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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (1971)1/10/2002 11:57:12 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
And Ashcroft a gun fanatic who talks about patriotism!, but refuses to do background
checks on terrorists who buy guns!



To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (1971)1/11/2002 12:02:07 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
Ashcroft's gun-coddling hypocrisy

By Thomas Oliphant, 12/11/2001
Boston Globe

WASHINGTON

AS THEY SAY in the euphemism business, John Ashcroft
''misspoke.'' He said his hands are tied by the law. As attorney
general, he said he has little patience for those who want him ''to
enforce some laws and not other laws.''

In fact, what leads him to treat guns with pussyfooting deference
in the middle of a war on terrorism - and everything else, no
matter how trivial, with a vengeance is not the Constitution or
the law but a puny government regulation that he could rewrite in
a New York minute.

In fact, there are grounds to feel strongly that the stupid
regulation is no obstacle at all. And Ashcroft is closing off
important gun-tracing work against the wishes of the FBI, where
the exigencies of the moment to not permit the luxury of
continuing to indulge in gun politics.

What the FBI did, in the midst of the effort to capture terrorists in
our midst and prevent additional attacks, was to begin to check
names of people it was interested in for its investigation against
gun purchase records.

Sounds like basic police work to me, but the very next day one of
the conservative activists in the Ashcroft inner circle, Assistant
Attorney General Viet Dinh, halted this effort to see who among
those considered subjects in the terror investigation were buying
guns.

In October, with the investigative machinery in full gear, the FBI
had the additional temerity to try again. They were again ordered
to get lost.

Apart from common sense, the FBI had an another reason for its
requests. In an initial check of some 186 people it found two in
federal records who had bought guns within the past 90 days. And
no wonder. One of the terrorist manuals found in Kabul last
month instructed would-be murderers of Americans `'to obtain an
assault rifle legally.''


What Ashcroft did to stop the FBI from investigating further,
moreover, is connected to another bit of his gun-coddling
fanaticism that adds hypocrisy to the mix. The reason cited for
stopping the FBI is said to be a regulation issued in the closing
weeks of the Clinton administration by Attorney General Janet
Reno.

In her opinion, information that comes in from gun stores and
licensed dealers that is employed in background checks of
would-be purchasers was not intended to be used for any other
law enforcement activity. Reno ruled that the information was
available to the FBI only for its regular work in auditing the stuff
for things like accuracy.

The notion of Ashcroft citing this regulation is a three-part joke.
Most important, it is Ashcroft himself who has tried to gut the
meaning of the very regulation he cites as tying his hands. Last
summer, it was the proposed reducing of the 90-day holding
period for these records to one day, provoking a wave of criticism
and legislation to stop him from Representative Jim Moran and
Senators Edward Kennedy and Charles Schumer.

Second, it is by no means clear that the Reno regulation would
stop the FBI from its work. Such wild-eyed radicals as Senator
John McCain assert the contrary. But no one disputes that a
regulation isn't the issue anyway; it's Ashcroft's weak will.

Regulations are easily rewritten. And in the wakeup period
following Sept. 11, regulations and laws have been changed to
clarify and increase federal power by the bucketful. When
Kennedy asked Ashcroft if he wanted the power to use gun
records in investigating suspected terrorists, he misspoke again
and claimed the question was hypothetical.


And there's the key point. All power needs oversight and criticism
in a democracy, but most of us have accepted restrictions and
inconvenience, and some of us (Muslims especially) face
borderline intimidation and repression.

According to FBI officials, their agents are interested in things
like credit card receipts and ATM records because they provide a
data trail of where people have been and some of what they have
been doing. That goes triple for gun records.

And the point also ought to apply to another effort Ashcroft
opposed, the campaign led by Senators McCain and Joe Lieberman
of Connecticut and Representatives Mike Castle of Delaware and
Carolyn Maloney of New York to close the loophole in the law
involving gun shows. Sales by dealers are of course subject to
checks, but one-on-one transactions (the No. 2 source after law
breaking by gun stores of illegally trafficked weapons, according to
law enforcement,) are in the clear.

Kennedy has the odd notion that the government ''must not put
the interests of the gun lobby above the nation's public safety.''

Ashcroft, whose contribution to demagoguery was the claim that
his critics are aiding terrorists, might like to explain exactly how
his gun policies deter them.

Thomas Oliphant's e-mail address is oliphant@globe.com.

This story ran on page A23 of the Boston Globe on 12/11/2001.
© Copyright 2001 Globe Newspaper Company.

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