Gun-ban bill dies in Senate committee (MD)

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Desertdog

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I guess idiots will always be idiots. :fire:

Gun-ban bill dies in Senate committee
http://washingtontimes.com/metro/20040402-105648-4513r.htm

By Robert Redding Jr.
THE WASHINGTON TIMES


ANNAPOLIS — A Senate committee narrowly defeated a bill yesterday that would have banned the sale of 19 semiautomatic gun types in Maryland.
The bill was defeated 6-5 in the Judicial Proceedings Committee, with the deciding vote cast by Sen. John A. Giannetti Jr., Anne Arundel and Prince George's Democrat.
"I think the gun debate died when [Mr. Giannetti] decided he wasn't going to support any kind of ban," said House Speaker Michael E. Busch, Anne Arundel Democrat.
The bill was intended to replace a federal ban on military-style weapons that is set to expire in September and is not expected to be renewed by Congress.
Gun-control advocates saw the bill as the last opportunity this year to strengthen Maryland's gun laws. Thirty other gun-related bills remain, but lawmakers are not expected to vote on them with less than two weeks left in the 2004 General Assembly session.
Sen. Robert J. Garagiola, Montgomery Democrat and the bill's sponsor, acknowledged that he tried to amend the legislation to get Mr. Giannetti to change his mind.
The [National Rifle Association] won, and the citizens of Maryland lost," Mr. Garagiola said. "Hopefully, Congress will do the right thing at this point and reauthorize it."
Maryland banned a number of military-style assault pistols about 10 years ago but allows the sale of 45 models of semiautomatic assault weapons if a buyer passes a criminal background check and agrees to a seven-day waiting period.
The federal law prohibits the sale of guns that have two or more characteristics of an assault weapon, such as a grenade launcher. There are 19 weapons banned under the law.
The proposal in the General Assembly would have banned sales of the 45 models that are now legal but would not affect guns already sold.
Mr. Giannetti has said that Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr., a Republican, would veto the bill.
The 30 remaining gun-related bills — not expected to make it to the floor — include efforts to lift a ban on selling some guns without safety devices; allow more residents to carry a concealed weapon, and make it a crime to use a toy gun to commit a crime.
Delegate Neil F. Quinter, Howard County Democrat, sponsored companion legislation to Mr. Garagiola's bill, which also is not expected to make it to out of the House Judiciary Committee.
This is the second straight year Mr. Garagiola and Mr. Quinter have tried to pass a more stringent assault weapons ban in the state. They had the support of Baltimore Mayor Martin O'Malley and Montgomery County Executive Douglas M. Duncan, both Democrats and Mr. Ehrlich's chief rivals in state politics. Five other states have imposed similar firearm restrictions. Connecticut and Kentucky are considering similar bans.
The U.S. Senate has voted in favor of a bill to extend the federal ban on weapons and to require background checks for buyers at private gun shows.
However, President Bush and gun manufacturers oppose the bill, which includes provisions to force the Republican-controlled House to accept lawsuits against gun dealers.
The assembly is scheduled to adjourn April 12.
 
anyone else notice the Washington Post has avoided reporting this story?

gee, they were all over every MMM press event in Annapolis
 
CeaseFire MD: Senator Sinks Assault Weapons Ban
4/6/2004

Press Release
CeaseFire Maryland
3000 Chestnut Avenue
Baltimore, MD 21211
www.ceasefiremd.org

Contact:
Leah Barrett
Phone: 410-889-1477

Baltimore, MD - CeaseFire Maryland, Inc., the state's leading gun violence prevention group, expressed deep disappointment today (April 2nd) that SB 288, the bill that would have protected Marylanders from assault rifles, died in the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee. Senator John A. Giannetti, Jr., cast the vote that killed the measure.

Leah Barrett, Executive Director of CeaseFire Maryland, said, "I still thought it was possible he would come to his senses at the eleventh hour and support this sensible bill, but now his vote against banning assault weapons is on record for all to see."

She continued: "What I find particularly puzzling is that Senator Giannetti could not even bring himself to support a straight reauthorization of the weak 1994 federal ban, which is the law of the land until September 13, 2004. We don't expect Congress to act to renew the ban so Marylanders will be able to buy AK-47s and other assault weapons on September 14."

"By casting his 'No' vote, Senator Giannetti abandoned his constituents, 82% of whom strongly support not only the continuation of the federal assault weapons ban but also support strengthening the ban to include copycat assault weapons."

Americans are already the most heavily armed civilian population in the world, according to a recent UN small arms survey. The proliferation of military-style assault weapons in the hands of civilians threatens the safety not only of ordinary Americans, but also of law enforcement officers (one in five was killed by an assault weapon between 1998 and 2001 according to FBI data). Kevlar vests are no defense against these highly lethal weapons.

