, even with the 17% figure. The assumption some are making is that the guns that can be traced to the U.S. were "sold illegally" to someone who took it to Mexico to commit a crime.
We don't know that. All we know is that the guns were originally distributed in the U.S. and found their way to a criminal in Mexico. That is all we know.
Don't assume that a gun dealer was involved in the transaction. Don't assume that a person who may have bought it did so illegally (they may have shown ID, went through the background check, etc.).
Some portion of the guns traced to the U.S. could have been bought legally and then stolen. "Straw" purchases could have been made to get around the restrictions (straw purchases are when a person who would pass the background check, buys a gun for someone who wouldn't). Straw purchases are illegal.
A licensed gun dealer has to keep records of every gun they buy and every gun they sell, and they're audited by ATF. Not only would they lose their license if they sold gun to a known felon/crazy (not making the sale after checking NICS and listing the NICS confirmation on the sale records), they'd risk a felony conviction.
Americans are not allowed to sell to felons. Just because a sale is private doesn't mean that portion of the law is void. The only difference is that they don't have access to the NICS database directly, but a lot of private sales (especially if they are made across state lines), transfer the guns they're selling through a dealer so the background (NICS) check can be done. Dealers charge about $25 to do this for folks making private sales.
The "gun show loophole" has no meaning at all. People show up at a gun show, just like they show up at a flea market, with something to sell. They're not the business owners who have booths at gun shows or they'd generally be licensed dealers and the above would apply. If someone routinely went to a gun show to sell guns (and especially if they rented a booth to do so), the ATF would be on them like a ton of bricks, charging them with acting as a gun dealer without a license.
A lot of the sales of guns at gun shows are private sellers (folks who show up) selling to the dealers at the show, thus avoiding any risk of making an illegal sale.
Some long guns made before a certain date are considered antiques and there is no background check required on their sale, but it is always a felony to sell to a felon, regardless of who makes the sale.
The important point of the story is that these were guns confiscated in Mexico when someone committed a crime with a gun, ie, CRIMINALS. Criminals, by definition, don't comply with the law, regardless of how many guns laws we make. Gun laws are not a talisman to prevent people from committing crimes.
I think we're looking at this wrong. Isn't anyone worried about a balance of payments deficit in black market foreign trade? The fact that we're importing a lot more merchandise without the approval of the U.S. Customs Bureau than we are exporting without the approval of our trading partner? Shouldn't we be celebrating the successes of our black market exporters?
Oh, never mind.
You know if Mexico really does have a beef with US guns coming into Mexico, they could just exercise their sovereignty and close the border to all save designated ports of entry...
Amazing that they won't do that... or ask the US for help in doing that. Plus it would stop human trafficking and the shipment of illegal drugs overland, which Mexico cites as a source of their problem, too.
That ends the problem pretty much right there, and then Mexico can deal with the overseas sellers from Russia, China and a few places elsewhere in the Middle East and Europe. Plenty of black market suppliers to the Red Mafia. Who are cited by a Library of Congress review in 2003 as having involvement with Mexican drug cartels/gangs.
Or go after the deserters in the Mexican Federal Police and Army and crack down on internal corruption.
Ahh... pointing out the obvious remedies that are hard to do, instead of complaining about the non-remedy that restricts civil rights of law abiding citizens in the US. So much easier to go after the law abiding than the criminal, I guess.
Seems to me that Mexican ans US authorities would be pleased when a US-sold gun was found. They have a complete trace on the weapon from manufactorer to distributer to dealer to purchaser who has been checked out against FBI files. If a person buys as little as two guns that end up in any drug cartel's possesion, it would warrant a "special" visit from the FBI. Since drug money would likely be involved in some of the transactions, this could provide a convienent entry point for tracing drug money through the network.
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mark sez If that's true I see no need for additional legislation.
With thoughts like that you'll never be a liberal.
This is rather idiotic.
Of the guns which could be traced, 90% are known to come from the U.S.
Thus Obama's "some 90%" is a more meaningful -- and accurate -- statement than the "17%" BS of Misters La Jeunesse and Lott.
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See what California and a lying California attorney, Steven T. Schoonover, and flip flopper James K. Olson did here to a Nevada citizen right to have a gun to protect herself after James K. Olson had broken into this Nevada citizen's home! Gun Controllers Among Us, Marin County California Courts
Most liberal Marin County Ca has repeatedly thumbed their nose at the US Constitution, then imposed their illegal actions onto a Nevada citizen. What's next?
Lying California attorney, Steven T. Schoonover had the Nevada citizen served at 7:30 Thursday evening in Nevada for a 9 am the following Monday court in California and the California incompetent judge allowed that 1 day notice although illegal as have to be served more than 10 days before a hearing and furthermore it was to a Nevada citizen!
Three strikes you're out lying California attorney, Steven T. Schoonover
http://reno.broowaha.com/article.php?id=3749