It's how the laws are written, and trafficking is hard to prove.
by Mick Dumke
To understand why it’s so hard to stop the flow of guns across state lines and into cities like Chicago, you have to start with a simple, well-established fact: Firearms are legal products.
To understand why it’s so hard to stop the flow of guns across state lines and into cities like Chicago, you have to start with a simple, well-established fact: Firearms are legal products.
Guns aren’t like cocaine. As the Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled,
most American adults are allowed to have them. That means there are
millions of people who can acquire guns legally — and millions of
potential sources of guns that may later be illegally sold, traded,
loaned or stolen.
Regulations and restrictions vary by city and state, and most are loose. As we reported in a story Tuesday, the majority of the guns seized by Chicago police were originally bought out of state.
But even when authorities know a gun has changed hands unlawfully, they often can’t determine its ownership history.
"What comes between that first sale and the recovery is the
question,” said Philip Cook, a researcher with the University of Chicago
Crime Lab and a professor at Duke University.
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