FILE - In this April 11, 2011, file photo retired FBI Special Agent John Hanlon describes the 1986 FBI shootout with Miami bank robbers, one of the deadliest in FBI history, in Miami. Hanlon was shot in the head, hand, groin and hip with a Ruger Mini-14 that had a folding stock. A different model of the same gun is on a list of exempted firearms in the gun-control legislation the Senate is currently considering. "What a joke," said Hanlon, who recalled lying on the street as brass bullet casings showered on him. "I can't imagine what the difference is." Both models take detachable magazines that hold dozens of rounds of ammunition. |
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Congress' latest crack at a new assault weapons ban would protect more than 2,200 specific firearms, including a semi-automatic rifle that is nearly identical to one of the guns used in the bloodiest shootout in FBI history.
One model of that
firearm, the Ruger .223 caliber Mini-14, is on the proposed list to be
banned, while a different model of the same gun is on a list of exempted
firearms in legislation the Senate is considering. The gun that would
be protected from the ban has fixed physical features and can't be
folded to be more compact. Yet the two firearms are equally deadly.
"What
a joke," said former FBI agent John Hanlon, who survived the 1986
shootout in Miami. He was shot in the head, hand, groin and hip with a
Ruger Mini-14 that had a folding stock. Two FBI agents died and five
others were wounded.
Hanlon recalled lying on the street as brass bullet casings showered on him. He thought the shooter had an automatic weapon.
Both
models of the Ruger Mini-14 specified in the proposed bill can take
detachable magazines that hold dozens of rounds of ammunition. "I can't
imagine what the difference is," Hanlon said.
President
Barack Obama has called for restoring a ban on military-style assault
weapons and limiting the size of ammunition magazines.
A
bill introduced last month by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif. would ban
157 specific firearms designed for military and law enforcement use and
exempt others made for hunting purposes. It also would ban ammunition
magazines that hold more than 10 rounds.
Yet
there are firearms that would be protected under Feinstein's proposal
that can take large capacity magazines like the ones used in mass
shootings that enable a gunman to fire dozens of rounds of ammunition
without reloading.
Feinstein said in a written
response to questions from The Associated Press that the list of more
than 2,200 exempted firearms was designed to "make crystal clear" that
the bill would not affect hunting and sporting weapons.
The
December shooting at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn., that left
26 students and educators
dead forced Washington to focus on curbing gun
violence, a risky political move not tried in decades.
The
gun industry, which is fighting any sort of ban, says gun ownership in
the U.S. is the highest it's ever been, with more than 100 million
firearms owners.
Obama and Vice President
Joseph Biden have traveled around the country in an effort to gain
support for new laws. Feinstein's proposal is the only sweeping piece of
legislation designed to ban assault weapons currently being considered.
But some gun experts say the lists of banned and exempted firearms show a lack of understanding and expertise of guns.
"There's
no logic to it," said Greg Danas, president of a Massachusetts-based
expert witness business and firearms ballistic laboratory. "What kind of
effect is it going to have?"
Feinstein's bill
defines an assault weapon as a semi-automatic firearm with a detachable
magazine that has one of several military characteristics that are
specified in her legislation. Examples of those characteristics include a
pistol grip, which makes a firearm easier to hold, and a forward grip,
which makes the firearm easier to stabilize to improve accuracy. The
definition is similar to the one in Congress' original ban on assault
weapons, which went into effect in 1994 and was widely criticized for
outlawing firearms based on cosmetic features.
Feinstein
was behind the 1994 law which, at the time, protected more than 600
firearms. The current bill would exempt by name and model more than
2,200 firearms by name and model.
Feinstein
said her staff had worked for more than a year to draft updates for the
ban that expired in 2004, and it was apparent in the wake of recent mass
shootings that now was the time to introduce a new bill. She said her
staff consulted with law enforcement agencies and policy experts for
months to create the expanded list.
Naming
firearms that would remain legal under an assault weapons ban is a
politically motivated gesture that was used to help pass the original
ban in the early 1990s, people familiar with the process said.
Any
firearm that does not fall within the law's definition of an assault
weapon would not be banned. As a result, the list gives vulnerable
politicians cover from constituents who do not want to give up their
firearms.
