Control Criminals Not Guns
Opinion Editorial by Walter E. Williams -
Jun 5, 2008
20 ratings from readers
The people who murdered Sgt. Stephen Liczbinski were violent convicts released on parole.
So what is responsible for his death: guns, or a criminal justice system that cuts soft deals for such criminals?
Every time there’s a highly publicized shooting, out go the
cries for stricter gun control laws, and it was no different with the recent
murder of Philadelphia Police Sgt. Stephen Liczbinski
Pennsylvania Gov. Ed
Rendell and Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter, in a letter to the state
congressional delegation demanding reenactment of the federal assault weapon
ban, said, “Passing this legislation will go a long way to protecting those who
put their lives on the line every day for us. ... There is no excuse to do
otherwise.”
Gun control laws will not protect us from murderers. We need
protection from the criminal justice system politicians have created. Let’s
look at it.
According to former Philly cop Michael P. Tremoglie’s
article “Who freed the cop-killers?” for the Philadelphia Daily News (5/8/08),
all three murder suspects had extensive criminal records.
Levon Warner was sentenced in 1997 to seven and a half to 15
years for robbery, one to five years for possessing an instrument of crime and
five to 10 for criminal conspiracy.
Howard Cain was convicted in 1996 on four counts of robbery
and sentenced to five to 10 years on each count.
Eric Floyd was sentenced to five to 10 years in 1995 for
robbery, rearrested in 1999 for parole violation and later convicted in 2001
for two robberies.
If these criminals had not been released from prison, long
before they served out their sentences, officer Liczbinski would be alive
today. So what’s responsible for his death: guns or a prison and parole system
that released these three criminals?
Tremoglie cites other examples of criminals, with
convictions for violent crimes ranging from robbery and assault to murder, who
were paroled and later murdered police officers.
A New York Times study (4/28/06) of the city’s 1,662 murders
in 2003-2005 found that 90 percent of the murderers had criminal records. A
Massachusetts study reported that on average, homicide offenders had been
arraigned for nine prior offenses.
John Lott’s book
More Guns, Less Crime reports that in
1988, in the 75 largest counties in the U.S., over 89 percent of adult murderers
had a criminal record as an adult.
A few days after the murder of Liczbinski, Governor Rendell
told a news conference, attended by state elected officials and top law
enforcement officials, “The time has come for politicians to decide. You have
to decide whether you’re on their side — the men and women who wear blue — or
whether you’re on the side of the gun lobby.”
Instead of saying “whether you’re on the side of the gun
lobby,” Rendell should have said “whether you’re on the side of the criminal
and the courts, prosecutors, prisons and parole boards that cut soft deals with
criminals and release them to prey upon police officers and law-abiding
citizens.”
If there is one clear basic function of government, it’s to
protect citizens from criminals. When government failure becomes so apparent,
as it is in the murder of a police officer, officials seek scapegoats and very
often it’s the National Rifle Association and others who seek to protect our
Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms.
We hear calls for stricter gun control laws when what is
really needed is more control over criminals.
There are many third-party liability laws. I think they
ought to be applied to members of parole boards who release criminals who turn
around and commit violent crimes. As it stands now, people on parole boards who
release criminals bear no cost of their decisions.
I bet that if members of parole boards were held liable or
forced to serve the balance of the sentence of a parolee who goes out and
commits more crime, they would pay more attention to the welfare of the
community rather than the welfare of a criminal.
You say, “Williams, under
those conditions, who’d serve on a parole board?” There’s something to be said
about that.
Walter E. Williams
is a professor of economics at George Mason University in Fairfax,
Virginia. He has authored more than 150 publications, including many in
scholarly journals, and has frequently given expert testimony before
Congressional committees on public policy issues ranging from labor
policy to taxation and spending.