In
2010 a Justice Department study looked at the efficacy of the Brady
Background Check, the one that requires all purchasers of firearms from
Federally licensed dealers to undergo an FBI (or State law enforcement)
background check prior to purchase. The purchaser fills out BATFE form
4473 stating that they are not a prohibited person for a myriad of
reasons. If they check one box wrong, the background check does not
happen and the sale is denied. If they do check all the boxes correctly
and they are a prohibited person, they just signed a confession to a
Federal felony that carries a five year sentence.
In the 2010 study, Enforcement
of the Brady Act, 2010: Federal and State Investigations and
Prosecutions of Firearm Applicants Denied by a NICS Check in 2010
(PDF) the report noted that of the 76,000 firearms purchase denials in
that year - some 47% of which were for "a record of a felony indictment
or conviction" - a grand total of 62 cases were referred for prosecution.
Things have NOT improved. The General Accounting Office released a report, Few Individuals Denied Firearms Purchases Are Prosecuted and ATF Should Assess Use of Warning Notices in Lieu of Prosecutions
The takeaway from this study?
In fiscal 2017, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives referred about 12,700 denied purchases to its field divisions for investigation. As of June 2018, U.S. Attorney’s Offices prosecuted 12 of these cases.
2010,
35,000 denials due to felony conviction or indictment, 62 referrals for
prosecution. 2017, 12,700 denials, 12 prosecutions.
If they’re not going to USE the law, what’s it for?
Oh, and the law didn’t work, so we need to DO IT HARDER!!
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