Utah: "Shootings renew calls for stronger Utah gun laws"

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cuchulainn

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from the Deseret Morning News

http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,525039015,00.html
Shootings renew calls for stronger Utah gun laws

By Doug Smeath
Deseret Morning News

Utah children have been victims of accidental shootings three times in the past week. This time a child died.

Gun-control advocates in the state are reacting by reiterating their desire for stronger legislation, while gun-rights activists say such shootings are rare and overplayed in the news media.

Marla Kennedy of the Gun Violence Prevention Center of Utah said while no official statistics are available, the group's unofficial count puts at 67 the number of children younger than 18 shot by other children since 1988. The actual number, she said, is probably much higher.

Kennedy said no official numbers are available because the state has no central way of keeping track. Numbers from the state Department of Health's Bureau of Vital records, however, put at 11 the number of children 14 and younger killed by firearms from 1988 through 2001.

The statistics will now include 3-year-old Ryker Lambert, who was shot in the face Tuesday by his 4-year-old brother in their West Valley home. He was dead by the time emergency crews arrived.

"We have to do something about this in this state, and we've been trying to do something about it for 10 years," Kennedy said. "And every year we've been shot down up at the Legislature."

A bill was introduced but was defeated in committee during this year's general session that would have provided a criminal penalty for a gun owner who "negligently" stores a weapon in a way that allows a minor access to it. Opponents said it denied the right to self-defense.

Early this year, the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence gave Utah a D- grade on its gun law as it applies to children. The group, named after former President Ronald Reagan's press secretary, Jim Brady, who was shot and disabled during an assassination attempt on Reagan in 1981, marked Utah down for not requiring child-safety trigger locks to be sold with guns and for not holding adults criminally responsible for leaving loaded firearms unsecured.

The center is seeking a so-called child-access prevention law, Kennedy said. Such laws, which provide for strong prosecution when a gun owner's negligence leads to an accident, have been supported by the National Rifle Association, she said.

"I am adamantly opposed to placing the responsibility in the hands of children," she said. "Children being children, by their very nature, don't have the impulse control" needed to safely handle guns.

The other shootings in the past week involved a 16-year-old Honeyville girl who was accidentally shot in the elbow Friday when two 17-year-olds pulled a gun as a prank, and a 14-year-old Minersville boy wounded Nov. 12.

© 2003 Deseret News Publishing Company
 
No way. We will fight this legislative session like we have every time they have brought up stupid crap before.

14 kids accidently shot since 1988, tragic, but I bet I can find 14 occurances of home invasions robberies in West Valley City alone during the last YEAR. So does that mean I need to have trigger locks on my guns, put them in a safe, and lock the ammo up somewhere else? BS.

One of those accidental shootings of a kid happened in my area when I was in high school. The kids were out coyote hunting with an SKS. They passed the gun from the front seat of the car to the back seat and at some point somebody screwed up and pulled the trigger, killing one of the hunters. I'm willing to bet that that case is in that number 14 somewhere, tell me how on earth "safe storage" laws were supposed to help there.

And in this latest case the gun was taken out of a safe.

So what exactly, other than harrasing the million or so gun owners in this state who have not accidentaly shot anybody, does this proposed legislation do?
 
El,
Been there, done that...didn't get it passed. You wouldn't want to actually TEACH the little ones about GUNS, now would you:what: ? They get themselve into enough trouble WITHOUT such knowledge. Imagine what michief and mayhem they'd create if they had actual knowledge of the durn things!:rolleyes:

'Course, none of my hunter ed students seem to be making the newspaper for such misdeeds as these, either. So what does THAT tell you?
 
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