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Gun Control Hearing Features Gabrielle Giffords, NRA Official Wayne LaPierre
WASHINGTON -- In a dramatic appeal, wounded former Rep. Gabrielle
Giffords urged Congress on Wednesday to enact tougher curbs on guns,
saying, "too many children are dying" without them.
"The time is now. You must act. Be bold, be courageous, Americans are
counting on you," she told the Senate Judiciary Committee at Congress'
first gun control hearing since 20 elementary school children were shot
to death in Newtown, Conn., late last year.
Giffords spoke haltingly, a result of the wounds suffered
when she was shot in the head in an attempted assassination two years
ago that left six others dead.
But in conflicting testimony a little more than an hour later, a top
official of the National Rifle Association rejected bans on certain
assault weapons and high capacity magazines advocated by President
Barack Obama and gun control advocates in Congress.
Under persistent questioning from Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., the
panel's chairman, the NRA's Wayne LaPierre also conceded that in a
reversal, his organization no longer supports universal background
checks for gun purchasers. He said criminals wouldn't subject themselves
to a background check and the current system is a failure because the
administration doesn't prosecute potential violators aggressively.
"Back in '99 you said, `no loopholes, nowhere,' " said Leahy,
referring to testimony delivered more than a decade ago. "Now you do not
support background checks for all."
Other Democrats on the panel disagreed with LaPierre.
"That's the point. The criminals will not go to purchase the guns
because there'll be a background check. It will stop them from original
purchase. You missed that point completely. It is basic," said Sen. Dick
Durbin of Illinois.
Retired Navy Capt. Mark Kelly, Giffords husband as well as a former
astronaut and also a witness, said a limit on the size of ammunition
magazines could have made a dramatic difference when a man opened fire
in Arizona two years ago.
He
"showed up with two 33-round magazines, one of which was in his 9
millimeter. He unloaded the contents of that magazine in 15 seconds.
Very quickly. It all happened very, very fast. The first bullet went
into Gabby's head. Bullet number 13 went into a nine-year old girl named
Christina Taylor Green....
"If he had a 10-round magazine -- well, let me back up. When he tried
to reload one 33-round magazine with another 33-round magazine, he
dropped it. And a woman named Patricia Maisch grabbed it, and it gave
bystanders a time to tackle him.
"I contend if that same thing happened when he was trying to reload
one 10-round magazine with another 10-round magazine, meaning he did not
have access to a high-capacity magazine, and the same thing happened,
Christina Taylor Green would be alive today."
Giffords was not on the list of witnesses released in advance of the
hearings, and in an unusual show of respect, members of the committee
greeted her warmly outside the hearing room as she and her husband made
their way inside. The former Democratic congresswoman was grievously
wounded in an assassination attempt in Tucson, Ariz., a little more than
two years ago, and has become a public advocate for gun control.
Kelly described the effect on his wife of the events of two years ago.
"Gabby's gift for speech is a distant memory. She struggles to walk,
and she is partially blind. Her right arm is completely paralyzed," he
told a rapt committee room.
In the aftermath of the Newtown, Conn., massacre, Obama has issued a call for gun control legislation.
California Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a Democrat and member of the
committee, has introduced a bill to ban numerous assault-style weapons
as well as high-capacity ammunition magazines.
The prospects for Senate passage are not strong, in part because of
opposition from the NRA and in part from a reluctance among rural-state
Democrats – Leahy among them – to support limitations sought by some
advocates of restrictions on firearms.
Republicans pledged to listen carefully, and no more.
Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, the panel's senior Republican, said
that while the shootings in Arizona and Connecticut were terrible
tragedies, they "should not be used to put forward every gun control
measure that has been floating around for years." He also said
any serious discussion of the issue `must include a complete
re-examination of mental health as it related to mass shootings."
In an opening statement of his own, Leahy said it is "a simple matter
of common sense" that there should be a strengthening of background
checks and that doing so would not threaten gun owners' rights. The
checks are currently required for gun purchases from licensed dealers
but not at gun shows or other private transaction.
At the same time, he said the Constitution's second amendment "is
secure and will remain secure and protection....No one can or will take
those rights or our guns away," he said.
He added, "let us forego sloganeering, demagoguery and partisan recriminations. This is too important for that."
Giffords' appearance – not only her words, but her obvious difficulty
in speaking – served to underscore the emotion surrounding the issue of
gun curbs.
The gunman in Tucson, Jared Loughner, used a 9 mm Glock pistol with
an extended ammunition magazine in the attack that wounded the former
congresswoman and killed six. The handgun would not have been illegal
under a federal assault weapons ban that lapsed more than seven years
ago, but the magazine that held more than 30 bullets would have been
prohibited.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., indicated that whatever
the committee produced wouldn't necessarily be the final product, saying
the package would be debated by the full Senate and senators would be
allowed to propose "whatever amendments they want that deal with this
issue."
Despite the horrific Newtown slayings, it remains unclear whether
those advocating limits on gun availability will be able to overcome
resistance by the NRA and lawmakers from states where gun ownership
abounds. Question marks include not just many Republicans but also
Democratic senators facing re-election in red-leaning states in 2014.
They include Max Baucus of Montana, Mark Begich of Alaska and Mark Pryor
of Arkansas.