cuchulainn
Member
from the WBAY (Wisconsin) site
http://www.wbay.com/Global/story.asp?S=1491688&nav=51s7Iexo
http://www.wbay.com/Global/story.asp?S=1491688&nav=51s7Iexo
Assault Weapons: Dangerous in Whose Hands?
By Jeff Alexander
Aric Tonn used a semi-automatic AK-47 assault rifle to kill Deputy Bruce Williams in Green Lake on Sunday. In 1994, Congress passed a law making it harder for people to get assault weapons. Congress banned the manufacture of guns considered assault weapons, and gun stores can no longer import them.
Still, thousands of these weapons are on gun store shelves because Congress grandfathered any weapon made before 1994.
The ban is scheduled to end next year unless Congress and President Bush agree to renew it.
No surprise, we found strong opinions on both sides of this issue. Some feel assault weapons are nothing but a threat to society. Others feel owning them is their constitutional right.
Butch Williquette is in the gun business. At On-Site Gun Company he buys, sells, and defends what he does for a living. "I got an AK-47 over there on the wall and it hasn't assaulted anybody yet," he points out. "You put anything in the hands of a killer and he's going to kill."
Williquette believes in the motto "Guns don't kill people, people do."
Not everyone agrees. Pastor Kay Krejci of Union Congregational Church feels assault weapons give people -- sometimes dangerous people -- the feeling of power, and that has to stop. God forbid that people feel powerful!
"It doesn't speak well for our society. It's not a healthy situation," she said. "I think it's appropriate for us as a community to say we don't need or want assault weapons in our homes."
Police tend to agree. They say weapons like an AK-47 possess too much firepower for them to handle.
"The number of rounds you can fire in a short time with a hunting rifle versus a semi-automatic AK-47 is quite different," Green Bay police Lieutenant Jim Arts said.
Those favoring the ban say it has to get even tougher because gunmakers are simply modifying models to offer customers weapons almost identical to those that are banned.
Recent studies by the U.S. Department of Justice found no evidence that banning assault weapons reduced the number of gunshot victims.
"Granted, in the wrong hands they're very dangerous, but so is that car you just drove up in," Williquette said.
© Copyright 2000 - 2003, WorldNow and WBAY