The Sniper and the Keystone Cops: Another Case of Why Gun Control
is Evil
by
William L. Anderson
The
Beltway Snipers’ murder spree ended the other night at a rest stop
that I frequent on my way home after teaching an MBA economics class
in Frederick, Maryland. It is a good thing the killers were asleep
and unaware that others at the stop had called the police, because
had they escaped, most likely they would still be at large.
Journalists
who populate the Beltway area are second in their love for statism
only to the North Korean propagandists, and soon after John Muhammad
and his 17-year-old pal were in custody, the area press was pouring
in its congratulations to the Maryland police and the FBI, who supposedly
"solved" this case. In fact, the opposite is true. Law
enforcement at all levels, and in all the jurisdictions where the
killings occurred, were an example of sheer incompetence. Furthermore,
they once again gave the lie to the words of James Brady, one of
the nation’s premier gun control advocates, who declared, "People
don’t need guns to protect themselves. That’s what the police are
for."
If
anything, the bumbling of the police in this whole sorry episode
proves that individuals must be able to protect themselves – precisely
because the police will not and cannot protect us. Let us begin
with the killings and how this puzzle was solved.
When
the shootings first began to happen about a month ago, the police
immediately began to rely upon "profilers" who were certain
that the killings were the work of the "lone nut" Angry
White Male. Thus, we were looking for the weird Caucasian with a
fascination for guns and violence – and who drove a white panel
truck while the real killers were unmolested by the police. Even
when reality continued to interrupt the investigation, the government
insisted upon following the leftist imaginary description of the
shooter.
After
some of the killings near Interstate 95, police shut down all highway
traffic and began doing the road version of airport security: bothering
everyone but those who are the perpetrators. White vans – which
were mistakenly identified as the vehicle used by the shooters –
were stopped and searched. In Richmond, Virginia, police grabbed
a white van with two Hispanic men and put out the word that they
might have caught the killers. All the while, the real criminals
were sitting in their blue Chevrolet Caprice (which had been modified
in order to enable them to shoot in secret), watching the whole
fiasco.
Furthermore,
it turns out that the killers and their car (which also served as
their home), were stopped by police several times during the whole
shooting spree, but never once suspected of being the shooters until
they gave it all away themselves. In fact, this episode would never
have solved had Muhammad not given the police everything they needed
to put the pieces of the puzzle together. Furthermore, Muhammad
had called in tips on a number of occasions, only to be rebuffed
by police who were still fixated on the AWM.
If
we are to be honest, we must give credit to the arrests not to the
police, but to Muhammad himself, who either wanted to be caught
or believed that the police were so inept that they would not have
arrested the killers even had they turned in themselves. Even here,
the incompetence of the police was stunning, as they still seemed
to be disbelieving, refusing the follow the leads Muhammad was giving
them, since the AWM theory was guiding their investigation almost
to the very end.
But
what does this have to do with gun control? First, the police proved
that they could not protect anyone from Muhammad, who killed people
at will. The police refused to consider anyone but the leftist media
favorite, the AWM, and botched chance after chance to nab the murderers.
This disproves Brady’s declaration that the police will always protect
us.
Second,
Maryland is a "progressive" state, which means it has
a gaggle of gun control laws. In fact, most Marylanders – or at
least those of the Beltway variety – are such True Believers in
gun control laws that when Republican gubernatorial candidate Robert
Erlich suggested during a recent debate with his opponent, Democrat
Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, that perhaps we should consider repealing
some gun control laws that had proven ineffective or harmful, the
anguished outcry was comical but predictable. To large numbers of
Maryland voters and politicians, gun control laws always work,
even when they don’t.
The
anti-gun attitudes among politicians in this state are such that
if a private citizen were to use a gun to stop a crime (if police
were nowhere in the area), it is almost certain that the gun-toting
civilian would be prosecuted severely. The only private citizens
who were armed in the I-70 rest stop where Muhammad and his 17-year-old
partner were nabbed were the killers themselves. Had someone held
the pair at gunpoint while waiting for the police, that person would
have been arrested, prosecuted, and would have faced many years
in prison. To leftist Marylanders, it is more important that a killer
be able to go on and on in a shooting spree than a private citizen
ever use (horrors!) a gun to stop him.
So,
what did we learn from this latest episode? First, we learned that
the experts are no better than anyone else at solving crimes and
would not have solved this one had Muhammad not given them everything
they needed to know. Second, we found once again that the police
can do almost nothing to protect individuals from crime should someone
decide to do harm to others. Third, we see there is almost no limit
to the self-congratulations government will give itself when it
"solves" something, even when it should receive absolutely
no credit for doing so.
I
am glad the Beltway shooters are in custody, although I shudder
to think they will be tried in Maryland’s left-wing court system
where juries are liable to conclude anything but the truth. Furthermore,
I am glad that people feel "safe" once again to go out
in public in the Washington, D.C., area, and no doubt the store
and restaurant owners are even happier. However, I also realize
that because we have such a left-wing apparatus of governance in
the state where I live, there is little doubt that if someone else
wishes to take up where Muhammad left off, he will almost certainly
have carte blanche as he shoots disarmed citizens at will. Government
in the name of "protecting" people leaves them defenseless
against determined killers. Unfortunately, at least in this state,
as well in much of this country, those defenseless people never
seem to learn the lesson that Muhammad and his friend have taught
us.
October 28, 2002
William
L. Anderson, Ph.D. [send him
mail], teaches economics at Frostburg State University in Maryland,
and is an adjunct scholar of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute.
Copyright
© 2002 by LewRockwell.com
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