Pubdate: Fri, 25 Jun 2004 Source: Charleston Gazette (WV) Copyright: 2004 Charleston Gazette Contact: http://www.wvgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/77 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) LANDMARK Pistol-Selling Verdict West Virginia attracts drugs-for-guns criminals because the state has no limit on the number of pistols a person may buy. Dope dealers come to the Mountain State, peddle their illicit narcotics, use the profit to buy trunkloads of cheap pistols, then return to major cities where they sell the guns to street thugs at a fat markup. But this ugly business may be crimped, thanks to this week's breakthrough lawsuit outcome. The insurer for Will Jewelry & Loan Co. in South Charleston agreed to pay $1 million to two New Jersey police officers who were wounded by a pistol from Will. Here's the background: New Jersey crack cocaine dealer James Gray, whose felony record prevented him from buying guns, offered cash and drugs to a Charleston cab driver if she would be his stooge to buy pistols. Since Charleston has a one-pistol-per-month limit on purchases, the pair went to the South Charleston shop, which had a record of selling guns later used in crimes. Gray picked out a dozen pistols, then handed the cabbie $4,000 for the purchase, while a store clerk watched. When asked why she wanted so many guns, the "straw buyer" laughed and said she was starting a shooting range. Later, the store's manager grew suspicious and notified federal agents, who set a trap and caught the couple when they returned to make another gun purchase. Gray got 15 years in federal prison, and she served a year. Meanwhile, one of the pistols from the first purchase was bought by a convicted felon in Orange, N.J., who used it to shoot two policemen in early 2001. The disabled officers sued the pawnshop, and its insurer coughed up $1 million. Although it's a shame that the store manager's cooperation helped bring a lawsuit onto his neck - and although we're leery of lawyers who look for lucrative targets to sue, and pocket large shares of the settlements - this case may enhance public safety. Will Jewelry & Loan already has changed its methods, and now sells only one pistol per month per buyer. This will dampen mass purchases by drug dealers using stooges. Further, the outcome should reduce pistol sales to other criminals, drunks, psychos, juveniles, tavern-brawlers, wife-beaters and sundry people who shouldn't be armed. Word of this case will spread among gun-sellers nationwide, and among plaintiff lawyers. Hereafter, every victim shot by a pistol that was funneled to an undesirable owner - or the victim's survivors - will be more likely to sue the dealer. Republicans and other right-to-bear-arms advocates in Congress nearly passed a law to ban such gun suits. The attempt probably will be revived. We hope West Virginia's members of Congress do their utmost to prevent it. Meanwhile, the Legislature finally should muster enough courage to follow Charleston's example and limit pistol purchases to one per buyer per month. No law-abiding person needs more than 12 new pistols a year. We hope this week's lawsuit outcome builds momentum for the crusade to protect Americans from dirty guns in dirty hands. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin