USA Today - 09.08.2019

(Darren Dugan) #1

NEWS USA TODAY z FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2019 z 3A


WASHINGTON – Deadly massacres
in recent years have exposed the diffi-
culty in identifying and acting on
warnings signs from troubled people –
even inside institutions such as the
military, which screens its personnel
continuously.
After massacres in El Paso, Texas,
and Dayton, Ohio, President Donald
Trump said the government needs the
power to identify potential shooters
and take away their firearms if they
have threatened harm to themselves
or others.
But even when warning signs are
apparent, they can be overlooked or
unheeded.
Information reporting systems
have gaps that can al-
low would-be shooters
to obtain weapons.
The District of Co-
lumbia and 17 states
have “red flag” laws.
Tuesday, Ohio Gov.
Mike DeWine called for
such a law and beefed
up background checks. Texas does not
have a red flag law.
The focus on such preventative
measures intensified after mass
shootings in El Paso and Dayton in
which at least 31 people were killed.
Those laws can work, said David
Chipman, a former agent with the Bu-
reau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives, provided guns are sold only
through federally licensed dealers.
“These laws empower police and
others to buy more time so that people
can diagnose the emergency,” said
Chipman, a senior policy adviser for the
gun safety advocacy group named for
former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, who was
critically wounded in a shooting in Tuc-
son, Arizona, in 2011. “The whole es-
sence of this is in its application in
emergency situations. I was encour-
aged to hear the president express sup-
port for this, but I am skeptical that
what he said may not marry up with the
intent of these laws.”
The laws require the flow of accu-
rate, actionable information to authori-
ties, and they require people to act on
warning signs.
Even in the military, which vets its
recruits for criminal activity and con-
ducts background checks before issu-
ing security clearances, warning signs
that could have prevented two trage-
dies went unheeded.
Less than two years ago, a troubled
former airman named Devin Kelley
slaughtered 26 churchgoers in Texas
with guns he had purchased legally de-
spite abundant warning signs about his
instability.
Recruiters missed the first warning
sign because Kelley simply lied on an
entrance form when asked if he’d “ever
experimented with, used, or possessed
any illegal drug or narcotic.”
Kelley had been arrested for mari-
juana possession in 2006; he received
six months’ probation and 60 hours of
community service.
The Pentagon inspector general re-
viewed Kelley’s case and found that
Kelley had raised alarms about himself,
twice admitting himself to base hospi-
tals for mental health treatment.
Hospital staff at one stay “put a
high-risk notification alert on his chart
due to his homicidal and suicidal indi-
cators.” His wife told Air Force criminal
investigators in 2012 he had beaten her
and the child and had threatened to kill
police and co-workers.
Kelley’s wife quoted him to investi-
gators: “If the cops show up at my door,
I will shoot them. My work is so lucky I
do not have a shotgun because I would
go in there and shoot everyone.” The Air
Force failed at least four times to notify
the FBI of Kelley’s troubles, including
his court-martial for assaulting his wife
and beating his infant stepson.
“Because his fingerprints were not
submitted to the FBI CJIS (Criminal
Justice Information Services Division),
Kelley was able to purchase firearms,
which he used to kill 26 people at the
First Baptist Church of Sutherland
Spring on Nov. 5, 2017,” the inspector
general concluded.


Past cases


show how


red flags


missed


Potential for violence


overlooked, unheeded


Tom Vanden Brook
and Kevin Johnson
USA TODAY


Kelley


After each mass shooting in Amer-
ica, the nation relives a near-scripted
clash: calls for stricter gun laws, push-
back from pro-gun activists led by the
National Rifle Association, and an ulti-
mate impasse.
But this time – following seven days
that left at least 35 people dead in
shootings in Gilroy, California; El Paso,
Texas; and Dayton, Ohio – one side of
that power struggle appears to have
shifted.
The NRA is busy managing another
crisis: Its own.
For months it has weathered a se-
ries of public spectacles stemming
from both infighting and outside scru-
tiny. Most recently, in the middle of
last week’s mass shootings, three
members of the NRA board resigned,
citing concerns over irresponsible
spending by the group’s leaders.
The NRA’s opponents see the chaos
as a vulnerability, something not lost
on supporters who have grown frus-
trated with the national organization.
“Those of us who are plugged into
this, who are living it, are wondering
why this is happening and why it
seemingly isn’t being fixed,” said Mark
Walters, an NRA member and host of
the syndicated Armed American Ra-
dio. “(Especially) at a time it is so im-
portant that we have a strong National
Rifle Association coming into 2020, in
particular on the heels of this mess
with California, El Paso, and Dayton.”
A spokesman for the NRA did not
respond to a request to interview CEO
Wayne LaPierre, instead providing a
statement that touted “a string of re-
cent victories” under the NRA’s new
political team.
“With many in the media writing
the obituary of the NRA, we are scoring
big wins in the legislative, legal, and
public policy arenas,” Andrew Arula-
nandam wrote.
The NRA’s opponents see them as
putting on a good face.
“I’ve never seen them weaker,” said
John Feinblatt, president of Every-
town for Gun Safety, a national advo-
cacy group. “I think that they have
been very much sidelined.”

