by James Jay Baker Dec. 20, 2001
The national public-policy debate was plunged
to a new low by the single-issue lobbying group Americans for Gun Safety (AGS).
AGS is funded solely by Internet billionaire Andy McKelvey — a former board
member of the gun-ban lobby known as Handgun Control Inc.
The new group is trying to make an outrageous
attempt to link the terrorist strikes against this country to a national
tradition as old as America itself — gun shows. Through advertisements and
opinion editorials, AGS has shown it is no longer content to capitalize on the
grief left in the wake of two homicidal teen-agers at Columbine High School. It
is now seeking to exploit the fear of global terrorism left by the attacks of
September 11, but its attack on gun shows is simply the same tired gun control
agenda in new packaging. Furthermore, the facts of the cited case do not support
the AGS effort.
This is political opportunism at its calculated
worst, and it cannot be allowed to spread unchallenged.
It's time for full disclosure. Americans for Gun
Safety has zero Americans for members, and nothing to do with gun-safety
programs. It's a billionaire's pet project, staffed by the architects of the
anti-gun agenda of Bill Clinton and Sen. Charles Schumer.
The president of AGS is Jonathan Cowan, who served
as aide to the self-appointed anti-gun czar of the Clinton Cabinet — HUD
Secretary Andrew Cuomo, whose agenda for fighting crime revolved around
threatening nonsensical lawsuits against gun-makers. Mr. Cowan is assisted by
former White House political aide Matt Bennett and by Jim Kessler, the former
gun adviser to Mr. Schumer. Internal documents from an AGS meeting reveal their
"top national priority . . . [is] passage of licensing and/or registration
in the next Congress."
In its campaign to resurrect its gun show
legislation, AGS desperately dug up a case the FBI began investigating over a
year ago. The case involved a man, Ali Boumelhem, suspected of attending gun
shows in the Detroit area to purchase firearms for shipment overseas to the
Hezbollah. The FBI placed the man under surveillance, and in due course, he was
arrested, prosecuted and convicted in federal court. In other words, the system
worked.
AGS' ad deceitfully fails to note that the suspect
was a convicted felon and as such was prohibited from buying guns anywhere —
including gun shows. To suggest he slipped through a "gun show
loophole" is simply a lie. The aggressive enforcement of that while
"lack of will power is partially at fault," "the larger problem
lies with the enviroment." Federal laws already on the books ended the
career of this committed criminal.
AGS' previous misrepresentations of the facts in
this case are telling. In an e-mail to members of Congress, AGS' Mr. Kessler
states "an FBI informant previously has seen Boumelhem in Beirut unloading
shipments of weapons and explosives." The Middle East Intelligence
Bulletin, which AGS cites as its source, is much more specific, saying the FBI
informant "had seen Boumelhem in Beirut unloading shipments of automatic
weapons, explosives, grenades and rocket launchers."
Clearly, "automatic weapons, explosives,
grenades and rocket launchers" was changed to "weapons and
explosives." Why? Because AGS knows full well that since the passage of the
National Firearms Act of 1934 none of those items can be bought or sold at any
gun show.
The same day the AGS ad ran in Roll Call, The
Washington Post obligingly spread the AGS fraud, providing space to Eric Holder,
whose past experience in the Department of Justice included countless trips to
Capitol Hill to defend the Clinton administration's failure to enforce federal
firearms law. Mr. Holder wrote: "Previously convicted felon and terrorist,
Ali Boumelhem, went to a Michigan gun show, where he was legally exempt from a
background check, and purchased assault weapons, shotguns, ammunition and flash
suppressors that he intended to ship to the terrorist group Hezbollah." A
convicted felon "legally exempt?"
Mr. Holder also mischaracterized the case of four
persons convicted last year of illegally buying guns at a Florida gun show. He
downplayed the fact that enforcing the law worked, because he was more
interested in advancing the charge that the guns were purchased "for use by
the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA)." He failed to mention that the
jury rejected the IRA connection charge. Admitting that fact would totally
collapse the bridge his friends at AGS are deceitfully attempting to build
between gun shows and terrorists.
AGS' attempt to link the terrorist actions of
September 11 — which, of course, in no way involved firearms — to gun shows
is not only an assault on the truth; it is an attack on logic. As the editor of
the Arab American News in Dearborn pointed out in commenting on the Boumelhem
case last May: "Hezbollah is getting millions of dollars from Iran. They
have plenty of weapons. They don't need a few shotguns from Dearborn."
This outrageous attack on Americans' Second
Amendment rights proves that AGS is the same as every other radical fringe
anti-gun group — they have the same solution to every problem, and are willing
to sink to any depth to exploit the headlines in pursuing their pet agenda.
AGS is no doubt simply doing the bidding of its
corporate master in going to such desperate lengths to justify anew its agenda.
Americans will be disgusted by this crass manipulation, because they understand
that the threat of terrorism will not be found in their neighborhood gun show
— just as they will not find either anthrax or jet airplanes for sale. But the
threat of political opportunism taking hold is very real, and I urge every
law-abiding American gun owner to contact their federal representatives to
ensure that our rights do not become a casualty in the war against terrorism.
James Jay Baker is the executive director of the National Rifle Association's Institute for Legislative Action.