For example, a politician can look
at the list and assure a constituent that the government would not ban
the firearm he or she loves to use for deer hunting. Under the 1994 law
and the currently proposed one, the government would not have the
authority to take away guns people already legally own. The ban would
only apply to specific firearms manufactured and sold after the law is
enacted.
A list of exempted firearms was not
part of Feinstein's original assault weapons ban two decades ago, said
Michael Lenett, one of the lead congressional staffers on gun control
issues in 1994. A separate bill in circulation exempted far fewer
hunting and sporting firearms, Lenett said.
The
purpose of creating such a list was to assure people that the
government was not going after any legitimate hunting or sporting
weapons. "The other purpose of the list was to have a high profile way
of assuring certain folks - including legislators - that we would not be
going after their weapons that they use for those legitimate purposes,"
Lenett said.
"It was a win-win situation,"
Lenett recalled, because, he said, if the list could help pick up votes
needed to pass the bill and temper some of the opposition, it could
assuage some opponents of the ban without making the law less effective.
But gun experts say the lists in 1994 and the expanded lists of today don't make much sense.
"The
bill demonstrates a shocking ignorance of the product they are
purporting to regulate," said Lawrence Keane, senior vice president of
the National Shooting Sports Foundation, a trade association based in
Newtown, Conn., that represents gun manufacturers. "I have no idea how
they arrived at this list. It would seem to be random, bordering on
throwing darts at a dart board."
For instance,
Feinstein's current proposal includes exemptions for three specific
types of the M-1 Carbine, an assault rifle designed for the military
that the U.S. currently bans from being imported. A draft of the
legislation, created and modified in November and early December last
year, banned the M-1 Carbine and didn't exempt any models, according to a
copy obtained by the AP.
Feinstein said there
was disagreement among firearms experts, law enforcement and gun safety
organizations about whether to include the M-1 Carbine on the list of
banned weapons.
"It has been used in multiple
police shootings, and was originally used by U.S. soldiers on the
battlefield," Feinstein said. "On the other hand, it comes in models
that would not meet the military characteristics test." She said she
decided to limit banned weapons to those that met the definition
outlined in the bill.
At a Jan. 30 hearing by
the Senate Judiciary Committee on gun violence, National Rifle
Association President Wayne LaPierre said Feinstein's bill is "based on
falsehoods to people that do not understand firearms, to convince them
that the performance characteristics of guns that they are trying to ban
through that bill are different than the performance characteristics
that they're not trying to ban."
The Ruger Mini-14 is a perfect example.
The
model that has a fixed stock would be exempted by Feinstein's ban; the
gun was protected in the 1994 law as well. A Ruger Mini-14 with a
collapsible and folding stock would be illegal.
The
guns fire the same caliber bullet and can take detachable magazines
that could hold dozens of rounds of ammunition. The folding stock only
reduces the gun's length by 2.75 inches, according to the manufacturer's
website.
"It's irrelevant," Edmund Mireles,
an FBI agent who survived the Miami shootout, said of the differences in
features. "They're equally dangerous."
Mark
D. Jones, a senior law enforcement adviser for the University of Chicago
Crime Lab, said the folding stock does not affect the firearm's lethal
potential.
"Given that both firearms will
accept a 30 round or larger magazine, it renders the differences between
them entirely cosmetic," Jones said.
Kristen
Rand, the legislative director at the Washington-based Violence Policy
Center, said the Ruger Mini-14 model that would be banned under
Feinstein's legislation is easier to hold while firing because it has a
pistol grip, and it's easier to hide because it has a collapsible stock.
That's what makes it more dangerous that the Ruger Mini-14 with the
fixed stock which would be exempted under the Feinstein bill, she said.
"And that's supposed to save somebody's life?" asked Hanlon, the FBI agent shot alongside Mireles.
Hanlon
considered the differences between the two models and whether the
events of April 11, 1986, would have been different if the shooter used a
Ruger Mini-14 with a fixed stock. "I don't think it would have changed a
damn thing," he said. "I don't see what makes that gun less dangerous."