Gun Shows in America
Tupperware® Parties for Criminals
Introduction
The 1980s were the glory
days of the National Rifle Association of America (NRA). The organization's
golden era began in 1980 with the election of NRA Life Member Ronald
Reagan as president. Reagan's victory was described by the New York
Times as "one of the darkest hours for handgun control advocates."
In Congress, after two decades of fighting�and often losing�a defensive
battle over gun control,1 the NRA was prepared to launch
its first offensive effort in decades. And although gun control took
a back seat to economic issues in 1981, the Times warned, "The
New Right and its Congressional allies...will be demanding action [in
1982] on their priorities�including gun control."
And they got it. The NRA
unveiled legislation that was nothing less than a pro-gun wish list:
the "Firearms Owners' Protection Act." Commonly known as "McClure-Volkmer"
for its congressional sponsors, then-Senator James McClure (R-ID) and
Representative Harold Volkmer (D-MO), it was designed to roll back broad
sections of the Gun Control Act of 1968 (GCA).2 Early versions
even removed restrictions on the mail-order sale of firearms. (Throughout
this study the bill and law will be referred to as McClure-Volkmer.)
NRA direct mail heralded
the bill as legislation "every American gun owner and hunter need [sic]
passed into law." According to Congressman Volkmer, the importance of
the bill to gun owners was surpassed only by the Second Amendment itself.3
The bill, said Volkmer, would:
protect you, the honest citizen, who might not know every
single line and provision of the 23 pages of the Gun Control Act, the
20,000 firearms laws already on the books and thousands of pages of
gun regulations. With the...bill as law, we will have taken away from
the government bureaucrats the opportunity to punish, harass and entrap
America's law-abiding firearms owners.4
The NRA and the bill's supporters
portrayed McClure-Volkmer as a gun owners' relief act. In reality, the
bill did much more to advance the interests of gun sellers�both
Federal Firearms License (FFL)5 holders and unlicensed individuals�than
those of the average gun owner.
After a long, bitter debate
that pitted the NRA and the firearms industry against gun control advocates
and national police organizations, McClure-Volkmer passed both houses
of Congress and was signed into law by President Reagan on May 19, 1986.
McClure-Volkmer�
-
Allowed Federal Firearms License holders to sell guns at gun shows
located in their home state.
- Allowed
individuals not federally licensed as gun dealers to sell their personal
firearms as a "hobby."
- Restricted
the ability of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) to
conduct inspections of the business premises of federally licensed
firearms dealers.
- Reduced
the recordkeeping required of federally licensed firearms dealers,
specifically eliminating recordkeeping of ammunition sales.
- Raised
the burden of proof for violations of federal gun laws.
- Expanded
a federal program that restored the ability of convicted felons to
possess firearms.
Despite
the controversy generated by McClure-Volkmer, little attention has been
paid to its effect in the 10 years since the law's enactment. This study
is the first in a series in which the Violence Policy Center (VPC) will
analyze the real-world impact of the NRA's McClure-Volkmer legislation
and gauge the law's effect on public safety.
One
legacy of McClure-Volkmer is the uncontrolled proliferation of gun shows�events
at which private citizens and federally licensed gun dealers congregate
to buy and sell firearms and related paraphernalia. Although the federal
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms maintains no historical records
as to the number of gun shows that occur annually and can only offer
rough estimates as to the number that occur today, for this study the
Violence Policy Center conducted interviews across the country with
law enforcement personnel and gun show organizers to gauge the effect
of the law on the volume of gun shows. The VPC's research reveals that
the law has resulted in a dramatic increase in the number and size of
shows, which occur in auditoriums, fairgrounds, and other outlets in
almost every state on virtually every weekend of the year.6
The VPC's research also reveals that this dramatic increase is due largely
to two little-noticed changes McClure-Volkmer made in the way that federally
licensed firearms dealers are regulated�
- The
law made it legal for Federal Firearms License holders to sell at
gun shows.
- The
law expanded the opportunities for private citizens to buy and sell
firearms at gun shows by raising the threshold of what constituted
being "engaged in the business" of selling firearms.
