Lawmakers hear more pleas for assault weapon ban
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[December 16, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – A legislative committee on Thursday heard more witnesses
call for a ban on high-power, semi-automatic rifles and large-capacity
magazines, but some experts said that alone won’t solve the problem of
violent crime in Illinois.
During its second hearing on a proposed assault weapon ban, an Illinois
House committee, meeting in Chicago, heard from several officials who
said public investment in marginalized communities and community-based
programs that aim to stop cycles of violence also are needed.
“Unfortunately, community-based providers serving at-risk youth and
emerging adults have lacked substantial investments for decades. Yet
these programs have proven to be impactful and effective,” Delrice
Adams, executive director of the Illinois Criminal Justice Information
Authority, told the panel. “Community investment, diversionary criminal
justice programming and evidence-based, trauma-informed treatment can
reduce crimes related to illegal gun carrying. A deliberate investment
must continue to be part of the gun violence prevention conversation.”
Adams spoke during a House Judiciary-Criminal Committee hearing on House
Bill 5855, sponsored by Rep. Bob Morgan, D-Deerfield. It would ban the
sale and possession of “assault weapons,” .50 caliber rifles, .50
caliber cartridges and high-capacity magazines. The bill provides a long
list of firearms, both rifles and pistols, that would fall under the
definition of “assault weapons.”
And starting 300 days after the bill takes effect, it would make it
illegal to possess such a weapon or ammunition unless it is registered
with the Illinois State Police.
Kim Smith, director of programs at the University of Chicago Crime Lab,
called gun violence a “public health crisis” in the United States,
noting that its homicide rate is at least 7.5 times that of other
industrialized nations and that guns account for 79 percent of those
homicides.
“Here in Chicago, fully three quarters of shootings stem from an
altercation that happens to take place within a reach of a gun,” she
said. “One way to reduce gun violence is therefore to make the
situations in which those arguments occur more forgiving. The best way
to do that is to limit the widespread availability of illegal guns,
particularly those equipped with high-capacity magazines. Without the
presence of a gun, altercations would still happen, but they would be
far less likely to result in death.”
But Smith said other actions are needed as well, including investments
in social service programs that help people “de-escalate stressful
situations before they lead to violence.”
One of the programs recently put into place in Illinois that aims to
make those investments is the 2021 Reimagine Public Safety Act,
administered by the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention within the
Illinois Department of Human Services, which provides grants to
organizations for violence prevention programs in 42 target communities
both within and outside Chicago that have seen the highest rates of gun
violence and homicides.
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A House criminal judiciary committee
discusses a proposal that would define and ban "assault" weapons in
Illinois. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
Chris Patterson, the assistant secretary who oversees that office, said
some of the communities receiving those grants are already seeing
dramatic declines in violent crime. But he argued that banning assault
weapons is still a necessary step.
“Something for us to consider is, what kind of commonsense society are
we creating for our children now that gun violence is the leading cause
of their death,” he said. “Let's help our communities that are trying so
hard to help themselves by banning the weapons of mass destruction we
loosely call assault weapons from the streets of this great state.”
The panel also heard from people directly affected by gun violence,
including Maria Pike, a volunteer with the group Moms Demand Action,
whose 24-year-old son was shot and killed in 2012 in Chicago’s Logan
Square neighborhood.
“He was shot while trying to park in front of his new apartment,” she
said. “And that's when my struggle began, because I wanted to understand
why someone who didn't know my son (shot) him multiple times. I don't
even know at this time how many bullets went through.”
That incident occurred just four months before the mass shooting at
Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.
The committee also heard from Marsha Lee, whose son was killed in 2008
in Harvey, Illinois.
“It's been 14 years since my son has been killed and we still are here
doing the same work, having the same conversation,” she said. “It's a
no-brainer to me. I don't understand why we have to fight the NRA and
others to have commonsense reform.”
But the committee also heard from opponents of the bill, including
Andrew Guadarrama, a 26-year-old Chicago resident who said the proposed
law could actually endanger public safety because many residents,
including those in high-crime neighborhoods, cannot rely on the police
to protect them.
“Living in a lower income area of the city, I've heard gunshots many
times. I've had guns waved at me,” he said. “When I try relying on law
enforcement to protect me, every time it's failed. Three instances I
called the police to report gunshots outside of my home. Those three
instances, police did not show up.”
The committee is scheduled to hold at least one more public hearing on
Dec. 20 in Chicago. Lawmakers are expected to debate and possibly take
action on the bill when they meet for a lame duck session starting Jan.
4.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government. It is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide, as well as hundreds of radio and TV stations. It
is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R.
McCormick Foundation.
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