| Lautenberg (S. 254, 106th
Congress) and Reed bill (S. 767, 107th Congress) |
Proposed McCain-Lieberman
compromise |
Does compromise weaken current
law? |
Why it makes a difference |
| Defines "gun show" as an event where
50 or more guns are offered for sale. |
Defines "gun show" as an event where
there are 75 or more guns except when the guns are part of a "personal
collection" and the person is not required to be licensed. |
Yes. Under current law, there is
no exemption for a "personal collection" of up to 75 guns. |
McCain-Lieberman would create a
de facto exemption for private vendors who run gun shows out
of their home calling it a sale from their "personal collection."
Because the requirements for being licensed are so vague, this new
numerical threshold could be interpreted to create a 75 gun exception. |
| Applies current Brady Law which gives
law enforcement up to 3 business days to complete background checks. |
Would shorten the time period for
background checks from 3 business days to 24 hours for gun show
checks by unlicensed sellers after three years if certain conditions
are met. |
Technically, no. But the shorter
time would apply only to sales by unlicensed sellers. It makes no
sense to have a shorter time for checks for sales made by unlicensed
sellers versus sales by licensed dealers. |
If anything NICS needs more, not
less time to complete background checks. When a transaction is delayed
more than 24 hours, the purchaser is 20 times more likely
to be prohibited. In fact, the FBI estimates that if it only had
24 hours to complete background checks, more than 33,000 additional
felons, fugitives, stalkers and other prohibited purchasers would
have been able to buy guns. These purchases would be denied under
the Reed 3 business-day rule. |
| Establishes uniform federal standard
for all background checks at gun shows, allowing up to 3 business
days for law enforcement to complete checks in the 5 percent of
cases where there is a question about the purchaser's eligibility
that can't be answered within 24 hours. |
Creates different sets of rules for
gun show background checks depending on who's selling the gun, the
state where the gun is being sold, and the state where a record
about a buyer is kept. |
Technically, no. However, there is
certain to be significant confusion when law enforcement tries to
figure out whether they have 24 hours or 3 business days to finish
checks. |
McCain-Lieberman would create a patchwork
of rules that will promote gun trafficking between states. This
is because the 24-hour rule for background checks would apply in
some states and not others. As Americans for Gun Safety stated in
its gun show report, states with weaker restrictions at gun shows
provide a source of gun trafficking to states with stricter laws.
Criminals can take advantage of the shorter background checks in
some states to get guns that they would be prohibited from acquiring
if law enforcement had 3 business days to finish a background check. |
| Gives equal priority to all background
checks regardless of where the sale takes place. |
Gives special priority to background
checks at gun shows. |
Yes, in the sense that it would encourage
buyers to shop at gun shows rather than gun stores. |
There is no basis for preferring
gun show checks over gun store checks. 72 percent of all background
checks are completed instantly. The ones that take more than 24
hours require more research, which cannot be begun, much less completed,
until the state court or other record repositories are open, usually
not until the Monday following the gun show. |