The
result is a readily available source of weapons and ammunition for a
wide variety of criminals�including street gangs, white supremacists,
would-be presidential assassins, and domestic terrorists. This study
has seven sections.
Section
One: The History of McClure-Volkmer details the events leading
to the passage of the McClure-Volkmer bill.
Section
Two: McClure-Volkmer's Gun Show Legacy chronicles the debate over
allowing Federal Firearms License holders to sell at gun shows and
details the two changes contained in McClure-Volkmer that led to the
proliferation of gun shows.
Section
Three: Changes Seen at Gun Shows as the Result of McClure-Volkmer
describes the proliferation of gun shows that followed McClure-Volkmer's
passage, the competition between licensed dealers and unlicensed hobbyists,
the opportunities presented to Class 3 machine-gun dealers by gun
shows, and the limitations of law enforcement in effectively policing
gun shows.
Section
Four: Illegal Trafficking at Gun Shows examines the most common
ways in which illegal transactions are conducted at gun shows.
Section
Five: Where the Famous and Infamous Shop details notable gun show
participants, such as David Koresh and Timothy McVeigh, and the role
gun shows play in the militia movement.
Section
Six: "Truck Loads of Parts Are Readily Available" reveals how
gun shows have become a ready market for stolen military parts.
Section
Seven: Trends looks at three new developments that may have an
effect on gun shows: increased civil litigation; the decrease in the
number of Federal Firearms License holders; and, the first-time sponsorship
of shows by the National Rifle Association.
Section
Eight: Recommendations offers a set of federal and state policy
recommendations based on the study's findings.
The
study also has three appendices.
Appendix
One is a sample of gun show ads.
Appendix
Two is the June 1993 testimony of convicted firearms trafficker
Edward Daily III before the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee
on Crime and Criminal Justice.
Appendix
Three is the June 1993 testimony of Bernard Shaw of the Maryland
State Police Licensing Division before the U.S. House of Representatives
Subcommittee on Crime and Criminal Justice.
These appendices
are not included in this on-line edition of the report. For information
on how to order a hard copy of the study, including the appendices,
please refer to the publications page.
- In 1968, Congress
passed the Gun Control Act of 1968. In 1972, the U.S. Senate passed
a bill that would have banned the domestic production and sale of
Saturday Night Special handguns, inexpensive, poorly constructed pistols
and revolvers lacking sporting purpose, but no action was taken in
the House of Representatives.
- The Gun Control
Act of 1968 is the primary federal law governing the manufacture,
distribution, and sale of firearms and ammunition. The GCA generally
prohibited the mail order and interstate sale of firearms, established
standards for the licensing of firearm manufacturers, importers, and
dealers, and banned the importation of both surplus military firearms
and Saturday Night Special handguns.
- Contrary to the
assertions of Representative Volkmer and the NRA, the Second Amendment
of the U.S. Constitution does not guarantee an individual right to
keep and bear arms. No gun control law has ever been struck down as
violative of the Second Amendment and the Supreme Court has ruled
that restrictions on gun possession do not infringe on any fundamental
right. Most recently, in 1996 the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit held that an individual had no standing to raise a Second
Amendment claim. The court held, "Because the Second Amendment guarantees
the right of the states to maintain armed militia, the states alone
stand in the position to show legal injury when this right is infringed."
Hickman v. Block, No. 94-55836 (9th Cir. 1996).
- NRA direct mail,
October 18, 1985.
- The Type 1 Federal
Firearms License (FFL) is the basic license required to sell firearms
in America and is issued by the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
and Firearms. FFL holders can ship and receive firearms and ammunition
in interstate commerce via common carrier in quantity at wholesale
prices. Most FFL activity can be conducted free of local and state
regulations that apply to individual purchasers, e.g. waiting periods
or background checks for handgun purchases.
- See Appendix
One for a sampling of gun show advertisements.
Go to Section
One: The History of McClure Volkmer
Return to Table
of Contents
All contents � 2000 Violence Policy Center
The Violence Policy Center is a national non-profit educational foundation
that conducts research on violence in America and works to develop violence-reduction
policies and proposals. The Center examines the role of firearms in America,
conducts research on firearms violence, and explores new ways to decrease
firearm-related death and injury. |