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Does Rahm Emanuel actually have a decent idea?

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  • Does Rahm Emanuel actually have a decent idea?

    Of course the Godfather of Chicago is as worthless a politician as they come, but I'm wondering if something like this could work on a national level. We are all for getting guns out of criminal hands. Maybe something like this could help.

    What do you guys think?

    In a City Council hearing, Ed Burke called for an expansion of the city's "gun offender" registry.


    CITY HALL — Chicago's gun offender registry needs to be expanded to include the names of people busted committing crimes with a gun, Ald. Ed Burke (14th) said Thursday. And Mayor Rahm Emanuel agrees.

    The powerful alderman wants to force anyone convicted of a violent crime with a firearm, including kidnapping, assault, robbery and vehicular hijacking, to end up on the list, which now has 584 names on it of those convicted of less serious gun violations.
    Burke said he was shocked to hear the current list had so few names.

    "Clearly I felt that there are thousands of offenders that should have been added to the registry," Burke said.
    In July 2010, the City Council passed an ordinance establishing a "gun offender registry," similar to a sex offender registry. But the law only requires those convicted of unlawful use of a weapon, which includes illegal possession of a gun among other charges, to register with police.
    Burke's plan to expand the list was approved at the City Council's Committee on Public Safety hearing Thursday and is on the agenda in front of the full council Wednesday.

    "We believe the ordinance can be implemented and will help achieve the Mayor's goal of reducing gun violence and illegal weapons in the city of Chicago," Mayor Rahm Emanuel's office said in a statement.
    Thomas Byrne, chief of the Chicago Police Department's Bureau of Detectives, told the committee that the number of people that would be added to this registry is currently uncertain.

    Any expansion would likely require more manpower and resources to enforce, Byrne said.
    "Knowing who they are helps officers on the street," Byrne said.

    But an expansion of such a registry could have a negative impact on public safety, said Richard Pearson, executive director of the Illinois State Rifle Association.
    "If you start publishing information about those people and their pictures they are going to become targets," Pearson said, adding that "police know who they are anyway."

    Former convicts residing in Chicago are required to register their names, identifying information, place of residence and place of employment.
    The current ordinance requires those people to register within 48 hours of release from prison, though Burke's new version gives them five days.
    Anyone who fails to register would face fines of up to $500 a day or six months in prison.
    Burke said he wanted the public to use such a registry as they would one for sex offenders. It could prove helpful to police as much as parents sending children to a playdate.

    "Shouldn't mom and dad have an opportunity to check a gun offender might be registered at that address?" Burke said.
    In both 2006 and 2008, Burke had also introduced measures for a registry.
    Chicago Police have made 255 arrests of people on the registry list since its inception. There are 74 people on the list that the department is actively investigating, police said.

  • #2
    The program as it exists is largely bullshit, but this new "idea" is almost painfully obvious. Why wasn't this done to begin with? Why would you not have actual criminals on the list, instead of creating criminals out of otherwise law abiding citizens? That's some really thickheaded bullshit that this is a "new" idea for the law.

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