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Thoughts on this? Personally, I think its a great idea.
My initial thought would be that I would be against it, for a number of reasons. However, none of those reasons would be because I am pro-gun or pro-gun-crime; I'd like to say that up front.
There is a distinct different between a criminal history file and a registry. When one is arrested, one's name goes into a national database that can be accessed by law enforcement and court-related officials through the nation (in most cases). When one is convicted of a crime, that information goes in there too. Some things may not show up, like field interview cards and parking tickets and so on - although they might show up in state-wide or local databases; but the big stuff does.
A 'registry' of this sort, however, requires that the person convicted go through the formality of registering their current location with local authorities, and that they continue to do so regardless of where they move to in the future. Some registries require life-long registration; some require it for a period of time.
Generally these registries are available to the public and not just law-enforcement personnel. Generally, they are established on a state-wide basis for sex offenders. The concept behind them is that sex offenders are by nature highly at risk of offending again, and that citizens have the right to know if sex offenders are living in their neighborhoods.
Typically, such registries are supported by the public, and generally, they seem to do no harm to anyone. It's hard to argue in support of sex offenders, after all.
However, there are sometimes situations which occur which to some may seem a miscarriage of justice. For example, some 'sex offenders' have been young men who have had consensual sex with minors who were just a few months their junior - an 18 year-old man having sex with a 17 year-old girlfriend, and that sort of thing. Or men who pay for a prostitute and get caught at it. Hardly what I'd call 'dangerous criminals' that we need to monitor on an hourly basis for the rest of their lives, but they're often lumped in with the rapists and child molesters. In fact, based on my local Michigan offender's list, most of the offenders that live in my neighborhood are guilty of just those sorts of offenses. I'm not too worried that a guy who got busy with his underage girlfriend when they were both in their teens but he was 18 and she wasn't is going to be stalking kids on the local playground, are you?
As well, other laws based on the registries have been passed in some places. From keeping track of where sex offenders live, there are some places that disallow them to live within certain distances of public places like schools. While well-intentioned, in at least a couple states, it turns out that sex offenders have no choice but to live under bridges and in tents in the woods, because there IS no legal residence that passes the 'distance test' within a given city's jurisdiction. Google for it if you don't believe me. And as much as many might be happy to see sex offenders punished for the rest of their lives and would consider living under a bridge to be a good idea, one might also suggest that the desperate and homeless might be a tad more prone to committing crimes than one who has a job and a place to live. Just saying.
And finally, in some noted cases, neighbors and others have taken the law into their own hands, burning down houses of known sex offenders, harassing them out of town, ensuring they get fired from their jobs, and so on. In a well-known case here in Michigan a couple years ago, a man in his 30's who had been convicted of having sex with his underage girlfriend when he was 21 and she was 17 was tracked down (he had been reduced to living in his truck), lured to a garage with the promise of a construction job, murdered, and
had his head chopped off. That was to 'punish' him for being a sex offender. Some punishment, eh? Hey, any of you guys have sex at a young age, maybe when you were 18 or 19 and your girlfriend was 17? Think you deserve to have your name on a list and have to report where you live for the rest of your life, to be hounded out of a job and have to live in your vehicle, and then 10 years after the offense to be killed and beheaded? I mean, if you think you deserve that, feel free to turn yourselves in.
So, getting back to a proposed gun-offense registry...I'd have to know some things.
First, what kind of crimes are sufficient to be put on this registry? Are we talking about about someone who goes hunting without a license? That's technically a 'gun crime', right? Someone who is found to have a weapon in their vehicle during a stop for something else entirely? Someone who rushes out of their house with a gun to defend their property and is arrested for having a gun in public if local laws don't allow that? I'd really like to know what the minimum offense is.
Second, for how long would such a person be put on the list? Is it for life? Is it possible to get oneself removed from the list by petition or trial? Can mistakes be rectified?
Third, who has access to this proposed registry? Are we talking the general public here?
Imagine a guy who has a CCW and it expires and he doesn't notice. He gets pulled over for a speeding offense, tells the officer that he is armed (as he is required to), gives up his CCW, and the officer arrests him for CCW because the permit is expired.
Now, in addition to criminal charges, he finds himself on a list for life, one that his neighbors have access to on the internet. As a 'gun criminal', some concerned neighbors take it upon themselves to notify his employer, and he loses his job. Then they start protesting in the street in front of his house until he moves. But wherever he goes, it starts up again. In addition, some do-gooding legislators pass a state law that limits where he can live to not within 1,000 feet of a school, church, or public building. And there are no buildings in his small town that don't fall within that limit. So he finds himself and his family homeless, jobless, and camping under a bridge.
Justice has been served. Right?
I suggest instead that if we want to protect society from gun criminals, lock them up. If we don't intend to lock them up, then leave them alone. We still have our criminal history records, which the police have access to, which lets them investigate crimes and determine suspects. I do not see what public interest is served by making a list of local gun crime violators available to the general public in this manner. Does the public have a right to know? Sure they do. And it can be found through public records of convictions as well as through news stories. It's not as convenient as browsing a database to see who lives on your street who has ever been convicted of a gun crime, but I'm not sure that making it more convenient is a public right in this case.