Barrett concluded: "I'm afraid it will have to take another tragedy in Maryland to bring lawmakers such as Senator Giannetti to their senses. Perhaps then they will deem public safety more important than political expediency. But then again, perhaps not."

Date of Release: April 2, 2004

http://www.jointogether.org/gv/news/alerts/reader/0,2061,570266,00.html
 
My letter to the editor of the Times. Guys, we have to back this guy or we will not have him the next time around.





Senator Garagiola, House Speaker Busch, Delegate Quinter and Leah Barrett of Ceasefire Maryland have launched a carefully coordinated, but misguided, campaign to make Senator John Giannetti the scapegoat for their failure to enact the Maryland Assault Weapons Ban of 2004.

These four seem to forget that there were five other members of the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee who voted in opposition to Senate Bill 288. How is it that the burden of the bill's failure is placed upon the shoulders of one legislator? Perhaps it is because John Giannetti knows flawed legislation when he sees it and voted his conscience in the interest of not wasting the Senate's time on bills that stand no chance of being enacted as law.

Unlike the four individuals cited above, Senator Giannetti took the time to look for the facts on both sides of the argument. He talked with representatives of law enforcement agencies, other politicians, representatives of gun organizations and members of organizations in favor of the bill. To have a senator actually take time to find the facts and avoid the hysterical rhetoric of those backing these bills is a breath of fresh air.

Senator Garagiola accuses Mr. Giannetti of caving to the NRA saying, " The National Rifle Association won, and the citizens of Maryland lost" (Washington Times, April 3). Nothing could be further from the truth. The NRA sent no representatives to speak at either the Senate or House hearings on the bills, while those speaking in favor of the bill were employees of The Brady Campaign and Ceasefire Maryland.

The citizens of Maryland came to those hearings in overwhelming numbers to defeat this misguided legislation. They came not as representatives of any organization or political party. They came as law-abiding individuals who are weary of having their individual freedoms curtailed by dangerously flawed attempts to control crime.

Senator Garagiola may not believe so, but the citizens of Maryland are capable of independent thought and do not need organizations to speak for them. Senator Giannetti exhibited this same quality by demonstrating that he is a free thinker who is not at the beck and call of the professional lobbyists backing these now-defeated bills.
 
Nothing worse than a guy who wrote a master's thesis on Spring Break:D

I just feel like we have to take the battle for hearts and minds to them, rather than just posting here amongst the already enlightened.
 
Ha! It would seem that Leah Barrett is taking a potshot at Senator Gianetti in retaliation for Norton's scathing letter printed in the Post (or was it the Times?) last week in which he exposed Mrs. Barrett (aka Gail Gunn) as the paid mouthpiece that she is, and not the grassroots political activist that she claims to be. Perhaps Mrs. Barrett thinks that Norton wrote that strictly on Senator Gianetti's behalf. She just can't grasp the thought of Marylanders thinking for themselves and not needing PAID lobbyists like herself.

Norton, maybe you could post that letter again in this thread so everybody can read it.
 
i think Garagiola forced the vote on Friday so they could have a concrete record of Gianetti's vote
last year the AWB died in the drawer with no vote
they forced the issue this year

more news:

Big issues will go down to deadline in General Assembly
by Steven T. Dennis, Catherine Dolinski and Thomas Dennison
Staff Writers
Apr. 7, 2004

For complete coverage of the 2004 legislative session, go to www.gazette.net/annapolis2004/.

<snip>
Gun control

A proposal to enact a state ban on assault weapons to replace the expiring federal ban was formally killed in the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee on Friday when Sen. John A. Giannetti Jr. (D-Dist. 21) of Laurel backed up his earlier decision to cast the deciding vote against the ban.

The bill's sponsor, Sen. Robert J. Garagiola (D-Dist. 15) of Germantown, lamented that after the federal ban expires Sept. 13, semiautomatic AK-47s, Uzis and other assault rifles will become legal again.

Giannetti said the bill would never become law because Ehrlich would veto it, and he feared the volatile issue would prompt a filibuster. He said he would side with the Maryland State Police in opposing the bill. Sen. Jennie M. Forehand (D-Dist. 17) of Rockville called the state police's opposition a sham because they work for Ehrlich, who lobbied hard to kill the bill. She warned Ehrlich and the state police that they would "bear the responsibility of this place when it becomes a war zone."

A separate proposal by Miller to alter the state's trigger lock law to benefit Maryland gun manufacturer Beretta appears to have been shelved as well.


http://www.gazette.net/200415/montgomerycty/state/210611-1.html
 
Ha! It would seem that Leah Barrett is taking a potshot at Senator Gianetti in retaliation for Norton's scathing letter printed in the Post


I wonder if she got the letter forwarded to her or not...
 
It was a sad day for Maryland politicians.. Tyranny died, and Freedom won.. that's pretty much everything they are against...
 
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