'Watch
Lists'
by
John R. Lott, Jr. and Sonya D.
Jones
by John R. Lott, Jr. and Sonya D.
Jones
Should
people lose rights because they are sympathetic to, but do not actually
help, terrorist groups? Should law enforcement be the arbiter of
those sympathizers who should be placed on "watch lists"?
Democrats said "yes" to both questions recently as they
released a report showing that 35 gun purchases during the first
half of last year were made by people on terrorist "watch lists"
and called it a major public security risk. Their solution? Ban
the sale of guns to people law enforcement places on the "watch
list."
Evening
news broadcasts, such as CBS', led their segments on the report
denouncing the sales: "As incredible as it sounds . . . ."
Democratic Senators such as Hillary Clinton, Jon Corzine, Ted Kennedy,
Carl Levin, Charles Schumer, and Frank Lautenberg quickly came out
strongly saying that "suspected" individuals should be
prohibited from buying guns.
The
35 "suspected" purchases, out of 3.1 million total transactions,
were allowed because background checks found no prohibiting information.
No felonies or disqualifying misdemeanors, for example. They were
neither fugitives from justice nor illegal aliens. Nor had they
ever disavowed their US citizenship.
The FBI was alerted when these sales took place, but the transactions
weren’t stopped because the law didn’t prohibit them.
"Suspects" didn’t have to be foreigners. They may
have simply been individuals classified by law enforcement as sympathetic
to militia groups or other undesirable domestic organizations. Ironically,
this debate occurred as the U.S. Supreme Court slapped down state
laws that use police reports to set prison sentences because police
reports are not reliable. Being on the "watch list" would
also just rely on police reports. There would be no adjudication
by a judge, no trial by jury, before being placed on the list.
Some
politicians have recently experienced being on a "watch list"
firsthand.
Sen. Ted Kennedy was understandably upset last year and publicly
complained to the Senate Judiciary committee when he was prevented
from flying on an airplane because his name was placed on just such
a "watch list." Rules did not allow him to be told at
the airport why he was being denied a ticket, but fortunately for
him being a U.S. senator meant the problem was solved with a few
telephone calls.
Ultimately,
though, despite all the fears generated, background checks simply
aren’t the solution. The Federal Brady Act has been in effect
for 11 years and state background checks even longer. But despite
all the academic research that has been done, a recent National
Academy of Sciences report could not find any evidence – not
a single published academic
study – that background checks reduce any type of violent
crime.
Surely,
it would be nice if these regulations worked. But it's hard to believe
they will be any more successful stopping terrorists. Criminals
and terrorists share a lot in common, starting with the fact that
what they are doing is illegal. In addition, terrorists are probably
smarter and engage in vastly more planning than your typical criminal,
thus making the rules even less likely to be successful.
People
need to remind themselves that a "watch list" is only
that. It is not even probable cause. If you had probable cause that
these suspects had done something illegal, you could arrest them.
Yet Sen. Carl Levin, for example, has been more solicitous of the
constitutional rights of foreign combatants held in Guantanamo to
"due process" then he is to the rights of Americans. He
believes Americans can lose their rights to own a gun without an
evidentiary
hearing.
Democrats
may think that people on "watch lists" should be denied
their rights to own a gun, but what is next? Why not just make the
system much "more efficient" and simply put all people
"watch lists" directly in prison?
March
23, 2005
John
Lott [send him mail], a resident
scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, is the author of The
Bias Against Guns (Regnery 2003). Sonya D. Jones is a law
student at Texas Tech University.
Copyright
© 2005 John Lott
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