Firearms Safety Bills in the 2019 Maryland General Assembly
Marylanders to Prevent Gun Violence and Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America (affiliated with ex-NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s Everytown for Gun Safety)—the state’s two principal gun-safety organizations—are tracking and backing five bills in the 2019 Maryland General Assembly.
- Ban on “Ghost Guns”: Ban all untraceable firearms, including so-called ghost guns, i.e., any firearm assembled from a kit and without a serial number, as well as firearms that can be downloaded and reproduced by using a 3D printer.
- Gun Trace Study: Require a gun trace study by the Attorney General’s office to help prevent diversion of weapons into illegal markets. Study will include firearms that are used in a crime or recovered by law enforcement in connection with illegal gun possession, transportation, or transfer.
- Access Prevention and Safe Storage: Require additional protections for children and to reduce accidents, homicides, and suicides by strengthening home safe-storage requirements.
- Definition of “Transfer”: Close a loophole in Maryland law that makes it difficult for law enforcement authorities to prevent illegal gun transfers. The bill closes another loophole by clarifying that a “transfer” includes a loan.
- Wider Background Checks: Extend background checks to include anyone purchasing a rifle or shotgun.
Legislators are also scrutinizing Maryland’s Handgun Permit Review Board. Governor Hogan’s appointees on this board all-too-often overturn Maryland State Police recommendations against wear-and-carry permits. Of 269 cases heard since December 2017, the board has reversed the decision of the MSP 77 times and modified restrictions 145 times. In the opinion of gun safety advocates, Hogan’s appointees are trying to covertly change Maryland from a “may-carry” state into a “shall-carry” state.
The Senate Executive Nominations Committee has voted down three members of the review board, and it seems possible that the legislature might even terminate the board entirely. As reported by the Washington Post, under legislation announced on January 31, people who are denied carry permits would "still have an opportunity to appeal it. We just won't have a politically appointed board with their own philosophies on guns overruling the state police," according to House Speaker Michael E. Busch.
The two gun-safety groups also are staying focused on bills pushed by the National Rifle Association and its allies. One proposes the NRA’s perennial argument that merely citing the need for self-defense is a “good and substantial reason” for the state to issue a concealed carry permit. Another would permit guns in churches; another would arm resource officers in Baltimore City public schools. Given the tenor of the times and given last year’s election results, these bills don’t appear to have much of a chance of passage in this year’s legislative session.
For more information, go to:
Marylanders to Prevent Gun Violence: https://mdpgv.org
Moms Demand Action: https://everytown.org
Gren Whitman is the acting chair of Kent County Citizens to Prevent Gun Violence.
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