.
Robert Ricker
A chat about Gun Control
May
10, 1999
Web posted at: 8:30 p.m. EDT
The following is an edited transcript of a chat conducted
with Robert Ricker, Executive Director of the American Shooting
Sports Council, held on Wednesday, May 5, 1999.
CNN Moderator: Hello and welcome Bob Ricker. Thanks for
joining us today.
Robert Ricker: Hello, glad to be here.
CNN Moderator: Please tell us about yourself and your
role at the American Shooting Sports Council?
Robert Ricker: I'm the executive director of ASSC, and
I'm in charge of lobbying for the firearms industry, both at the
state and local level and at the federal level here in
Washington D.C.
Chat Participant: What can we do to educate the U.S.
public about guns? Much of the anti-gun hysteria seems to be
based upon an absolute lack of knowledge of guns by that crowd.
Robert Ricker: That is true. There is a lot of
misinformation about firearms. And we need to not only educate
people about guns, but more importantly about the safe use of
firearms. And once people understand basic firearm safety, they
will clearly see that firearm ownership and use can and is one
of the safest sports we have in America.
CNN Moderator: What is the purpose or mission of the
American Shooting Sports Council?
Robert Ricker: We are here to protect the firearms
industry, and basically guarantee that we have a legal and
legislative environment that will permit and promote the lawful
use of firearms. We work with Congress, with state legislators
and others. We provide them information, technical data, and
testimony basically on all facets of the industry from
manufacturing down through the sale to the general public at
licensed firearm dealers, and places of business. We're
basically the voice of the firearms industry.
Chat Participant: How can you call it one of the safest
sports in America? When I go skiing I can't kill a room full of
people in a couple of minutes.
Robert Ricker: Well, if you follow the basic rules of
firearm safety, if you're not a criminal, every day firearms are
used by thousands and thousands and thousands of people and no
one is ever injured in a safe sporting environment.
Unfortunately when criminals get their hand on guns, or when
negligent adults allow children or other prohibited persons from
getting their hands on guns, firearms can be very very
dangerous. The percentage of firearms misused is well below one
half of one percent of all guns in America. And we try to work
with law enforcement to guarantee and make sure that firearms
are used safely. But there are far fewer people killed or
injured in accidental shootings than there are people killed or
injured skiing every year.
Chat Participant: Where is the constitutional guarantee
to firearms as sport? Doesn't the second amendment clearly
discuss a well-regulated militia?
Robert Ricker: No, the second Amendment does not discuss
a well-regulated militia. It references the militia, which at
the time the amendment was written was used to refer to all
able-bodied citizens who could potentially be called upon to
defend their country. Most legal scholars now agree across the
board that the second Amendment grants all Americans the
individual right to not only keep but also bear arms. The issue
that I think you are referring to has never been squarely dealt
with by the U.S. Supreme Court. And there is a case that
recently came down from a U.S. district court in Texas which
ruled very clearly that our founding fathers intended very
clearly that the second amendment apply to all individual
citizens of the United States.
Chat Participant: Mr. Riker, guns are a weapon that kill.
Do you think that they should be regulated like any other danger
to the population?
Robert Ricker: Well, firearms industry is a highly
regulated industry. There is a specific bureau of our federal
government that has been charged with regulating the
manufacture, sale, and distribution of firearms, and that
department is known as the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms. There are over 20,000 gun laws on the books right now.
Guns are the only consumer product that can only be sold after a
person goes through a criminal background check and passes that
check. So, in terms of other consumer products, firearms are
really more regulated and go under more scrutiny than, let's
say, toasters or teddybears.
CNN Moderator: Do you think rapid-fire weapons should be
made available for Americans to purchase? What purpose do they
serve?
Robert Ricker: Machine guns have been banned in this
country since 1934. Semi-automatic firearms of whatever
configuration can only fire one round per pull of the trigger.
In order to rapidly fire a semi-automatic firearm, the rate of
fire is determined by how fast a person can pull the trigger.
So, there's really no way that one type of semi-automatic
firearm functions differently than another type. So what we have
is a situation where your father's hunting rifle functions and
fires as fast or as slow as a commercially available Uzi or AK
47. The concept of rapid-fire is really a red herring, or a
fantasy, unless you're talking about machine guns, which are
illegal.
Chat Participant: Many gun control proponents say that
guns are more available now than in the past. Isn't it true?
