Restrictions work, says man who brought
Massachusetts gun deaths to record low
The state has the lowest US gun death rates, and John
Rosenthal says mass shootings won’t stop without real national action
John
Rosenthal, founder of Stop Handgun Violence, during a panel discussion in
Boston in 2013. Photograph: Steven Senne/AP
Sarah
Betancourt in Boston
@sweetadelinevt
Sat 24 Apr
2021 11.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/24/us-gun-violence-deaths-massachusetts-expert
In 2020, even as many Americans remained cloistered in
their homes under the pandemic, 19,380 died from gunshots – more than in any
other year.
This year
is no different. According to the Gun Violence Archive, there have been 158
mass shootings with four or more people shot, more than one a day.
No one
knows the numbers better than John Rosenthal, a co-founder of Stop Handgun
Violence, a Boston-based non-profit. He has discussed the issue with
presidents, governors, a supreme court justice and even the former head of
Smith & Wesson. Largely thanks to his efforts, the state has the lowest US
gun death rate.
It all
started in 1994, when Rosenthal owned a parking garage next to Fenway Park,
home of the Boston Red Sox. Negotiating a price for a billboard on top of the
garage, he realized the value of the spot, over the Massachusetts Turnpike and
250,000 drivers a day.
“I thought,
‘Well, what message could I put on here that could help change bad public
policy?’”
A friend
told him 15 kids under 19 died every day from guns. The figure went on the
billboard. The numbers changed as the board gained attention. Bill Clinton
would reroute his motorcade to pass it. The president met Rosenthal through
former governor Bill Weld.
Over 27
years, Stop Handgun Violence has led the way on passing four state gun violence
prevention bills – three under Republican governors.
“We’ve had
a 40% reduction in the rate of gun deaths in Massachusetts, and a reduction of
suicides,” Rosenthal says.
About
two-thirds of gun deaths are suicides. In Massachusetts, requirements for
licensing, registration and background checks have created waiting periods that
make it harder to purchase a gun, creating time to think.
“You can’t
buy a gun impulsively in Massachusetts, legally,” Rosenthal says.
The
landmark Massachusetts Gun Control Act of 1998, signed by a Republican governor,
Paul Cellucci, required renewable licensing and registration for all gun
owners, adopted the standards of the 1994 federal assault weapons ban (which
was sponsored by Joe Biden, then a senator), implemented the first consumer
protection standards for firearms and required dealers to be licensed.
Another
Republican, Mitt Romney, signed a second major gun law in 2004, making
permanent the federal assault weapons ban and outlawing 19 specific firearms.
A Democrat,
Deval Patrick, oversaw a 2014 law that requires a wide range of data be
submitted to National Instant Background Check System, including domestic
violence convictions, mental health and substance abuse records. Massachusetts
also got a web portal for instant background checks on all private sales and
expanded police discretion for issuing licenses for rifles and long guns. The
law required every gun recovered in a crime be traced and logged in a central
database.
That
officer died in Boulder. He was outgunned. He had to reload. That’s when you
die
In 2017 and
2018 another Republican, Charlie Baker, signed the first US ban of bump stocks
– devices which make guns semi-automatic – and the Extreme Risk Protection law,
which empowers family members and law enforcement to have firearms removed when
they believe an individual could use them for harm.
Nonetheless,
Rosenthal says, Massachusetts makes “more firearms at Smith & Wesson and
Springfield Armory and other smaller companies than any other state. We are
selling weapons of mass destruction, mostly AR-15s, which can’t be sold
in-state because of our assault weapon ban but [are] wreaking havoc across the
country.”
In the late
90s, Rosenthal contacted Ed Shultz, then Smith & Wesson’s chief executive,
hoping he could create childproof guns similar to models the company had made
more than 90 years before.
“I told
him, ‘You put safety features on your guns, but 17% of police officers are
killed in the line of duty or killed with their own weapon because the bad guy
grabs the gun. Why don’t you make a childproof or personalized gun now?”
According
to Rosenthal, Shultz said, “We would like to do it. But the minute we do it,
we’ll be sued for not doing it yesterday. You get me tort reform, I’ll get you
personalized gun technology.”
Together,
they pursued handgun locks and technology that would only allow the owner of a
gun to fire it. The National Rifle Association boycotted the company.
Leadership changed. Smith & Wesson began making AR-15s.
“Their
AR-15 was later used in Aurora, in Las Vegas and countless other [mass
shootings],” Rosenthal says. Smith & Wesson now makes the most popular
rifle in the country.
In a 5-4
ruling authored by Antonin Scalia, the court found a Washington DC handgun ban
unconstitutional, holding that the second amendment to the US constitution
protects the right to keep weapons for self-defense – unconnected to the
formation of a militia.
Rosenthal
counters that every decision before Heller said the second amendment gave the
right to bear arms to the militia, now the national guard.
“Not an
individual right. Heller changed that but only in so much that you could have
had the same guns you had in 1776. Not current AR-15 assault weapons. None of
that is protected and Scalia said as much. He said you could put reasonable
restriction on guns.”
The NRA,
Rosenthal says, decided to spin Scalia’s words, to say individual gun ownership
was completely protected.
Rosenthal
says he met Richard Heller, the plaintiff in the case, at a debate in 2013,
after the Sandy Hook school shooting in Connecticut in which 20 young children
and six adults were killed. They talked, he says, about how some children could
only be identified by their clothing, because they had been shot more than 10
times. Rosenthal says Heller said: ‘If I hadn’t done the work for the NRA and
brought this case, maybe those children [would still] be alive.’”
The same
year, the NRA lobbied against an assault weapons ban which was defeated in the
Senate, several Democrats voting against it. Rosenthal says the Massachusetts
senator Elizabeth Warren called him in tears, saying she and others had
“failed” the families of Sandy Hook.
“The toy
gun industry can be sued if they don’t put a red dot at the barrel of a toy,”
Rosenthal says. “Teddy bear companies can be sued if stuffing is flammable. But
the real firearm that results in 40,000 deaths a year, 150,000 injuries a year,
eight children killed every day? No regulations.”
Biden
recently signed a series of executive actions, after shootings in Boulder,
Colorado, where 10 people were killed, and Atlanta, where eight died. Earlier
this month, eight more died in Indianapolis. Rosenthal says mass shootings
won’t stop without real national action.
“Congress
allows 30-to-100 round magazines before having to reload without any background
check in 32 states,” he says. “That’s the reason why that officer died in
Boulder. He was outgunned. He had to reload. That’s when you die.”
The House
has passed two gun-control bills. The bipartisan Background Checks Act of 2021
would require universal background checks on all commercial sales and
legislation to close a loophole which allows sales if a background check isn’t
completed in three days.
Rosenthal
wants more. This week, he introduced new state legislation – to ban the
manufacturing of assault weapons in Massachusetts.


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