By Kevin D. Williamson
Thursday, November 02, 2023
A horrible massacre in Maine—who could have seen it
coming?
Everybody.
The Army did. The Maine killer was a reservist whose
behavior exhibited mental illness of a dangerous kind: He had assaulted friends
and colleagues, gave voice to delusions of persecution, and had been remanded
to a psychiatric hospital. The Army handed down its judgment, that he “should
not have a weapon, handle ammunition, and not participate in live fire activity.”
And then the Army washed its hands of the matter, save for being sure to point
out that the killer did not have access to military-issued weapons at the time
of his crime.
The police saw it coming. They had been informed by one
of the killer’s military colleagues that he seemed ready to “snap and commit a
mass shooting.” Note the specificity of the threat
identified—not some vague notion that the reservist was a danger to himself and
others, but that he was going to do exactly what he ended up doing. Police
visited his home and spoke with his family. Do you know what the police did? They
got his brother to promise to try to secure any firearms that the mass shooter
might use to pull off the mass shooting everybody expected him to commit. This
raises some obvious questions, such as: Why do we have police? No doubt the
killer’s brother meant well, but he is not a sworn law-enforcement officer with
a badge and a gun and the ability to go to a judge to get a warrant.
The killer’s family saw it coming, and not just the
brother in question but also his son, his ex-wife, and others. They described
their strategy as trying to avoid the man who seemed to practically everybody
who knew him primed to do the awful thing he just did. And avoidance is a good
strategy—for them. They decided that the best thing to do was to try to get the
reservist’s military superiors involved. And, at one point, the brother
apparently changed the combination to the gun safe in the man’s home but did
not take away the guns—or the killer’s
backup key, for that matter. He wasn’t the only one concerned about those
guns: The killer’s divorce
decree specifically noted that firearms in his home must be kept
securely locked.
A local
gun shop knew something was up. When the killer went to a retailer to pick
up a suppressor he had ordered, he answered “Yes” to one of the disqualifying
questions on the background check, affirming that he had “been adjudicated as a
mental defective” or had “been committed to a mental institution.” That wasn’t
actually true—the killer had been treated for two weeks in a psychiatric
facility, but he had not been through the legal process of being involuntarily
committed or being declared incompetent. But it amounted to a declaration—on federal
paperwork—that the killer himself knew he was suffering from a profound mental
disturbance. As required by law, the shop refused to execute the transfer. The
law doesn’t require anything more of them, and, if it did, what were they going
to do? Report the incident to the same police who ended up doing so little to
stop the massacre? Call the Army? Track down his family? To what end?
The military. The police. The gun shop. His friends. His
family. The psychiatric facility at which he was treated. People who knew him
and cared about him—and people who feared him. Everybody knew. But, in the end,
nobody actually did anything that stopped him from doing what they were all
afraid he was going to do.
Some states have so-called red-flag laws; Maine has a
more expansive “yellow
flag” law, under which police can temporarily disarm someone on the
recommendation of a doctor. But the Maine killer was not disarmed under that
law, in spite of the fact that the Army wanted to make sure he didn’t have
access to any of its weapons, that his family was worried about his mental
state and his access to firearms, that the police were similarly worried—that
the killer himself made a federally sworn declaration of his mental unfitness
on that gun-shop paperwork.
This is an outrageously familiar story, of course. The
killer in the Jacksonville
massacre had been involuntarily held in a Florida psychiatric facility
under the state’s “Baker
Act,” after which nothing was done to stop him from doing what everybody
expected him to do. The killer in the 2018 Parkland massacre had been the
subject of an attempted Baker Act proceeding, and school counselors had
recommended involuntary mental health treatment, but the medical professionals
decided that the future killer presented “low risk of harming himself or
others.” The Uvalde killer made
violent threats and collected news stories about mass shootings. The
killer in Roseburg, Oregon, engaged in violent fantasies and told
his friends on 4Chan: “Don’t go to school tomorrow.”
These stories raise serious questions about the
competence and commitment of our law enforcement and mental health authorities.
Take one truly remarkable example: After being flagged for what police called
“escalating homicidal behavior,” the future Club Q killer in Colorado had
been involved
in an armed standoff with SWAT units—a standoff involving guns and
explosives and a promise to become the “next mass killer”—which resulted
in: nothing. The charges related to the standoff were thrown out
after a four-minute hearing in which prosecutors did not even attempt to
advance the case. The lunatic threatening to become a mass killer went on to
become a mass killer, murdering five and shooting 19 others at a gay bar in
Colorado Springs.
Five dead. Four minutes to throw out the charges—keep
that in mind.
For comparison, consider this: I own a firearm that I
plan to put a shoulder stock on to make it easier to shoot accurately. It is a
perfectly ordinary model of gun that you can buy, without any special fuss, at
any of the better gun shops around the country. The shoulder stock is a
perfectly ordinary piece of plastic that can legally be installed with no
paperwork on some firearms but not on others. Putting the shoulder stock on the
firearm requires turning two screws. But before I can legally turn those screws,
I had to be fingerprinted and photographed and had to spend a couple of hours
filling out federal paperwork identifying me as a firearms manufacturer,
had to undergo an additional background check, etc.—and, if things move
quickly, I may have Washington’s permission to turn those screws before the
year is out, though it might go into 2024. You can, if you want, buy the same
firearm with the stock already attached, but that requires a whole different
federal process that would very likely extend into 2025.
Or, you could get into an armed standoff, profess your
desire to carry out a massacre, and then be free to go and arm yourself and
carry out that massacre after a four-minute hearing.
There is something perverse about how we approach
firearms regulation. A regular guy with a clean criminal record may flunk his
background check if he writes “101 Main Street” on his applications when it
says “101 Main St.” on his driver’s license, or if one says “West Avenue” and
the other says “West Ave.” Standoff with a SWAT team? Murderous threats? Eh,
just watch the typos.
If anything is clear from the events preceding the
bloodbath in Maine—in which everybody from the military to the police to
friends and family and mental health authorities had good reason to intervene
and the legal means
to do so—it is that this is not, as our friends in the gun control movement
insist, mainly a question of more robust retail regulation of sporting goods
stores. The gun shop clerks in this story did what they were supposed to do:
They declined to make a sale to someone they had reason to believe was a
prohibited person. The police, on the other hand, basically punted public
safety to the lunatic’s brother, asking him to lock up the guns and then more
or less crossing their fingers and hoping for the best.
These episodes do not come out of nowhere. School
shooters, in particular, are very eager to talk about their plans. A study
undertaken by the Department of Education and the Secret Service found
that in 81 percent of school shootings, at least one other person knew about
the planned attack. Often, someone (usually another student) knew the day and
time of the planned massacre. In a large majority of the cases, more than one
person knew about the planned shooting. And that was a study carried out in
2004—a few years before smartphones and social media made young people a lot
chattier and more public about almost everything, including violent
intentions.
Sometimes, we get ahead of the curve: There’s a
Jew-hating weirdo at Cornell who was recently taken into custody after a series
of ghastly threats to do to Jewish students at Cornell what Hamas is doing to
Israeli children, to “slit throats” and carry out a mass shooting at a dorm
housing Jewish students. His parents say that he is suffering from mental
illness, possibly suicidal … and, also, that
he didn’t do it. It will be interesting to see how that turns out. But we
should not assume that whatever happens to him will produce any legal barrier
to his buying firearms or that, if he should end up being prohibited on
criminal or mental health grounds, that anybody anywhere is going to lift a
pinky finger to enforce the prohibition. There are plenty of red flags, but
red-flag laws are not self-executing.
Who could see all this coming? Anybody who bothered to
look.
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