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Brady Bill There have been many different gun control laws proposed in the past few years. One of the most recent and controversial ones has been the Brady Bill. The Brady Bill represented the first comprehensive, federal gun control in twenty-five years. The Brady Bill is an effective way of gun control with its background checks and five-day waiting period. The Brady Bill was originally named for anti-gun lobbyist James Brady. James Brady was Press Secretary to President Ronald Regan and was shot and paralyzed in an assassination attempt on the President. It took seven years to get the Bill passed through Congress till President Clinton could sign it into law in November of 1993, although the law would not become effective till February 28, 1994. The Bill required that states impose a five working day waiting period and a background check on all people wanting to purchase a handgun. During the five day waiting period local police officers in the buyer’s area were to, “make a reasonable effort” to determine if a buyer could posses a handgun. The Bill also moved the age of owning a handgun up to age 21 from age 18. An amendment to the Bill added that a federal instant background check system was to be install within five years of the Bill's passage to due away with the five-day waiting period. The system was installed but President Clinton wanted to keep the five-day period as a “cooling off” period for people who might be purchasing a gun for a “passion crime”(13). The Amendment also added that states can be exempt from the Brady Bill if they have there own waiting period or background check system in place already or during the life of the Bill. The effectiveness of the Brady Bill has been proven nationwide. ... ... middle of paper ... ... 12. Kahane, Leo H. “Gun lobbies and Gun Control: Senate Voting Patterns on the Brady Bill and the Assault Weapons Ban.” Atlantic Economic Journal Dec. 1999: Vol. 27 Issue 4, 384-394. MasterFILE Premier on-line. Apr. 5 2000 http://www.epnet.com/ehost/login.html Provides information on the Brady Bill. 12. GunCite- Gun Control: The Brady Bill http://www.guncite.com/gun_control_brady_bill.html Talks about parts of the Brady Bill. 13. http://handguncontrol.org/backgd.htm Tells about background checks and waiting periods that the Brady Bill made into law. Apr. 7 2000 14. http://www.handguncontrol.org/bradyhistory.htm Gives the history of the Brady Bill. Apr.9 2000 15. http://www.nraila.org Gives information about Brady Bill. Apr. Apr. 26 2000 16. http://www.census.gov/statab/www statistics on violence in the U.S. Apr. 26 2000
The two filed separate claims challenging the constitutionality of the Brady Act’s provision that used congressional action to compel state officers to execute Federal law. The NRA stood behind them, stating that this provision violated the 10th Amendment. However, instead of just arguing for the removal of the provision, the NRA argued that the whole law must be voided. This argument contradicted prior claims from the NRA that they did, in fact, support background checks. In 1997, the Supreme Court ruled to remove the portion of the Brady Law that required local police to conduct background checks as it was an unconstitutional mandate. The rest of the law remained in place
So the GCA had little effect of the events that were about to come. Hinckley’s gun purchase led to the attempt to assassinate Ronald Reagan, Reagan was injured along with James Brady. Leaving James Brady partially paralyzed, which gave Brady the direction to pursuit to trying to pass a new law that would require thorough background checks on all firearm purchases. In 1993, The Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act was signed by President Bill Clinton, its main focus was that of which a purchaser that buys a firearm from a federally licensed deal must pass the check to try to avoid selling to incapable purchaser. All these different act are very important in the United States to keep everyone somewhat “legal” and encourage the law abiding citizens the opportunity to acquire a firearm within the rules and regulations.The fact is that very few federal laws regulate the manufacture, sale or possession of firearms, and those currently on the books are filled with loopholes or significantly tie the hands of law enforcement. The Brady Act, for example, which requires licensed firearms dealers to perform background checks on gun purchasers, does not apply to private sellers, responsible for an estimated forty percent of all gun sales. Because of this “private sale” loophole, convicted felons and other prohibited
Fields, Gary. "New Washington Gun Rules Shift Constitutional Debate." Wall Street Journal. 17 May. 2010: A. 1. SIRS Issues Researcher. Web. 22 Apr. 2014.
Carter, Gregg Lee, ed. “Federal Gun Laws.” Gun Control in the United States: A Reference
Some people believe that guns should be heavily regulated. In fact, According to Handgun Control ¨laws such as the Brady Act, which requires background checks on gun buyers, have prevented four hundred thousand felons and other prohibited purchasers from buying handguns.” These laws have done their job. This system still has its flaws. They are trying to fix a system that is not broken and usually when someone tries to fix something that is not broken they break it. Also, when there are new laws for gun
Lee, Robert W. "A Liberal Look at Gun Control" The New American 15 (1999): 39-41
The passage of the Brady bill of 1993 is one of the best case studies of
The background check system can help to reduce crime and violence with the help of the NICS. This system is in charge or having criminal, mentally ill, or drug abusers names. Their names should appear on the database when they want to purchase a gun, and it has to be shared with the FBI. However since the Virginia Tech massacre they realized that the background check system is missing a lot of records and was not succeeding. Because of this congress passed the NICS Improvement Amendments Act to help with the cost of gathering and submitting information from agencies and states to the FBI, to create a more accurate database and make it faster for new information to be loaded in the NICS. According to Christine Watkins, “Every day 34 Americans are murdered with guns, and most of them are possessed illegally” (Watkins 1).
It is only there to make our lawmaking bodies and those of us who are too naive to see the truth feel better. Do you really think that the Brady Law keeps handguns out of the hands of criminals?
Johnson, Fawn. "The Silver Lining in the Gun-Control Defeat." National Journal. (2013): Opposing Viewpoints Resource Center. Web 31 Oct. 2013
Aroung the time of John F. Kennedy’s assassination, the controversial and widely argued issue of gun control sparked and set fire across America. In the past decade however, it has become one of the hottest topics in the nation. Due to many recent shootings, including the well known Sandy Hook Elementary school, Columbine High School, Aurora movie theater, and Virginia Tech, together totaling 87 deaths, many people are beginning to push for nationwide gun control. An article published in the Chicago Tribune by Illinois State Senator Jacqueline Collins, entitled “Gun Control is Long Overdue” voiced the opinion that in order for America to remain the land of the free, we must take action in the form of stricter gun laws. On the contrary, Kathleen Parker, a member of the Washington Post Writers Group whose articles have appeared in the Weekly Standard, Time, Town & Country, Cosmopolitan, and Fortune Small Business, gives a different opinion on the subject. Her article in The Oregonian “Gun Control Conversation Keeps Repeating” urges Americans to look at the cultural factors that create ...
"How the Gun-Rights Lobby Won After Newtown." PBS. PBS, 10 Dec. 2013. Web. 12 Dec. 2013.
Wilson, H. (2007). Guns, gun control, and elections. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Jacobs, James B., and Kimberly A. Potter. "Keeping Guns out of the ‘Wrong’ Hands: The Brady Law and the Limits of Regulation." The Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology 86.1 (1995): 93-120. Print.
McClurg, Andrew J. Gun Control and Gun Rights: A Reader and Guide. New York: New York UP, 2002. Print.