From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

This is courtesy of Spiker via WorldNet Daily. I've already
gone to Herr Reed's site and signed his petition. Since
Herr Reed seems to be a good little NAZI minion, might I
suggest using signature of some whom he is bound 
to idealize, e.g., Goring, Goebels, Himmler, Eichmann etc.
I've already used the big one I'm afraid  
:-)       Mike P

Source:
WorldNetDaily
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/

Gun-registration bill not moving
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_dougherty/20000827_xnjdo_gunregistr.shtml
Measure requiring federal tracking of firearms sits in committee

By Jon E.  Dougherty � 2000 WorldNetDaily.com

Although a U.S.  Senate bill that would require all handgun owners to 
register their firearms has received a great deal of publicity -- 
especially online -- in recent weeks, no action has been taken on it since 
WorldNetDaily first reported on the measure in March.
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_dougherty/20000316_xnjdo_senate_con.shtml

The brainchild of Rhode Island Democrat Sen.  Jack Reed, SB 2099
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d106:s.02099:   originally had no 
cosponsors.  However, since being introduced into the Senate and referred 
to the Finance Committee, noted gun-control advocate and New York Democrat 
Sen. Charles Schumer, along with Sen.  Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., have also 
signed on to it.

Photo of Sen. Jack Reed D-R.I., chief sponsor of SB 2099
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/images/20000827_xnjdo_gunregistra1.jpg

Photo of Sen. Frank Lautenburg D-N.J., cosponsor of SB 2099
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/images/20000827_xnjdo_gunregistra2.jpg

Photo of Sen. Charles Schumer D-N.Y., a cosponsor of SB 2099 and noted 
gun-control advocate
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/images/20000827_xnjdo_gunregistra3.jpg

If passed, the measure would amend a 1986 IRS code to require the 
registration of handguns and other firearms.  Specifically, the measure 
would require an amendment to Chapter 53 of the Internal Revenue Code 
(Machine Guns, Destructive Devices, and Certain Other Firearms) to "require 
the registration of handguns in the National Firearms Registration and 
Transfer Record."

The bill is titled the "Handgun Safety and Registration Act of 2000."

To aid in publicizing it in the hopes of getting it passed out of 
committee, Reed has set up an online petition for voters to use to help him 
push for the bill.

In fact, ostensibly because he had received overwhelming support for 
firearms registration, Reed has established a 
website  http://www.gunregistration.org/  specifically to help stump for 
gun registration.

"Although polls have shown that Americans overwhelmingly support handgun 
registration, I need your support to help move my Handgun Safety and 
Registration Act through Congress," Reed said via his personal Senate 
website, where he also asks visitors to sign his online petition supporting 
gun registration.

Reed said the measure is needed to "reduce illegal gun trafficking by 
providing for more efficient tracing of handguns used in crimes and tougher 
penalties for those who sell guns to illegal purchasers."

"For far too long in America, too many gun crimes have gone unsolved 
because law enforcement doesn't have the tools to tie criminals to the 
handguns they use in crimes," the petition said.  "Requiring handguns to be 
registered would help law enforcement officers do their jobs more 
effectively."

According to Reed's measure, current handgun owners would also be required 
to register their guns.  Also, the bill would make it a felony to transfer 
ownership of a handgun "without prior law enforcement approval."

The bill adds handguns to the list of weapons registered by the Secretary 
of the Treasury, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, under the 
National Firearms Act, which currently covers machine guns, short-barrel 
shotguns, short-barrel rifles, silencers, bombs, grenades, and other 
specialized weapons, said information about the bill on Reed's website.

Handguns would have to be registered with the ATF within a year of passage, 
but if the gun is transferred or sold to another owner before the one-year 
time limit, then it must be registered before the transfer can take place.

The bill requires the ATF to share handgun registration data with local, 
state and federal law-enforcement officials to enhance tracing 
capabilities, and adds a $5 tax for all handgun registrations or transfers 
instead of the $200 tax on all National Firearms Act weapons.

Also, a $50 tax would be assessed for every handgun made.

The Senate Finance Committee's Taxation and IRS Oversight Subcommittee has 
responsibility for the measure.  The bill has not yet been voted out.

According to the Senate Calendar, only one IRS-related bill is currently 
scheduled for debate.  That bill, S.  1792, deals with expiring provisions 
and "nonrefundable personal credits against regular tax liability."
--
Well, what he says about his bill is a total con job on his website,
and note also that the actual text of the bill isn't there either.

It says specifically that the only _required_ participation of
a chief law enforcement officer is to sign the ATF transfer form,
but anyone who has ever had anything to do with NFA transfers
knows that CLEOs are not required to sign the transfer form.

In essence his bill is really a handgun ban.

Steve.


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