Six
months after the Highland Park Fourth of July
parade massacre, the Illinois House on Friday cleared a measure
that would immediately ban the sale of assault weapons in the state and prevent
sales of large-capacity magazines that
hold more than 12 rounds.
After
a lengthy debate that stretched into the early hours of Friday, the House voted
64-43 to pass the measure that would also ban “rapid-fire devices” that turn
firearms that fire one shot per trigger pull into fully automatic weapons. It
must still clear the Illinois Senate.
“This
legislation will most importantly ban the new sale of assault weapons in the
state of Illinois. This is what the people of this state have been calling for.
And that’s what it will deliver,” Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch
said during debate. “These are weapons that belong on a battlefield, not at
parades celebrating our country’s independence or at parks or at schools.”
Gov.
J.B. Pritzker has said he would support passage of an assault weapons ban and
joined Democrats on the House floor during the entirety of the debate.
Lead
sponsor state Rep. Bob Morgan, D-Deerfield, who was at the parade shooting with
his family, recounted some of the horrific encounter — the images of a bloodied
toddler he saw being dragged away and the sounds of gunfire he heard. Morgan
said he had a hard time at 10:14 a.m. on Wednesday, the exact time the shots
rang out on six months earlier.
“This
is not a unique situation. And I left that day thinking I will do whatever I
can, whatever is in my power to make sure, none of us, none of you, none of
your communities go through what we went through,” Morgan said at the end of a
nearly two-hour debate. “And yet I failed. Because within three days after the
Fourth of July, there were more gun deaths throughout the state of Illinois
than that day on the Fourth of July in Highland Park. So I failed. I literally
have been carrying that on my shoulders to this moment as we stand here right
now.”
Outgoing
Illinois House Republican Leader Jim Durkin, R-Western Springs, who has been a
vocal supporter of an assault weapons ban for years, spoke in support of the
measure. “I’m tired. I’m sickened by the shootings everywhere in this state
with these types of weapons,” Durkin said.
But
other Republicans questioned whether the measure will pass constitutional
muster and said it will criminalize lawful gun owners. “We’re talking about gun
crime. We’re talking about urban gun crime. We’re talking about mental health
issues. And these are two things we’re not combatting in this,” said state Rep.
C.D. Davidsmeyer, R-Jacksonville. “We are going after legal gun owners who have
done nothing wrong. Ninety-nine point nine percent — 99.999, right — have done
nothing wrong, and we’re going after these individuals, and I think it’s wrong.
We’re drawing at straws. I agree with you on the problem. But your solution is
going at all the wrong people.”
Those
who already own assault weapons would be able to legally keep their firearms by
registering them with the Illinois State Police within 300 days of the law
taking effect. The goal of the legislation is to stem future sales.
Sponsors
added language that would exempt active-duty law enforcement and retirees who
have served in law enforcement for over 10 years from the firearm purchase
restrictions. Retired officers will not be exempt from the ban on high-capacity
magazines.
Language
that would have raised the eligibility for a state firearm owner’s
identification card for most Illinois residents to 21 was not included in the
measure that cleared the House. That language was included when House Democrats initially
filed the bill on Dec. 1. And sponsors also added language that
would allow gun manufacturers to continue to make firearms that can be sold in
states where their sale is still legal.
Other
lawmakers called on bill sponsors to lessen penalties for those caught with
high-capacity magazines — lessening a second offense to a $1,000 fine instead
of a felony charge. Criminal justice advocates had argued the new restrictions
could disproportionately affect Black and Brown communities.
Lawmakers returned to Springfield on Wednesday for the beginning of a lame-duck session. The Illinois House held three committee hearings in December in Chicago about the controversial measure, which featured more than 12 hours of testimony from gun-rights advocates, anti-gun supporters and victims of crime...
The legislation would also extend the duration of such firearm restraining orders from six months to a year. It would also give state’s attorneys standing to assist in filing such an order. No one had sought such a restraining order against Crimo, even though Highland Park police were called to the family home in April 2019 described Crimo in their reports as having suicidal thoughts, threatening to kill his family, to “kill everybody.”
...Gun-control
groups also formed a nonprofit group called “Protect Illinois Communities,”
which helped to drum up support via television ads, mailers and news
conferences.
After a lengthy debate that stretched
into Friday, the House voted 64-43 to pass the measure that would also ban
“rapid-fire devices” that turn firearms into fully automatic weapons. It must
still clear the Illinois Senate.
-Tina
Sfondeles, Chicago Sun-Times
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