Matter of law, not messenger

Last month, the Boston Herald said it would stop distributing the revered Maine shopper Uncle Henry's around the Massachusetts capital because guns purchased from its pages had either been illegally trafficked, or linked to violence, in the city.

Maine and New Hampshire are a prime source for firearms, because private transactions in those states are largely unregulated, unlike Massachusetts. Removing Uncle Henry's, then, would cut a connection between Bay State criminals and easy-to-acquire weaponry.

(Disclosure: the Sun Journal also accepts advertisements for firearms in its classified section.)

This might work, for awhile. But taking away Uncle Henry's in Boston doesn't alter its ubiquity in Maine and New Hampshire. Guns are still available. They're still advertised. Anyone who wants one can get one; now it just requires a trip. (Which, for persons buying guns in Maine and New Hampshire before, was a trip they were making anyway.)

There is no guarantee, either, that Uncle Henry's is gone forever. Its publisher is said to be looking for another distributor in Boston. So the victory for Boston-area officials and gun-control advocates, already hollow, might also be short-lived.

Uncle Henry's is a convenient target. The real culprit, as has been identified before, are the laxer laws for tracking private gun sales in Maine and New Hampshire, which offer an attractive market to the wrong element. If prosecutors, police and advocates wish to staunch the flow of guns from the north, these laws must be toughened.

And if policymakers, law enforcement officials and citizens of Maine and New Hampshire wish to aid this effort to the south, they must take the politically bold stance to do so, instead of having career criminals remark about how profitable the north-south gun trade is. They have had this chance in the past, but legislation hasn't progressed. 

The goal is laudable: ensuring guns purchased in Maine and New Hampshire don't easily fall into the wrong hands. It would make the private sale of guns more bureaucratic, but also more traceable, which should provide a strong disincentive for illicit buyers.

In private gun sales, Massachusetts requires buyer and seller to complete a form filed with the state. Buyer and seller must also have a firearms license, which must be recorded at the time of sale. Being convicted of certain crimes prohibits a person from holding a license.

Traffickers and criminals in Massachusetts are reportedly using Maine and New Hampshire's weaker laws to circumvent these requirements. Changing the law in Maine could prevent those who shouldn't possess firearms from doing so, without violating the constitutional right of law-abiding citizens to bear arms.

Equalizing laws on the merchandise is the route for trying to stem gun violence in Massachusetts, not pressuring Uncle Henry's or its distributors. Firearm advertisements don't harm people, after all. But the wrong person with a gun is a different story.

editorialboard@sunjournal.com

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Displaying comments, from newest to oldest

robert's picture

I would like to know what

I would like to know what evidence the editorial board is using when it states that Maine and New Hampshire are a prime source for firearms illegally trafficked, or linked to violence, in the city. I see this argument used in such broad strokes but never backed-up. i had a conversation with a state legislator who said there were truck loads of guns going to Philidelphia and other areas all the time. So I asked the question, "how many truck loads have been caught that can verify your story...he never had the answer, and these are the people who are writing the laws of our state. Scary isn't it.

Bravosixalpha's picture
verified

You can see how effective

You can see how effective gun control laws are in Boston, New York City, Baltimore, Washington D.C. Los Angeles, Sanfrancisco, Chicago and every other major city. Why heavens the murders are down almost one percent of the previous year(being sarcastic). If a person wants a firearm/handgun, they will find a way to acquire it. My thinking is that you require a person who legally purchases a firearm to be well trained, so that when he/she has to use it for self defense, the victim ends the criminal career of the offender.

Bravosixalpha's picture
verified

You can see how effective

You can see how effective gun control laws are in Boston, New York City, Baltimore, Washington D.C. Los Angeles, Sanfrancisco, Chicago and every other major city. Why heavens the murders are down almost one percent of the previous year(being sarcastic). If a person wants a firearm/handgun, they will find a way to acquire it. My thinking is that you require a person who legally purchases a firearm to be well trained, so that when he/she has to use it for self defense, the victim ends the criminal career of the offender.

Bravosixalpha's picture
verified

You can see how effective

You can see how effective gun control laws are in Boston, New York City, Baltimore, Washington D.C. Los Angeles, Sanfrancisco, Chicago and every other major city. Why heavens the murders are down almost one percent of the previous year(being sarcastic). If a person wants a firearm/handgun, they will find a way to acquire it. My thinking is that you require a person who legally purchases a firearm to be well trained, so that when he/she has to use it for self defense, the victim ends the criminal career of the offender.

fixit001's picture

I firmly beleve you should

I firmly beleve you should be able to own the same weaponry as any govermental agency has so when they try to take your home away you can take as many out before they get you I.E. Fair Fight!!!! With the rate at which our taxes are climbing and false and tainted valuations we will all be forced out of our homes therefore we should be allowed to protect our homes with deadly force from anyone who wishes to take our homes!!!!

Jabba's picture
verified

When our founding fathers

When our founding fathers guaranteed us the right to bear arms it was primarily to have the means to fight an oppressive government.

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