And while Second Amendment advocates like Commerford say they are hopeful about the potential for federal-level reciprocity for concealed carry, he and others like him fear it will add to the nation’s ongoing gun violence crisis.
“This legislation is a dramatic infringement on states’ rights and would be disastrous for gun crime and law enforcement safety in our country,” said Emma Brown, executive director at the gun control advocacy group Giffords. “Violent crime rises when state concealed carry standards are weakened, and this would weaken the standard in every single state. It would also endanger police and make their jobs harder.”
The second bill advanced this week on Capitol Hill was H.R. 2184. It aims to enhance the rights of people wanting to purchase a firearm who may be denied as the result of errors in the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS).
If a buyer appeals a judgment denying their right to purchase a firearm on the grounds that there was an error, H.R. 2184 would require federal officials to make a determination on their appeal within 60 days. If an answer is not provided within the two-month timeline, gun owners can then seek a court judgement to obtain one.
“If your name is John Smith and you fill out a NICS check on Black Friday at Cabela’s to buy a firearm, you’re going to be in for a wait, and sometimes you’re going to be in for clerical errors that could restrict that [purchase],” Commerford said. “With a pro-gun House, a pro-gun Senate, and a pro-gun president in the White House, now is the time to put the foot on the gas and try to restore Second Amendment rights of America’s gun owners.”
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