Report: Weapons Manufacturers 'Lost' More Than 16,000 Guns
over Two Years
by Jordy Yager
Sunday, September 4, 2011
More than 16,000 guns were “lost” from gun manufacturers’
inventories over the last two years, according to a report by a gun control advocacy
group. The report, released by the Brady
Center to Prevent Gun
Violence, pulled data from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and
Explosives (ATF) and found that 16,485 guns left the inventories of nearly
4,500 licensed gun manufacturers throughout the country without a record of
them ever being sold. In 2004 Congress passed the Tiahrt amendment – named for
its sponsor then-Rep. Todd Tiahrt (R-Kansas) – which prohibited the ATF from
requiring gun manufacturers to track their inventory. The Brady Campaign has
long advocated for a repeal of the Tiahrt amendment. “It is shocking that gun
makers are so oblivious to public safety that they lose track of thousands of
guns every year,” said Dennis Henigan, the acting president of the Brady Center .
“Given the lethality of its product, the gun industry has a special duty to act
responsibly. Instead, it has a scandalous record of carelessness.”
The report states that the unaccounted for guns are often
used in crimes because a trace of the weapon is not as likely to lead law
enforcement officials back to the criminal. “This lack of any security or
inventory requirement for gun manufacturers and dealers makes it easy for gun
sellers to claim falsely that firearms they have sold illegally and
“off-the-books,” were lost or stolen,” the report states. “Firearms that
disappear from gun manufacturers’ plants without records of sale are frequently
trafficked by gun traffickers and prized by criminals. Guns taken from gun
manufacturing plants may also be removed before they have been stamped with
serial numbers, making them virtually untraceable.” The report was not able to
identify which specific gun manufacturers had the greatest number of missing
guns. The Brady Center released the report in the wake
of an internal shakeup within the ATF and the Justice Department.
Three top officials, including the acting head of the ATF
Kenneth Melson, left their positions as a result of their role in the botched
Fast and Furious gun tracking operation, which attempted to sell thousands of
guns to known and suspected straw buyers for Mexican drug cartels. But
officials declined to provide the weapons and their buyers with adequate
surveillance, allowing the guns to flow into the hands of criminals on both
sides of the border. The ATF has been without a Senate confirmed director since
2006 largely because of lobbying efforts by the National Rifle Association
(NRA), which views some of the agency’s power as an infringement on Second
Amendment rights.
[Maybe Sarah Conner is stockpiling them for Judgement Day?]
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