Robert Ricker: Actually, that's not true. The
availability of firearms is more restricted now than it ever has
been. And if you look at the number of guns available per
capita, there was probably back in the late 1800's early 1900's,
more guns available per capita than there are now. And back at
that time, there were virtually no restrictions on the sale or
acquisition of firearms. What we have today however is a
criminal justice problem that our cities have been unable to
deal with effectively, so the easy way out is to blame the gun.
CNN Moderator: Isn't it true that the sale of guns has
never been as heavily regulated as now?
Robert Ricker: That's true.
Chat Participant: Why are the gun lobbyists trying to
kill a law that says nobody can buy more than one gun a month?
Robert Ricker: We think that one gun in the wrong hands
is one gun too many. One gun a month laws incorrectly targets
the law-abiding citizen. If a person is not going to break the
law, and is going to handle firearms safely, what difference
should it make how many firearms that person can acquire in a
year or a month? It's the criminal we must restrict from ever
obtaining a firearm.
Chat Participant: In the three school shooting incidents
I can think of in recent memory, guns have been the primary, and
in some case sole, weapons of choice. What do you think this
says to the people who say, "If we take away guns, they'll
just find another weapon"? Do you think it is a coincidence
that they all chose guns?
Robert Ricker: Guns are not to blame in incidences like
Littleton.
CNN Moderator: Many people blame incidents like the
Littleton shootings on the easy access to guns. Do you think
guns are at all an issue in these situations?
Robert Ricker: However, since firearms were used, the
firearms industry has to reexamine the whole issue of children
with guns. There is not one proposal that I have seen from the
gun control side that would have prevented what happened in
Littleton. There we had two young men on a suicide mission. They
made homemade bombs, they illegally acquired firearms,
ammunition, and they illegally modified two sporting shotguns to
turn them into very effective killing machines. No law would
have stopped these two madmen. What we need to do, is find ways
in which to protect our schools and our law-abiding citizens
against crazed killers like these two young men.
Chat Participant: What if the two Littleton boys got
their guns from someone buying 10 guns a month, obviously more
than what one needs to hunt with?
Robert Ricker: Well, in Littleton, it wouldn't have
mattered how many guns per month were purchased by these two
young men or their accomplices or co-conspirators. What we do
know is these two young men should never have been allowed
access to guns, or explosives, or other items they used to make
the bombs.
Chat Participant: Are there any additional barriers to
weapons acquisition that you would support?
Robert Ricker: We support the criminal background check
prior to purchasing a gun, and that should be extended to cover
gun shows. We feel that violent juveniles, juveniles convicted
of violent felonies when they are juveniles, should never be
allowed to own guns when they become of age.
Chat Participant: What kind of sport does your lobbying
aim to protect? Duck hunting, deer hunting, skeet shooting?
Robert Ricker: All facets, all facets of the recreational
use of firearms. In addition to the availability and use of
firearms of law-abiding citizens for self-protection. Target
shooting, formal competition, like the shooting sports that are
part of the Olympics. Hunting, and what is commonly referred to
as "plinking" and that's what President Clinton
described as his first experience with a firearm. That's
shooting a tin can off of a fencepost or a rock out in the
country. So there is a wide range of recreational or sporting
uses of firearms. And sporting firearms include handguns, BB
guns or air guns, rifles of various calibers and shotguns.
CNN Moderator: Does that include semi automatic weapons?
Robert Ricker: Yes, there are Olympic competitions and
other recognized shooting sports activities that require the use
of semi-automatic pistols and rifles.
Chat Participant: Your position of responsible gun use
seems contradictory to Larry Pratt of Gun Owners of America. Do
you feel comfortable having that organization on the same side
of the issue?
Robert Ricker: There are many different views on how best
to protect our shooting sports, our right to keep and bear arms,
and the firearms industry. Mr. Pratt's organization believes in
the absolute right of the individual to keep and bear arms. We
believe, however, that no Constitutional right is absolute. We
clearly know that a person cannot yell "fire" in a
crowded theatre and then claim first Amendment protections for
that type of activity. We feel a criminal background check and
preventing violent felons from owning guns are reasonable
balances in our Second Amendment rights.
Chat Participant: How do you handle criticism that the
gun lobby is protecting the economic interests of the gunmakers
at the cost of lives?
