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MOST PRIVATE GUN POSSESSION BANNED—

Gun-Free School Zones Impact Greater Than Expected
New maps disclose unexpected result of 1,000-foot bans
Federal law makes it a crime to possess a firearm off your property and
within 1,000 feet of a school, with a few narrow exceptions. When all gun-free
zones were recently plotted for schools in two major cities (Phoenix and
Cleveland), using computer mapping, it became apparent that virtually all
public travel with firearms is now a violation of law.
The study was included as part of a ten-year review of all federal gun law by
gunlaws.com, for the Tenth Anniversary edition of
Gun Laws of America, the unabridged guide to federal gun law. Published by
Phoenix-based Bloomfield Press, it has just been released.
Without realizing it, and by an unexpected route, anti-gun-rights advocates
have achieved their primary goal -- gun possession is effectively banned by
federal law. A five-year federal prison sentence attaches to every crossing
into a school zone, and the zones overlap virtually citywide. The public commits
countless millions of gun violations by simply moving around. No effect on crime
has been reported.
Members of Congress and even the NRA are on record calling for strict
enforcement of current federal gun laws. How that policy and the school zones
measure can co-exist is not clear.
Additional maps and the dataset are posted at
gunlaws.com
"This near-total gun ban is simply unenforceable, and was never intended to
criminalize everyone who bears arms," said
Alan Korwin, author of Gun Laws of America. "We would have to place
half the public in prison to comply with this law. It shows the folly of such
legislation, perhaps the most ineffectual feel-good gun law ever enacted, and it
needs to be repealed," he said, adding that it must be humiliating to the bill's
original sponsors. "Where would Justice Roberts stand on this issue, and
what was Sen. Feinstein really asking?" Many politicians are quietly
aware of the ban.
The simple act of buying a gun and bringing it home, taking one to the range,
going hunting, or carrying one for personal safety would subject most people to
arrest and a permanent criminal record under this law, originally enacted by
President Bush's father, President Bush, in 1990.
The Gun-Free School Zones law was struck down in 1995 by the U.S. Supreme Court,
in the now-famous Lopez case, referred to today by Sen. Feinstein, a staunch
anti-gun-rights advocate. For the first time in decades the Court ruled that
Congress had overstepped its powers to regulate states under the Commerce
Clause. There were more than 121,000 local schools at the time. Congress
responded by swiftly reenacting the entire law, under President Clinton in 1996,
with
a few small changes it believed bypassed the Court's concerns. No new case
has been brought to test the new version, so it stands.
Contact:
Alan Korwin
BLOOMFIELD PRESS
"We publish the gun laws."
4718 E. Cactus #440
Phoenix, AZ 85032
602-996-4020 Phone
602-494-0679 FAX
1-800-707-4020 Orders
http://www.gunlaws.com
alan@gunlaws.com
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