Malloy Issues Gun Control Proposal–Universal Background Checks, Bans Large Capacity Magazines

On a day Vice President Joe Biden visited Connecticut to discuss gun control, Governor Dan Malloy “outlined a plan for common sense gun violence prevention that I believe can serve as critical first steps in our efforts to make Connecticut safer.” Frustrated by the pace of gun control proposals in the state legislature, Malloy says he decided to offer his own plan.

According to a news release issued by the governor today,  his proposal outlines five primary areas where the state can strengthen gun control laws, including:

· Making background checks universal and comprehensive

· Banning large capacity magazines

· Strengthening the assault weapons ban

· Promoting safer gun storage

· Improving enforcement of existing laws

Malloy also issued the following remarks today:

Two months ago, our state became the center of a national debate after a tragedy we never imagined could happen here.

The horrific tragedy at Sandy Hook Elementary School brought home the fact that we are not immune to problems that face the nation at large, that we can never become complacent in our effort to ensure the safety of our residents.

Since that day, all of us have experienced grief. We have all mourned the loss of innocents. We have cried for the families and the survivors.

And we have done so knowing that on some level, we will never be the same as we were before.

We have changed. And I believe it is now time for our laws to do the same.

I want to applaud the Vice President and President Obama for their work on this issue.

Whatever laws we have on the books in our state, the need for strong federal legislation has never been clearer.

The proposals outlined by the White House will make us and our children safer, no doubt about it.

And as the President pointed out just a week ago, the families in Newtown and Aurora and Tucson and every other community that has been affected by gun violence deserve an up or down vote.

There is good work being done already in our state too.

In January, I convened a Sandy Hook Advisory Commission to make specific recommendations in the areas of school safety, mental health, and gun violence prevention.

The General Assembly also convened a bipartisan taskforce to look at many of the same issues.

But even as those good efforts continue, and despite the strong leadership and goodwill in Connecticut’s House and Senate, we run a risk of letting this critical moment in history pass us by.

None of us want that to happen, and none of us should let it happen.

Connecticut too must change.

Today, in a letter to Connecticut legislators, I outlined a plan for common sense gun violence prevention that I believe can serve as critical first steps in our efforts to make Connecticut safer.

We can do it by answering some simple questions.

Questions like, why is the gun used at Sandy Hook not classified as an “assault weapon” under today’s law?

Why are background checks required when someone buys a gun in a store, but not when they buy it privately or at a gun show?

Why is there no limit on the size of a magazine that can be used in a semiautomatic weapon?

These are questions we can answer now.

While some problems are more complicated and require further study–including the intersection of mental health and gun ownership–there are clear, common sense steps we can take right now to improve Connecticut’s gun laws.

I believe we need to enhance and expand our system of background checks, so that whether you buy a gun from dealer, a private individual, or at a gun show–you must go through a background check before anyone hands you a firearm.

We need to expand the permitting process to cover more guns and keep guns away from people who have been convicted of violent crimes or making violent threats.

And we must track the sale of ammunition as well as firearms.

We need to ban large capacity magazines, and allow only the sale of magazines that hold 10 rounds or less.

We need to strengthen our assault weapons ban. We have decent laws on the books today. But that law didn’t prevent the sale of the AR-15.

I am proposing that we change the definition of assault weapon to any semiautomatic that has at least one military characteristic, and ban the sale of these weapons in our state.

We need to expand laws around gun storage so that these weapons don’t fall into the hands of people who shouldn’t have them.

Gun owners have a responsibility to store their weapons safely, and should be held accountable if a person is injured because of an improperly stored weapon.

And we need to increase the responsibility of those involved in the sale and use of guns.

The fact is that if you sell guns, or work at a gun range, and you see or know of illegal activity involving a firearm or banned magazine, you have a responsibility to tell someone in law enforcement.

If you see someone illegally using a banned weapon or magazine, you have an obligation to do something about that.

There’s more we can and should do–which is why I’m also asking the Commission I put together to study some important things.

Things like, what changes we should consider to mandatory reporting laws regarding behavioral and mental health, and whether there are additional gun storage requirements that should be mandated by law.

These are tough questions, and I hope that my Commission and the General Assembly’s bipartisan taskforce will both consider those, and other important potential reforms.

But I hope the steps I’m outlining today can frame the discussion about how we can start moving right now in a very real and fundamental way toward more meaningful gun violence prevention laws.

Finally let me be very clear–I have a great deal of respect and belief in the second amendment.

We have a fundamental right to bear arms in this country. But with every right comes a responsibility.

This proposal endorses reasonable measures to improve public safety, while preserving citizens’ constitutional rights.

