ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: THURSDAY, October 21, 1993                   TAG: 9310210199
SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL                    PAGE: A5   EDITION: STATE 
SOURCE: Associated Press
DATELINE: BOSTON                                LENGTH: Medium


HEADLINES HELP BUILD MOMENTUM FOR GUN CONTROL

As a top federal prosecutor, Bill Weld opposed banning semiautomatic weapons, thinking it a misguided approach in the war on crime. But the gruesome daily headlines brought a change of heart.

"It was an emotional thing," says Weld, now the Republican governor of Massachusetts. "I'm reading every single day about innocent people getting shot, bystanders getting shot. . . . It doesn't take too many of those to get you to rethink things."

Weld is hardly alone in rethinking - and debating - views on crime. Gang violence in communities large and small, urban and rural, cop killings, the Florida tourist slayings and other tragic turns have pushed crime to the front of the national, state and local political agenda.

Along the way, the terms of the debate have shifted markedly from years past, with Weld and other one-time opponents of gun control now advocating tough restrictions, and politicians of all stripes rushing to take on the National Rifle Association, a once-unbeatable lobbying force.

President Clinton now challenges the gun lobby in virtually every speech, as he advocates passage of a federal five-day waiting period on handgun purchases. He also wants the federal government to help put 50,000 more police officers on the streets.

The Democratic gubernatorial candidates this year in Virginia and New Jersey, Mary Sue Terry and Jim Florio, both one-time friends of the NRA, now stress their support for gun control in races where crime is a major issue.

And in New York, Boston, Detroit and a half-dozen other big and medium-size cities with mayoral contests this year, crime is a paramount issue - and gun-control proposals are easy to come by.

In Salt Lake City, gang violence prodded the City Council into adopting a five-day waiting period for residents 18 to 25 who want to buy guns. It also created criminal penalties for gun sales to minors.

In Colorado, Gov. Roy Romer won rousing applause when he criticized the NRA in a speech opening a special legislative session to deal with crime.

"People are fed up with this business of excessive guns," Romer said in an interview. "The NRA can scream, but there is no reason a 14-year-old should be carrying a gun, and everybody knows that."

In the past week alone:

The Utah Legislature, called into special session to deal with gang violence, passed a $4 million package that outlaws possession of handguns by people under age 18 and possession of any firearm by those under age 14 unless accompanied by an adult. Other provisions include opening a work camp for violent young offenders and bringing more juveniles to trial as adults.

The new Senate president in Florida talked tough as he prepared for a November special session to deal with crime in a state where tourist killings have brought international notoriety. "We must begin to treat juveniles who commit violent offenses like the criminals that they are," Democrat Pat Thomas said. Democratic Gov. Lawton Chiles wants handgun possession banned for those under 18.

The Wisconsin Assembly gave preliminary approval to a $7 million anti-gang bill that includes a new boot camp for juvenile offenders.

In most cases, the NRA is sticking to its traditional theme in opposing gun control.

"Criminals don't obey gun laws," NRA spokesman Brian Judy said when the Utah measures passed. "This is brushing over real, complex problems by trying to come up with Band-Aid solutions."



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