'Ballistic fingerprinting'
advocates follow emotion, not reason
by Joe Brower
joebrower3@comcast.net
Originally published at HeraldTribune.com
Reprinted with author's permission
November 2002
With the advent of the
"Beltway Sniper" shootings, there has been the predictable hue and cry
for more gun control, mostly in the form of a "ballistic fingerprinting
database" for all firearms. Simply put, the idea is that bullets recovered
from shootings could be matched to images stored in a computer, the owner of the
weapon could then be determined and an arrest could be made.
Sounds good, doesn't it?
Unfortunately, in the real world,
it doesn't work. The federal government has been working on such a system for a
decade. Since 1999, its advocates like to proclaim, it's made more than 12,000
matches. But it has yielded no convictions.
Why? Because the "fingerprints" are nowhere near distinct enough to
provide matches that are truly viable as evidence. Maryland has had a similar
system in use for the last two years. Number of convictions: zero. California
has reviewed the feasibility of this idea and deemed it "unworkable."
The term "fingerprint"
is a deliberate misnomer. Real fingerprints cannot be changed. A firearm's
working parts can all be altered in five minutes with tools commonly found in
any garage.
Don't think that criminals don't know this; they most certainly do. Even normal
use will change the "fingerprint" in time.
So why is such an ineffective measure even considered?
"Ballistic fingerprinting" is just a facade for what is truly desired
by its advocates: a national gun registry. A list of every gun owner in the
United States, where they live and what firearms they possess. This is hardly a
concept befitting a nation that professes to be "the land of the
free."
Who would even want such a thing? Need you
ask?
The voices that have immediately
sought to capitalize on this tragedy are the same ones who attempt to use every
abuse of firearms to further their goal of restricting guns or banning them
outright. These include Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., in the U.S. Senate, the
appointed bureaucrats of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, and such
groups as the Brady Campaign and the Violence Policy Center, among others.
Even so, is a national firearms registry a bad thing? Absolutely.
Why? Because all registration
schemes lead to eventual confiscation. This is readily verifiable. This
inevitable progression is ongoing in Britain and Australia. In the 20th century,
it preceded much of the conflict in Europe and Asia.
Those who say "it can't happen here" are whistling past the graveyard
of history. It's simply not worth the risk.
Thankfully, the truth of this is obvious to many, and is the primary reason why
"ballistic fingerprinting" proposals have gone nowhere.
The whole scheme violates the
Second, Fourth, Fifth and 10th Amendments to the Constitution, as well as the
concept of prior restraint and the prohibition of ex-post-facto laws. We still
live in a nation where people are considered innocent until proven guilty.
If the police have probable cause to suspect our involvement in a crime, they
have the right to fingerprint us, take a DNA sample or check the ballistic
identification of our guns. If they don't have probable cause, they don't. It's
that simple.
Of all the articles in the Bill of
Rights, the Second Amendment is the one that specifically states "shall not
be infringed," but is, ironically, the most infringed upon. Any honest man
could simply look up the word "infringe" in the dictionary and go from
there. Over 20,000 laws now hinder this fundamental human right -- the right to
self-defense.
We human beings, for all our technology and civilization, are creatures who
still feel more quickly and more strongly than we think. The heart betrays the
mind; gun control is primarily an illogical response to fear. Impelled by the
need to "do something," we are misled into actions that do more harm
than good.
The truth is that no law is better
than a bad law, and knee- jerk concepts like "ballistic
fingerprinting" are bad law.
Every time a crime is committed involving firearms, there invariably follows the
usual demands that we surrender even more of our freedoms, all for a false
promise of safety that politicians know can never be delivered. It is a siren
call that rational, thinking people cannot, will not heed.
Joe Brower is a Venice software engineer and freedom advocate.
Related Reading: Ballistic
Fingerprinting Archives