Thomas Clarke said:
I found this link off the net. I think it fairly shows what happened. The question is who is responsible for the death of the 13 year old. The 14 year old friend pleaded guilty as a juvenile. I do not know if Pennsylvania has a law that says a handgun must be locked up. In any event in my opinion the owner of the gun is responsible for the enablement of the homicide and should be fully accountable both under criminal law and under civil law. Gustafson should be going after the gun owner and his property and insurance representatives. He is the real criminal.
By definition, if Pennsylvania doesn't have a
criminal law making the unsecured storage of a firearm a crime, then the owner of the firearm is absolutely NOT a criminal. If there isn't such a law (and
www.handgunlaw.us could not find one), then the people of Pennsylvania might wish to have a discussion as to whether or not there should be a law, but that's a different question. As of now, it appears there is no such law, so it's difficult to comprehend how you can label as a "criminal" someone who has not broken any criminal law.
The parent of the other boy also share in some responsibility and should be subject to both criminal and civil actions. If the accused want to say that the gun maker made is responsible, then it is up to them to try and do it.
Again, what criminal statute did the parents of the other boy violate? With all due respect, it strikes me that you are more than a little free in labeling people as ciminals when you have nothing to indicate that they broke any laws.
I suspect I'm more than a few years older than you. My state currently has a safe storage law, but it didn't when I was growing up. I grew up in an extended family -- my family, my maternal grandparents, and two families of aunts, uncles, and assorted cousins all lived on the same road, within a half mile of one another. All the families had guns in the house. None of the guns were locked up, and all of us kids knew where the guns were kept. Miraculously, nobody got shot. Perhaps the reason was that our parents taught us that guns are not toys, that guns can and do kill people, and that if we EVER touched a firearm without permission from and supervision by one of the adults, we would regret it for a very long time. Back then, Dr. Spock was still the bible for raising children, and spanking was considered normal and appropriate discipline, not child abuse. We all survived, and most of us went on to become responsible, productive adults.
So if a kid picks up a gun and accidentally (i.e. negligently) shoots a playmate, where does responsibility lie? My view is that we reap what we sow, and what the liberals have sowed is an attitude that GUNZ! are so evil that they must never be mentioned. So instead of teaching kids how guns work and showing why they shouldn't play with them, society has made GUNZ! into an esoteric attraction that is guaranteed to arouse curiosity.
We had a similar case around here a couple of decades ago. The owner of the gun was, in fact, a police sergeant and the gun involved was his duty weapon, which he had not locked up (it wasn't required back then) when he came off duty. It was tragic, and I don't mean to suggest that it was not. But ... it was NOT criminal.