ISIS Supporter Specifically Targeted Gun-Free Zone for Attack
Friday, February 12, 2016
NRA has been criticized by our opponents for
contending that those seeking to wreak mass violence on innocents choose
their targets based on the likelihood that they will meet armed
resistance, and that armed citizens could assist in halting this type of
violent attack. As part of their efforts, gun control activists and
their allies in the media have frequently lampooned NRA Executive Vice
President Wayne LaPierre’s astute remarks that “The only thing that
stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.” The bankruptcy of
this anti-gun position was exposed late last week when details from an FBI terrorism investigation revealed that an alleged ISIS supporter chose the target for a planned terrorist attack because it was a gun-free zone.
A notable example of our opponents’ error on this matter
is a commentary from March 25, 2013 edition of USA Today penned by
Mother Jones Editor Mark Follman. Titled, “The NRA's gun-free zone
myth,” the item characterizes NRA’s argument as “killers deliberately
choose sites where firearms are forbidden, gun-rights advocates say, and
because there are no weapons, no ‘good guy with a gun’ will be on hand
to stop the crime,” then labels it, “Sound bite sophistry.” USA Today
has exhibited an appetite for this position, as on December 11, 2015
they gave platform to another commentator for an item titled “The 'good
guy with a gun' myth.” The writer contended that if a terrorist were to
be met with armed resistance, “we’d have a lot more dead innocents.”
For its part, Bloomberg’s Everytown has gone to great
lengths to perpetuate the notion that the ability to lawfully carry is
not a deterrent to mass killers, going so far as to produce a misleading
analysis of mass shootings since 2009. The Everytown analysis contended
that 86 percent of mass public shootings took place in areas where guns
were permitted. However, a closer inspection by former University of
Chicago Professor John Lott revealed numerous errors in Everytown’s
work. Lott concluded that a mere 8 percent of mass shooting occurred in public places where people were allowed to carry.
Following an FBI investigation that culminated last week,
the dubious speculations of media commentators or the flawed findings of
Everytown should hold little purchase.
On February 4, federal authorities filed a criminal complaint
against a Dearborn Heights, Mich. man in the United States District
Court for the Eastern District of Michigan for a violation of 18 U.S.C.
922(g)(3), which makes it unlawful for anyone “who is an unlawful user
of or addicted to any controlled substance” to possess a firearm. The
complaint alleges that on two occasions the subject lied on ATF Form
4473 while purchasing a firearm, as he was in fact a drug user.
The FBI began investigating the man in May 2015 after
learning of threats he made about “committing acts of terror and
martyrdom… on behalf of the foreign terrorist organization Islamic State
of Iraq and Levant.” The complaint goes on to note that the individual
repeatedly promoted the terrorist group on using social media.
During its investigation, the FBI engaged with the man
using an undercover asset. The man told the undercover asset, “I tried
to shoot up a church one day. I don’t know the name of it, but it’s
close to my job. It’s one of the biggest ones in Detroit. Ya, I had it
planned out.” The subject then told the asset why he chose the church,
stating, “It’s easy, and a lot of people go there. Plus people are not
allowed to carry guns in church.”
Policymakers across the country should allow the heinous
statements of this ISIS supporter to inform their policy decisions
regarding the efficacy of gun-free zones. Moreover, Michiganders should
know that Michigan Compiled Laws section 28.425o(3) bans Right-to-Carry
permit holders from carrying on “Any property or facility owned or
operated by a church, synagogue, mosque, temple, or other place of
worship, unless the presiding official or officials of the church,
synagogue, mosque, temple, or other place of worship permit the carrying
of concealed pistol on that property or facility.” Church officials
should use their discretion wisely in light of these events.
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