Schumer Announces $1.5 Billion Push for Interstate Gun Task Force

Jack Phillips
By Jack Phillips
January 31, 2022Politics
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Schumer Announces $1.5 Billion Push for Interstate Gun Task Force
Senate Majority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) speaks to members of the press after a Senate Democratic Caucus meeting in Washington, on Jan. 18, 2022. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) on Sunday pushed the federal government to provide his state with at least $1.5 billion to deal with illegal guns.

Schumer said that the Interstate Task Force on Illegal Guns, headed by Democrat Gov. Kathy Hochul, will only work if the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF) and other federal officials have the resources.

“The ABCs of beating back the scourge of gun violence depends on three federal letters: A, T, and F,” Schumer said during a Manhattan news conference.

“I am pushing for $1.5 billion dollars in federal funds for the agency, so they can help with this work and do much more at the national level,” the top Senate Democrat said. “Without the $1.5 billion … these plans will not have their full impact, and we need full impact to address the flow of these crime guns in our communities and across our state.”

It comes after two New York City Police Department officers were shot and killed in late January, allegedly with a stolen firearm. Mayor Eric Adams, meanwhile, launched a plainclothes NYPD unit aimed at gun trafficking.

But Adams, a Democrat, warned that he will fire officers for alleged misconduct.

“If you don’t follow the law, you’re not going to serve in my police department,” he said on Sunday.

New York City, along with Chicago and Los Angeles, has some of the strictest gun control rules in the United States. Before purchasing a firearm in the city, the buyer has to have a license for a handgun or a shotgun or rifle, whereas, in New York state, a buyer doesn’t need to have a permit to purchase a rifle or shotgun—only handguns.

Critics of gun control measures have said that such rules do not lead to lower crime or homicide rates, but simply unfairly penalize lawful gun owners. Chicago saw more than 800 murders in 2021, while New York City saw nearly 500 murders—the highest total in years.

Meanwhile, in late November 2021, some members of the Supreme Court had pointed questions about the New York state law and similar laws in California, Maryland, and other states that sharply limit an individual’s ability to carry a gun outside their home—suggesting the high court may overturn the law.

“We are likely to see New York be forced to rewrite its law,” said Adam Winkler, a law professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, told The New York Times in November regarding a pending Supreme Court decision.

“We’ll have to wait until we see the court’s opinion before we know what’s constitutionally permissible,” he added.

From The Epoch Times

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