They lost my support in their second sentence:
..Each gun dealer would have a list of all persons prohibited from buying guns. Instead of a government background check, dealers would check the list to see if potential buyers have firearms disabilities...
Those "authors" have no freaking idea how many people living in the USA have THE EXACT SAME NAME.
Thinking that such "a list" could be easily and quickly accessed by a dealer is ludicrous.....heck, there are still dealers who don't have email.
Putting the additional burden of checking a list with hundreds of thousands if not millions of names............and there being many duplicates is a burden few dealers would want.
I sure as heck wouldn't want the responsibility and liability that comes from performing my own background check. With the current FBI NICS
THEY are the ones taking the blame for giving someone a proceed or deny......not me.
Bartholomew Roberts I generally disagree with the utility of the background check; but fact of the matter is the current NICS system - especially if applied more broadly - lends itself to registration and other privacy abuses.
The FBI NICS is only told that the person is buying a handgun, long gun or other firearm. They don't get make, model serial#, caliber or anything else that's a part of "registration".
ATN082268 The number of FBI agents required to run the new BIDS system would most likely be less but I doubt that would translate into there being less FBI agents.
FBI "agents" have absolutely nothing to do with NICS. NICS is a contracted call center staffed by customer service reps who simply type in the buyers info and wait to see if any records return that indicate a potential disqualifying condition. If it does they forward the call to an FBI Legal Documents Examiner, who determines if the John Robert Smith trying to buy a gun is the same John Robert Smith who has a felony, or the John Robert Smith who is a deserter or if there are no John Robert Smiths who are prohibited. Yeah, I want to search through a list of a hundred JRS's and guess.
FBI NICS is one of the most efficient, well run, polite government agencies you will ever encounter.
johnwilliamson062 How do they verify the FFL is actually completing the checks?
They trust us.
Seriously, when ATF comes to do a compliance inspection they inspect those 4473's. The ones that had a NICS check run will show a NICS Transaction Number. That NTN is sequential and easily checked to see if it matches the date the NICS check was made. For example, the NICS checks I ran today started with "368P-xxx" if the dealer was stupid enough to invent a NTN he better be within the range for that particular day. Needles to say it would be a felony for the dealer to knowingly transfer a firearm without conducting a NICS check when required. If he were caught, losing his FFL would be the least of his worries.
There are tens of thousands of FFLs. No one is just going to trust they all comply.
Even if the dealer WANTED to comply and agreed with the philosophy of no records on "the good guys"........who the heck wants to be the dealer that let the wrong John Smith have a gun?
Some of them aren't the brightest either. How can you be sure they will correctly check the list? Yes, I have been in some shops where i am not sure the employess would be capable of reliably checking purchases. Now they just read the info and the agent checks and makes the call.
Heck, there are dealers who use the yellow 4473's that became obsolete in 2008. Because they do so few transfers, they rarely get a compliance inspection.......but their next one will be a doozy.
I meant the 4473s that are sent by FFLs when closing down. I do not know what happens to those.
Turned in to ATF along with ALL the dealers bound books.