Shootings like this are becoming an all too common occurrence in our country. That must change.

While the tragedy at Sandy Hook provided a devastating reminder of the need for more sensible policy, the problem of gun violence is not confined to one community.

Communities throughout our state, particularly in our largest cities, continue to suffer from the scourge of gun violence regularly. The time to act is now.

The Sandy Hook tragedy happened in a school, but we don’t want the next time to happen in a movie theater, a shopping mall, a ball game, or on a street corner in any one of Connecticut’s cities or towns.

While there are limits to what can be done, we don’t want there to be a next time.

The thousands of people who came to Hartford last week to push for stronger gun violence prevention laws came with one underlying message–vote.

I can think of no better way to honor those who we’ve lost than to use the lessons learned and to have a vote on a bill that will make our state, and the country, safer. Thank you.

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28 comments

  1. Yeah. Great. Good ballsy move. BAN THE F*~@!#G BULLET. That bullet was designed for use in combat for a high capacity to stop an oncoming enemy. Its effect is devastatingly brutal. Too brutal for target practice or sport shooting. Entry wound the size of an eraser head. Exit wound the size of a cantaloupe. A few days after the tragedy in Newtown I personally observed a well-dressed professional-looking man carry two military type ammo boxes out of a Walmart in Guilford. Each container held more than two hundred rounds. That is outrageous. The only reason I can see the 5.56 bullet is available to the public is because defense contractors want to make more money by selling to the public especially inasmuch as defense spending is heading for dramatic cuts. Ban the bullet and the delivery systems go away too, e.g. the AR 15 and related high-capacity magazines.

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    1. Sorry yahooy, wrong again. The .223 was designed to wound but it can kill you.
      wiki.answers.com/Q/Is_5.56mm_round_designed_to_just_wound_the_enemy

      If I have a section of 8 men and one of those is killed I still have 7 other men at my disposal, whereas if one of my section is wounded I lose him as well as at least two others to care for/evacuate him therefore placing me at a greater disadvantage.
      It also cost the enemy a great deal more to manage a wounded soldier than a dead one.

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        1. Wikipedia is full of shit too. Outrageous. BTW, that round tumbles with a locus (you’re too stupid to know what a locus is) the size of a spinning quarter. Imagine the effect of a high-velocity round loci at the size of a quarter hitting flesh and bone. Spin a quarter and imagine a bullet hitting a person.

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          1. It tumbles when it hits the body. This is because it is long compared to how round it is. At the moment it hits you the tip starts to stop and the back is trying to go the same speed.
            www .youtube.com/watch?v=nBqjAyhs56M
            The back tries to turn around and is now pointing in some random direction. Now it is still moving forward but also trying to travel in the direction it is pointing. This usually causes the bullet to break into two pieces or shatter. See the video. Notice the bullet go in the side and out the top.

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  2. Also, the .223 is a popular bullet because it is cheap. It is cheap because it is military and they simply make lots and lots of them. Look at all the military rounds 45acp, 30-06, 308, 9mm. All cheap rounds. Compare with 7mm magnum, 40 cal and other non-military rounds. The .223, if it were not so long and did not ‘tumble’ upon impact would probably go right through you. But it is no more deadly or ‘brutal’ than any other bullet. Basically, all bullets were designed to kill you. Very few were designed to tickle you or make you happy.

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  3. Another thing, BOE SPY, tell me why the US Department of Defense would convert from the 7.62 used in the M14 and the M60 machine gun to the 5.56 designed, according to you, to “wound only.” If that were so there are 58323 dead in Viet Nam and more than 4000 in the Middle East who expected a different result from their weapon.

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    1. The M14 was replaced by the the M16. The idea was a soldier could carry more bullets if a bullet were skinnier and lighter. In Vietnam we learned a soldier could be rendered combat ineffective by a sharpened bamboo stick in a hole. Here is the wound profile of the .223:
      www .firearmstactical.com/pagea18.htm
      Someone with this kind of wound would not fire back for long.
      The M60 was replaced by the M246 SAW because is was lighter and the .223 SAW ammo could be used in the M16. The SAW can also take M16 mags. The SAW belt ammo can be disassemble and put into M16 mags. Having all your weapons use the same ammo is an advantage to troops. It sucks to have bullets for a gun that is broken and none for the guns that work. .223 ammo is also cheaper than .308. Even a few cents make a big difference when you use 100s of thousands of rounds a day. If 58K were killed in Vietnam and 4K in Iraq, what happened to the other 54K? The VC did not really have medevac so I would guess the wounded bled out while in Iraq they received medical attention. Thus tying up enemy resources and troops but saving 54K people.