As proof, he pointed to
the fact that gun control
groups outspent gun
rights groups in the 2018
midterm elections. The
gun control lobby spent
about $12.1 million to the
gun rights’ $10 million
($8.2 million of that com-
ing from the NRA), ac-
cording to numbers com-
piled by Open Secrets, a
nonpartisan group that
tracks lobbying and elec-
tion spending.
And that, he said, was
all “before the five-alarm fire.”
The turmoil in the NRA has been un-
folding for months. The group began the
year by downplaying its relationship
with Maria Butina, a Russian agent later
convictedand sentenced to 18 months
in prison for trying to infiltrate political
organizations on behalf of the Kremlin.
Butina had become cozy with the group,
including helping to host a delegation of
NRA insiders in Moscow in 2015.
McClatchy has reported that the Justice
Department is investigating whether
one of her associates, former Russian
official and NRA member Alexander
Torshin, illegally moved Russian money
through the group to back President
Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign.
In April, the organization’s president,
Oliver North, was forced out after raising
concerns about the group’s finances and
amid allegations he had attempted to en-
gineer the removal of LaPierre. LaPierre,
who accused North of extortion, is now
facing increased pressure to resign, in-
cluding from deep-pocketed donorscon-
cerned about the ongoing strife, The New
York Times has reported.
The New York Attorney General’s Of-

fice also is investigating the NRA’s tax-
exempt status. And the District of Co-
lumbia attorney general has another
probe into the organization and its char-
itable foundation.
Even with public pressure from the
recent mass shootings, many watching
the debate are skeptical the NRA’s trou-
bles will dramatically move the needle
on gun control legislation. Congress has
not passed broad changes for decades.
Lawmakers considering new gun
measures know that how they vote will
influence whether the NRA endorses
them – one of the most powerful tools at
the organization’s disposal, said Adam
Winkler, a professor at the UCLA School
of Law. “The threat is always there and I
think that is enough to sway a lot of law-
makers,” he said.
Harry L. Wilson, a political scientist
at Roanoke University who focuses on
gun control, said he doubts the NRA’s
troubles will have much impact. “The
sides are pretty firmly dug in, I think,
legislatively,” he said.
He said the impact could be more
dramatic down the line if the problems
persist and discourage donations.
Activists in battleground states are
watching the NRA’s strife closely.
Shira Goodman, executive director of
the nonprofit CeaseFire PA, said she
hopes the “the lawsuits, the turmoil, the
internal dissension, the attempted
coups” will damage the NRA’s brand.
She and others stressed, though, that
the NRA still has its biggest asset: sin-
gle-issue, pro-gun voters it can mobilize
in an election. “Those people will take
the NRA voting guide to the polls,”
Goodman said. “And that is not going to
disappear overnight.”
Contributing: Mark Nichols, Kevin
Crowe and Richard Wolf

Advocates of gun control hold a vigil outside NRA headquarters in Fairfax, Va., on Monday. WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES

Could turmoil at NRA

be a game changer?

Tricia L. Nadolny
USA TODAY
Gun control groups outspent gun rights

groups in the 2018 midterm elections. The

gun control lobby spent about $12.1 million

to the gun rights’ $10 million ($8.2 million

of that coming from the NRA).

Open Secrets, a nonpartisan group that tracks lobbying and election spending

North

LaPierre

An attorney for the family of the
man charged in the El Paso shootings
said the man’s mother contacted po-
lice weeks before the rampage out of
concern that her son had a rifle.
Twenty-two people were killed af-
ter a white gunman targeting a His-
panic area opened fire at a Walmart in
the border city Saturday.
Dallas attorney Chris Ayres told The
Associated Press the call was made to
police in the suspected shooter’s town
of Allen, Texas, a Dallas suburb.
Ayres and fellow attorney R. Jack

Ayres told CNNthat the suspect’s moth-
er contacted the Allen Police Depart-
ment to ask about an “AK”-type firearm
he owned. The attorneys said the moth-
er was only seeking information and
wasn’t motivated by a concern that her
son was a threat to anybody. They said
the mother didn’t identify herself or her
son in the call. The lawyers told CNN the
mother was concerned about her son’s
age, maturity level and lack of experi-
ence but was told by a public safety offi-
cer that her son, who is 21, was legally
allowed to possess the weapon.
A family statement sent by Chris
Ayres to USA TODAY said the suspect
acted outside the family’s teachings and

values. “He was raised in a family that
taught love, kindness, respect, and tol-
erance – rejecting all forms of racism,
prejudice, hatred, and violence,” the
statement says. “There will never be a
moment for the rest of our lives when
we will forget each and every victim of
this senseless tragedy.”
Sgt. Jon Felty, Allen police spokes-
man, said he couldn’t confirm the call. “I
have nothing in the database to support
this claim,” he told USA TODAY.
The suspect, Patrick Crusius, faces
charges of capital murder in state court
and may face federal hate crime charges
that could carry a death sentence.
Contributing: The Associated Press

El Paso suspect’s mom called police

Adrianna Rodriguez
USA TODAY
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