This story was originally published by ProPublica. This article is co-published with The Texas Tribune, a non-profit, non-partisan local newsroom that informs and engages with Texans. Sign up for The Brief weekly to get up to speed on its essential coverage of Texas issues.
The fact that the gunman responsible for this week’s massacre in Uvalde, Texas, was able to buy two AR-15s days after his 18th birthday highlights how much easier it is for Americans to purchase rifles than handguns.
Under federal law, Americans buying handguns from licensed dealers must be at least 21, which would have precluded the killer from buying that type of weapon. That trumps Texas law, which only requires buyers of any type of firearm to be 18 or older.
Following the massacre at Robb Elementary School, which killed 19 children and two adults, a growing number of lawmakers in Texas and beyond are calling for the minimum age to purchase assault rifles to be raised to 21 from 18. Doing so would require undoing nearly two centuries of more permissive regulations on so-called long guns.
“It’s something that could happen at either the state or federal level, but I don’t see movement on either front,” said Sandra Guerra Thompson, a criminal law professor at the University of Houston Law Center.
Only six states — Florida, Washington, Vermont, California, Illinois and Hawaii — have increased the minimum purchase age for long guns to 21, according to the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence. The majority did so following the 2018 massacre in Parkland, Florida, where a then-19-year-old assailant killed 17 people at a high school. Several states have since faced legal challenges.
The National Rifle Association sought to repeal the Florida law.
“The ban infringes the right of all 18- to 20-year-olds to purchase firearms for the exercise of their Second Amendment rights, even for self-defence in the home,” the NRA argued in a court filing, according to the South Florida Sun Sentinel. “The ban does not just limit the right, it obliterates it.”
Government attorneys, however, argued that because “18- to 20-year-olds are uniquely likely to engage in impulsive, emotional, and risky behaviours that offer immediate or short-term rewards, drawing the line for legal purchase of firearms at 21 is a reasonable method of addressing the legislature’s public safety concerns”.
A federal judge upheld the law last year; the NRA is appealing.
A US Court of Appeals recently ruled that California’s version of the law was unconstitutional, though it did uphold a provision that requires adults under 21 to obtain a hunting licence before buying a rifle or shotgun.
After the shooting in Uvalde this week, lawmakers in New York and Utah also called on their states to raise the age limit for long gun purchases to 21. US Senator Dianne Feinstein introduced federal legislation earlier this month — less than a week before the Uvalde shooting — that would raise the minimum age to purchase assault weapons to 21 from 18; the California Democrat said in a statement that it was in response to a shooting that killed 10 people at a Buffalo supermarket. That gunman also was 18 years old.
“It makes no sense that it’s illegal for someone under 21 to buy a handgun or even a beer, yet can legally buy an assault weapon,” she said.
Lindsay Nichols, federal policy director at the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, said that increasing the age requirement at the federal level may be more effective because federal authorities can inspect and discipline licensed firearm sellers.
“State authorities often don’t have a system in place for enforcing the laws governing” licensed dealers, Nichols said.
In the hours after the shooting in Uvalde, there was some confusion about what types of firearms were used. Texas Governor Greg Abbott initially said that the killer had a handgun and possibly a rifle. That prompted some to speculate that he had been able to get hold of the weapons more easily because of recent changes to the gun laws in Texas, including a bill passed last year that allows Texans to carry handguns without a permit or training. But those early reports turned out to be inaccurate.
After it became clear that the weapon used was a rifle, Texas Democrats questioned why the teenager was able to purchase one at the age of 18.
“Why do we accept a government that allows an 18-year-old to buy an assault rifle, but not tobacco products?” state Representative Nicole Collier, a Fort Worth Democrat who chairs the Texas Legislative Black Caucus, said in a statement. “The hypocrisy of government is deafening. We can develop gun policy that does not infringe upon one’s constitutional right while preserving and protecting life; that’s called multitasking and we can do that.”
State Representative Jarvis Johnson, a Houston Democrat, called on Abbott to convene a special session of the legislature so lawmakers could “pass real gun reforms”, including raising the minimum age to purchase long guns.
“Enough is enough,” he said.
Such a move would reverse a decades-old Texas system that treats handguns differently from long guns, which have long been exempted from state rules on open carry.
The disparate rules date back to the post-Civil War era, when the state — counter to its modern-day reputation — adopted some of the strictest gun control laws in the nation.
“Despite its stereotype of being a state where cowboys promiscuously tote six-shooters, Texas is one of the few states that absolutely prohibits the bearing of pistols by private individuals,” wrote firearms attorney Stephen Halbrook in a 1989 Baylor Law Review article, six years before former Texas governor George W Bush relaxed rules on handguns considerably.