Robert Ricker: Well that is absolutely not true. This
industry has nothing to do with why criminals commit crimes with
guns. Our industry is highly regulated. We pay millions and
millions of dollars each year in federal and state taxes, we
employ thousands and thousands of individuals, and we are the
mainstay in many states in their state economy. There is no
relationship between our sound business practices and the
criminals who may misuse the products we may make.
Chat Participant: How do we guarantee the constitutional
right to bear arms while protecting society from the gun nuts?
Robert Ricker: The only way to accomplish that is through
the enforcement of our current laws. If the law is enforced, we
will do two things; we will guarantee the rights of law-abiding
citizens, and reduce crime and keep guns out of the wrong hands.
This has been done in cities like Richmond, Virginia and Boston,
Massachusetts.
Chat Participant: All of the guns that these "two
madmen" used were bought at gun shows. Wouldn't regulating
gun shows or shutting them down have prevented the tragedy?
Robert Ricker: No. These two "madmen" went to
great lengths to acquire explosives. If there were no gun shows,
these two men would not have given up their plan, they merely
would have found another source for the guns they used. We do
need to tighten the rules surrounding gunshows in order to be
consistent with the laws that relate to federally licensed
firearms dealers. But the answer is not to blame a gun show. The
answer lies in being able to deal effectively with troubled
teenagers.
Chat Participant: You state that you support background
checks and the like for prospective firearm purchasers. The
primary objection by many gun owners to background checks is
that it provides the government with a list of gun owners, How
would you prevent this?
Robert Ricker: This would be prevented by building in
certain protections into the law; protections like the
destruction of transfer records after a person has cleared the
background check.
Chat Participant: Do you get tired of the gun control
people?
Robert Ricker: I get tired of the same old failed
programs that the gun control crowd seems to push year after
year. I don't question their sincerity, however I do question
sometimes their motives. In order to solve a very difficult
problem like gun violence, we need to concentrate more on
preventing criminal behavior than creating more potential
crimes. It makes no sense to add law after law after law on top
of laws we already have if the criminal does not think twice
about committing such crimes as murder, rape, robbery, and
arson. Passing new laws to restrict the behavior of law-abiding
citizens completely misses the point.
CNN Moderator: What should be done to keep guns out of
the hands of children and criminals?
Robert Ricker: Well first, we must educate the public on
the proper use and handling of firearms. Secondly, we have to
get the criminals off the street. We have to lock them up. And
that's the only effective way that we in America have ever been
able to effectively deal with gun crime. Richmond, VA has done
it, and several other cities have similar projects underway to
disarm the criminal. If you look at countries like Switzerland
for example, they have very very few gun crimes committed each
year. Yet, every Swiss citizen is required to own a firearm. Gun
ownership does not equate to crime.
Chat Participant: Don't you think that if guns were
unavailable, violent crimes would drop, at least a little?
Robert Ricker: Sure. If we could destroy every gun in
America, gun crime would undoubtedly drop. But that's an
unrealistic approach. There are over 250 million guns in
America. If we started today, to try to ban and confiscate every
gun, or to stop the production of every new gun, we would still
have a tremendous supply of firearms for at least the next 150
years. So what we need to do, is we need to be able to
effectively deal with the criminal.
Chat Participant: Mr. Ricker, do you think that gun
makers should be responsible for putting safer guns on the
market?
Robert Ricker: We represent those gun companies that are
spending research and development dollars to perfect the safest
possible firearms. The firearms that are available today have
never been safer, and to try and rest gun safety merely on
mechanical devices, we believe is a very unwise course of
conduct. There are safety devices, gun locks and other products
that a gun owner can purchase to safely store firearms, and gun
makers are attempting to develop personalized firearms, firearms
that can only be fired by the lawful owner. But that technology
is still being developed and may be years away. What we need to
do now is concentrate on educating the public on gun safety
issues. Even if you do not own a firearm, even if you do not
like firearms, there are so many guns in America chances are you
or your children sometime in the future are going to be
confronted or run across a firearm. The American public, both
adults and children, should know how to keep themselves safe
when a gun is around. For children, they should not touch the
firearm, they should leave the room, and they should tell an
adult. For adults, they should understand that you treat all
firearms as if they were loaded and you never point a firearm at
anything you don't intend to shoot, and you never put your
finger on the trigger until your ready to shoot and shoot a safe
target. Those are simple rules and we need to do a better job on
educating the public on those simple rules. Thanks for having
me!
CNN Moderator: Thanks, Bob Ricker, for joining us today.
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