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  4. BOE SPY,
    Ask Osama Bin Laden what it was like to be hit by the 5.56. Oh. You can’t. He’s dead. I guess those bullets didn’t know they were only supposed to “wound.”

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    1. The farther away you are the more likely you are to just be wounded. The bullet burns off it’s muzzle energy quickly as it travels through the air.
      www .urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=223%20nato
      You may still die from your wounds. The DC sniper killed all his victims almost instantly. That is how you knew he was close. I am going to guess Obama Bin Laden was shot point blank and/or more than once. Special Forces often carry non-conventional weapons. They may have been carrying AK’s so enemy soldiers could not pinpoint their location from the sound of the gunfire. If they ran out of ammo the seals would also be able to use enemy ammo. The idea that .223 would only wound you is silly. But, if it does not kill you outright, you WILL be terribly maimed. Like you would from a dumb-dumb or hollow-point bullet.

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      1. That comment is so outrageous it does not deserve comment. The AK is the weapon of our enemies. We fire at the distinctive AK sound and we shoot at anyone stupid enough to be carrying an AK in a battle zone.

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        1. Okay Gunny Highway, that is true. But the SEAL team was the only friendly force operating in the area for the Bin Laden raid. I would assume they are well enough trained to NOT shoot each other. The bad guys in the area would be listening for the distinctive sound of the M4. That would lead them right to the SEAL team. Hence the SEAL team uses the same weapons the enemy is likely to carry. You must not have been on a SEAL team.

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  5. No again, yahooy. You can get an M4 from Bushmaster or Colt chambered in a lot of different sizes. You can even get one that comes with what you need to change the round it fires. I have seem then outfitted to fire anything from 9mm para to 7.62X51mm.
    I also had a few questions.
    1-What army were you in that you saw so many .223 wounds? The American army MAKES .223 wounds. They get AK wounds.
    2-Are you sure the wound you saw was from a .223? The .223 makes a pencil-sized hole going in and usually does not come out. The wound you describe ‘a quarter sized entry wound and cantaloupe sized exit’ would be from a .50 cal. Although it would have to be a small cantaloupe.
    3-Can you post any proof to your claims or are you just talking out your butt? I posted supporting documentation.

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  6. I was air crew on a medevac chopper in the navy. We also did Vertrep, troop insertion/extraction, air support and patrol. We flew in UH-1s, 53s, 60s and 46s. I was not on one but we had AH-1s and sometimes AV-8s that flew with us. I saw combat in the Golan Heights when that Marine chow hall got blown up. What is your story? Company clerk, Coast Guard, in the rear with the gear or some leg unit who liked the ‘I hear an AK time to spray and pray’ system of combat?

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  7. BTW–All those .223 holes you saw. Were they in troops who survived being shot by the ultra deadly, should be banned .223? Troops who were possibly just wounded? Or were you playing with corpses?

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  8. Just one more thing Commando Cody, I don’t think the ragheads who were guarding Bin Laden would have ignored the small-arms fire they heard coming from Bin Laden’s quarters because it had the distinctive KAK KAK KAK sound of the AK.

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    1. True. Nothing you can do about that. I think the four helos that landed in the yard would have tipped them off long before that. But once you alert them you are there, knowing exactly where you are is the hard part. You hear AK fire. Is that one of us or them? You think your buddy is shooting and run to help him but your buddy is getting shot. Now you get shot, too. You hear M4 fire and you know it is them.

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  9. That was a long time ago and I was in and out in a chopper, not like I was ‘boots on the ground.’ We took some incoming but we had gunships or a door mini-gun or M60 to answer back. The mini-gun was no joke. I was sad when they took that away. The AK did not have the range or accuracy to hit us except by getting lucky. It always makes me laugh when you see a movie and a helo has bullets bouncing off it. They are little more than a soda can. When they get a hole in them a tin bender runs out and puts duct tape over it.
    Also, I wasn’t doing anyone a favor by joining. I just did not have anything better to do. I wanted to see the world. 70% is covered by water. Saw lots of that part.
    As for being a pussy–opinions are like backsides. Everybody has one and they all stink. You should try to upgrade your language. You would sound less ghetto and ignorant.
    So where did you see all the .223 holes?

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  10. Yes, I was enlisted. I was air crew. Not a pilot. Get the bird ready in the AM. Put the stuff in the chopper, tie it down and take it out. Sit in the back. Clean out all the puke from the jarheads. Shoot the door gun. Open the doors and wash the helo, watch it get fueled and put it away at night unless we were doing night missions. Pilots only come out, get in and fly. Plane captains even start the engines. When we get back the pilots get out and walk away. We did everything else.

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