Korwin on NICS computer 'outage'

Jeff Thomas

New member
Good read. IMHO, the solution to this is one or more FFL's with big juevos who are willing to incur the wrath of the BATF and take them on in court.

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Gun Sales Stopped 4 Days

For Immediate Release
BLOOMFIELD PRESS "We publish the gun laws"
May 15, 2000


DOES LOOPHOLE ALLOW GUN SALE WITHOUT "NICS" CHECK?

"Escape Clause" Was Designed For FBI Computer Failure

Federal Suspension of Bill of Rights Runs 4 Days


"It's not a loophole, exactly," according to gun-law expert Alan Korwin, author of the unabridged guide, Gun Laws of America. "The so-called 'escape clause' was deliberately put into the Brady law to allow gun sales if the national computer ever went down, or in case it was never actually built. I followed that legislation closely -- it's designed to help prevent federal agents from suspending the Bill of Rights and blaming it on a computer."

The latest computer outage, however, froze gun sales nationwide for four days, and ended Sunday. It was blamed on the part of the system known as the triple "I", the interstate identification index. A schematic of the $200 million background check system is posted at gunlaws.com.

Recognizing that the national background check (NICS) could stop gun sales altogether, Congress explicitly required its use only if it is running and information is available (under law 18 USC §922(t)(5), reprinted below*). But gun dealers, afraid for their livelihood and licenses, have so far been reluctant to risk relying on the law, at least not on their own, creating a sort of rights-denial-by-default. When NICS is down, dealers generally refuse to make sales, costing them a small fortune.

Doing business without NICS would almost certainly attract the wrath of federal agents. "Though the intent was to protect you, and that language was specifically placed there during drafting for this very reason, I have little doubt that the feds would be, shall we say, displeased, at such challenge to their power," Korwin says. "The fact is, 't5' has a penalty for a dealer who doesn't use NICS-but only if it's running."

Gun rights groups have been uncharacteristically quiet about this new federal "off" switch for gun sales.

A review of FBI computer records reveals that the firearms industry has been shut down for more than eight full business days, between Dec. 10 to June 15, 1999, due to FBI down times. A four-page report, obtained by the National Association of Federally Licensed Firearms Dealers, indicates that legitimate businesses endured federal closures 84 times in the six-month period.

"Let's not forget that people endured these closures as well, at the hands of the FBI and its new computerized control system," Korwin commented. "They claim these stoppages of your rights are accidents, and that they are not accountable. Are we to infer they could do this deliberately as well?"

"What other industry would tolerate such dramatic and constant damage to its business?" Korwin asks. "The most amazing aspect is the deafening silence from the mainstream media," he says, "where a mere 5-hour outage at amazon.com makes national headlines for days."

NICS had been touted as a tool to stop criminals from buying guns at retail. But widely publicized stings in Chicago suburbs, which lead to municipal lawsuits against gun makers, pretty clearly showed that the FBI's system was not having that effect, and that police work could do the job. Gangs were sidestepping Brady with impunity until the police finally took action and made some arrests.

FBI figures show that 23,000 Americans buy guns at retail on an average day. When the FBI system is off your only option for legally obtaining firearms in America is by private sale from another person.

If private sales are the sole channel for obtaining arms, there are extraordinary implications to the president's stated goal, supported by a portion of Congress, in seeking to outlaw law-abiding private sales, and deceptively categorizing such legitimate and legal activity "a loophole."

A CNN report on Sunday indicated that 28% of all Americans going through the "instant" check do not get an instant response. That hardly matters, though, if the government can simply turn off retail gun sales day after day, and no one stands up to them.

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18 USC §922(t)(5)
<* Note: Paragraph (1), referred to below, is the NICS check.>
If the licensee knowingly transfers a firearm to such other person and knowingly fails to comply with paragraph (1) of this subsection with respect to the transfer and, at the time such other person most recently proposed the transfer, the national instant criminal background check system was operating and information was available to the system demonstrating that receipt of a firearm by such other person would violate subsection (g) or (n) of this section or State law, the Secretary may, after notice and opportunity for a hearing, suspend for not more than 6 months or revoke any license issued to the licensee under section 923, and may impose on the licensee a civil fine of not more than $5,000.

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One-time North American Serial Rights
Copyright 2000 Alan Korwin

Not-for-profit circulation is approved.

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Alan Korwin is the author of seven best-selling books on gun law, including "Gun Laws of America -- Every Federal Gun Law on the Books, with Plain English Summaries," and gun owner guides for AZ, CA, FL, TX, VA. He can be reached at www.gunlaws.com.


LOOK AT "GUN LAWS OF AMERICA" YOURSELF --
If you knew all your rights you might demand them.

AVAILABLE AT LAST: Gun-owner guides for --
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AZ, CA, FL, NJ, NY, TN, TX, UT, VA, WA
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Contact:
Alan Korwin
BLOOMFIELD PRESS
"We publish the gun laws"
12629 N. Tatum #440
Phoenix, AZ 85032
602-996-4020 Phone
602-494-0679 FAX
1-800-707-4020 Book orders http://www.gunlaws.com

Guns Save Lives

[This message has been edited by Jeff Thomas (edited May 16, 2000).]
 
Let's be specific. The NICS being down does not prevent gun sales. It prevents the buyer from taking delivery of the gun. I work in a gun store in Florida. This weekend we sold guns. We just couldn't let the customer leave with them unless they had a valid FL CCW license issued prior to Nov. 30, 1998. In Florida if the FDLE (the state entity who performs the check via NICS) fails to update a conditional approval within three days the buyer may take possession of the weapon with the caveat that if the check eventually comes back denied the buyer must either sell the weapon or surrender it to the authorities. FDLE is pretty cool about it in cases where the buyer did not break any laws by trying to buy the gun. They give the buyer the ability to sell it back so as to avoid a total loss.
 
Let's be more specific. A riot erupts in some city. A shop owner decides that his bird gun won't do the trick so he goes to a gun shop to buy a riot gun. Or maybe he hasn't shot a gun since his days in 'Nam.

Somewhere in Virginia an FBI bureaucrat get a phone call. His superior has decided that the best thing he can do is to limit further blood shed by shutting down all sales to this city for a period of three days.

The shop owner(s) find themselves unable to buy firearms to protect their possessions.

Now, why do I need permission from the federal government for every firearm purchase?

Rick
 
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