Following spasms of violence that were then plaguing the young state in the 19th century, lawmakers “started specifically targeting weapons that they equated with crime”, said Texas historian Brennan Rivas, who is writing a book about the state’s early gun laws. “They equated bowie knives, daggers and pistols with interpersonal violence and crime.”
Muskets, rifles and shotguns, by comparison, were excluded because they were used for hunting or participating in a militia.
“They didn’t consider long guns to be deadly weapons,” Rivas said. “Those had valuable uses. Whereas these other weapons were kind of like a plague on polite society.”
Lawmakers of that time could not have envisioned that long guns would evolve from lumbering hunting rifles into AR-15s capable of firing dozens of rounds per minute, Rivas added.
But any tighter requirements appear unlikely to pass in Texas.
Just last year, following high-profile massacres in El Paso and in Midland and Odessa in 2019, lawmakers approved a variety of measures that loosened gun regulations. In addition to authorising the carrying of handguns in public without a permit or training, the laws ban the governor from limiting gun sales during an emergency and allow gun owners to bring their weapons into hotel rooms.
During a Wednesday press conference at Uvalde High School, Abbott repeated a claim he and other Republican state leaders have often made: that mental health issues are to blame for the streak of mass shootings, not lax gun regulations. Officials conceded that they were not aware that the gunman had any criminal or mental health issues.
“The ability of an 18-year-old to buy a long gun has been in place in the state of Texas for more than 60 years,” Abbott said. “And why is it that for the majority of those 60 years we did not have school shootings? And why is it that we do now?”
US feds could ban modern guns by the simple expedient of declaring that the constitutional right to carry arms referred only to muzzle loaders.
yeah, apply the same “logic” that the Supreme Court are using to overthrow access to abortions
Texas Governer asks, ‘Why is it that for the majority of those 60 years (!8 year olds could freely get guns) we did not have school shootings? And why is it that we do now?’
Well may he ask. Over 350+ people die each day, in USA, from gun use.There have been 220+ mass shootings (over 4 people dead in the one event) since the beginning of this year. Not sure how many 18 years olds have been shooting people each year. Not sure how many ‘school’ shootings there were.this year. What is his point? Are there good shootings and bad shootings. Does the age of the shooter and the site of the shootings determine if the shooting is OK or not?
What is this deadly rubbish coming from this politician’s mouth?
How do the words, around this this deadly rubbish, enter the ears of journalists, politicians, police, let alone the voting population, but not enter their brains, be processed by critical thinking, and then be rejected?
Brian dead – maybe or have they been Gaslighted so comprehensively, by their own echo chamber, that it is the authorities that have the ‘mental illness’ that Abbott declared the shooter must have had.
This would not be an explanation for the US failure to act would it?
Congress members with the most contributions from gun rights groupsLifetime contributions to members’ campaign or leadership PAC for the 117th Congress, as of May 25, 2022
Members from Texas
Sen. Ted Cruz (R) Texas $442k
Rep. Steve Scalise (R) Louisiana $396k
Sen. John Cornyn (R) Texas $340k
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R) SC $284k
Sen. Mitch McConnell (R)Kentucky $247k
Rep. Devin Nunes* (R) California $228k
Sen. Ron Johnson (R) Wisconsin $223k
Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R) California $220k
Rep. Pete Sessions (R) Texas $208k
Sen. Steven Daines (R) Montana $198k
Seems rather cheep-cheep, less than $3M which would be a day’s gun sales.
Recently the Texas governor lamented that (Dem dominated) California had overtaken the Lone Brain Cell…Star state in gun sales and urged Texans to “pick up the pace”.
Seems the lad took him at his word, as soon as he turned 18.
An old suggestion, which would not disturb the Second Amendment fetish, is to let the nutters have as many penile substitutes as they wished to fondle, oil, fondle, caress, oil, stroke…did I mention fondle? etc but restrict access to ammunition, including bullet making raw materials such as shell casings, cordite and gunpowder.
Win-Win and it cost the arm industry a bundle as one-off weapons sales do little to boost continuing profits, it’s the ammo. that bolsters the bottom line.
A lot of it is copycat suicide stuff. They’re lucky they don’t class grenades as firearms. And they are a violent society, from movies to football. Now if the anti-gun lobby people shot all the pro-gun politicians…
There will never be Republican agreement on restricting firearms as long as more Democrat voters – or their children – are killed than Republicans. Seriously, most of these shootings appear to be in non-white or small ‘l’ liberal neighborhoods.