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Gun violence unlikely to prompt any changes in federal law

By Rob Hotakainen, McClatchy Newspapers –

WASHINGTON — At an early learning center in Eatonville, Wash., on Sunday, mourners will light candles to honor Margaret Anderson, the 34-year-old ranger and mother of two toddlers who was shot and killed on New Year’s Day while she tried to set up a roadblock in Mount Rainier National Park.

That same evening, at the mall of the University of Arizona in her hometown of Tucson, Democratic Rep. Gabrielle Giffords will hold a glow stick and listen to a symphony orchestra at a vigil to recognize the one-year anniversary of the shooting that critically wounded her and killed six others.

In ceremonies from New York to Seattle, candlelight vigils are planned in more than 30 cities to remember the thousands of Americans who are murdered in the United States each year, most of them with guns. For gun-control advocates, it will be a day to “light a candle against the darkness of gun violence” and to demand that Congress tighten the nation’s gun laws.

Congress did nothing of the sort after the Giffords shooting last year, and the odds are good that nothing will happen this year.

Democratic Rep. Norm Dicks of Washington state, a gun-control proponent who gets failing grades from the National Rifle Association, said it’s just a matter of political reality on Capitol Hill. He wants Congress to overturn a law that took effect in 2010 that allows loaded guns in national parks, but he’s not optimistic.

“The problem is the NRA’s got a majority in the House and Senate — that’s the reality of it,” said Dicks, an 18th-term congressman.

John Velleco, director of federal affairs for the Virginia-based Gun Owners of America, said that Congress should instead loosen existing gun-control laws to make it easier for citizens to defend themselves with firearms.

“I think the vigils completely miss the point because they’re assuming that more gun-control laws will lead to fewer crimes, but we find that the opposite is true,” he said. “The more gun-control laws you have, the easier it is for criminals to commit crimes.”

While homicide statistics vary each year, the Federal Bureau of Investigation said that 12,996 Americans were murdered in 2010, the most recent year for which statistics are available. Of those, more than two-thirds — or 8,775 — were killed by guns, according to the FBI.

Until February 2010, loaded guns were not allowed in national parks. Under intense pressure from gun-rights groups, Congress voted to allow loaded guns as long as they were permitted by state law.

Park rangers objected furiously to the change, saying their safety would be jeopardized.

John Waterman, who served as president of the U.S. Park Rangers Lodge Fraternal Order of Police, warned in 2010 that the change was “an invitation to disaster,” putting both rangers and the public at increased risk.

But this week, Waterman, now the group’s past president and a park ranger in Pennsylvania, said he doubted that the law would have made any difference in preventing Anderson’s death.

“The law itself is totally unrelated to the slaughter of Ranger Margaret Anderson by a disturbed man,” he said. “They’re two separate incidents. …. Whether you said guns are allowed or not, it wouldn’t have mattered. He would have had them anyway. I don’t think he would have read the sign and said, ‘Oh, I’m not supposed to have a gun.’”

Velleco said the Washington state shooting “just proves the point that we need to allow the law-abiding citizen to have the ability to defend themselves,” particularly in remote national parks where help can be hundreds of miles away.

“The criminals are intruding on these lands, so it would be ridiculous to restrict people’s rights to defend themselves with firearms in the places where they might need them and be helpless otherwise,” he said.

Anderson was the ninth ranger in the history of the National Park Service to be murdered in the line of duty, according to National Park Service records. The last murder came in 2002, when ranger Kris Eggle, who worked at the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument in Arizona, was killed by a Mexican drug dealer.

 

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