Pritzker pushes for assault weapons ban, federal action
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[July 13, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – In the wake of a July 4 mass
shooting in Highland Park that left seven people dead and dozens more
injured, Gov. JB Pritzker is calling for a ban at both the state and
national levels on military-style assault rifles and high-capacity
magazines.
The governor made those calls on national cable television and at the
White House in recent days.
“While I support an assault weapon and high-capacity magazine ban at the
state level, we urgently need federal regulation on the weapons of war
and high-capacity magazines that are used only for mass murder,”
Pritzker said in a statement released last week. “Illinois is not an
island, and even with some of the strictest gun laws in the nation, our
state is only as safe as the state with the weakest laws — many of which
border Illinois.”
The weapon used in the Highland Park shooting has been identified as a
Smith and Wesson M&P 15, a semi-automatic rifle that holds 30-round
magazines of 5.56mm ammunition. The alleged shooter, Robert Crimo III,
reportedly used three such magazines during his attack on a Fourth of
July parade, firing off more than 80 shots in a matter of just a few
minutes.
Although the letters “M&P” stand for “Military & Police,” it and others
like it have been widely available to civilians at sporting goods stores
throughout the country.
The weapon used in Highland Park is also similar to guns used in other
recent mass shootings, including the May 24 shooting at an elementary
school in Uvalde, Texas, that left 19 children and two teachers dead,
and the May 14 shooting at a Buffalo, New York, grocery store that
killed 10 people.
All those weapons are modeled after the Colt AR-15, a semi-automatic
version of a rifle originally designed for the military.
On Monday, Pritzker and Highland Park Mayor Nancy Rotering were at the
White House for an event with President Joe Biden marking the recent
signing of the Safer Communities Act, the first significant federal law
addressing gun violence in nearly 30 years.
“We had a number of conversations immediately after the attack in
Highland Park and I've been impressed with the way they've handled
things. It's been extraordinary,” Biden said. “And as the three of us
have discussed, we have more to do.”
Later in the day, Pritzker appeared on CNN’s “State of the Union,” and
he repeated his call for additional measures to control gun violence.
“I think that there are probably three things that need to be looked at
here: One is changing some of the verbiage in the law on red flags so
that something could have been filed that would have prevented the FOID
card from being issued. That's one,” he said. “Two is that we need to
ban assault weapons, not just in the state of Illinois, but nationally.
And then third, high-capacity magazines.”
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An image from the Smith & Wesson website shows the
type of weapon used in the July 4 Highland Park shooting. (Credit:
www.smith-wesson.com)
A bill pending in the General Assembly would make it a felony to buy or
sell assault-style rifles and high-capacity magazines. House Bill 5522,
by Rep. Maura Hirschauer, D-Batavia, would also require existing owners
of such weapons to register them with the Illinois State Police, and it
would prohibit those owners from selling them in-state to anyone but a
federally licensed firearms dealer.
Hirschauer, a first-term lawmaker and organizer of a local chapter of
Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America, introduced the bill in
January, but it was never considered in a substantive committee. Since
the July 4 mass shooting in Highland Park, however, 50 more lawmakers,
all Democrats, have signed on as cosponsors.
“I think that my colleagues have been moved by the tragedy in Highland
Park, but also moved by the gun violence that affects the entire state,
and constituents all over Illinois have been reaching out to their state
representatives and state senators, telling them how important this bill
is,” Hirschauer said during a phone interview.
Gun rights advocates, on the other hand, argue that eliminating one type
of gun from society will not address the underlying causes of gun
violence.
“We certainly understand the emotional response of anti-gun politicians
in light of the evil and violence the world witnessed in Highland Park …
just like the equivalent of 47 Highland Park shootings that have taken
place in the city of Chicago year to date,” Richard Pearson, director of
the Illinois State Rifle Association, said in an email. “Evil and
violence do not lie in an inanimate object but in the hearts of people.
At some point politicians must tackle the “Why” of violence instead of
the easy way out by trying to ban inanimate objects.”
Lawmakers had planned to convene a special session this summer,
primarily to respond to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision striking down
a constitutional right to abortion. Before the Highland Park shooting,
however, those plans were put on hold and no special session has yet
been scheduled.
Republican gubernatorial candidate Darren Bailey also called for a
special session last week to repeal a criminal justice reform bill
passed in January 2021 and convene a mental health task force consisting
of “doctors, first responders, patients, home caregivers, parents,
teachers, and churches.”
The Pritzker campaign, in turn, blasted Bailey for voting against gun
safety bills and state budgets that increased mental health funding.
The next scheduled meeting of the General Assembly is Nov. 15 when the
regular fall veto session convenes.
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Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |