CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2023 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“'FRUIT STOPS' SHOULD SCREEN OUT
EXPANDED-MAGAZINE GUNS”
Many
Californians feel perplexed in the wake of several mass shootings this state
endured in January, two by senior citizens who targeted dozens of innocents and
killed at least 18. Only the bravery of an Alhambra dance hall manager
prevented the carnage from becoming much worse.
At least
one gun used in the mass murders was illegal in California, the Cobray
automatic repeating pistol with an expanded ammunition magazine and an
apparently homemade sound suppresser wielded by Monterey Park shooter Huu Can
Tran, 72, before he killed himself when cornered by police in Torrance, more
than 28 miles from his crime scene.
.
Guns and magazines like Tran’s often go
undetected until they’re used in serious crimes. In part, this may be the
result of a longstanding, misplaced state priority: the extreme underuse of
border protection stations California built decades ago to shield agriculture
from pests and diseases.
Tran’s
weapon cannot now be sold legally in California, but authorities reported he
bought it in 1999, before expanded handgun magazines were outlawed here. No one
knows when it entered the state.
But the
arrival and later misuse of many similar weapons in California very possibly
could be prevented if state lawmakers cared enough. Most such guns enter the
state in cars, trucks or RVs. It’s almost impossible for them to come here by
air, as virtually all types of firearms are quickly detected by the
Transportation Security Administration (TSA) wherever commercial planes take
off.
They
could enter by train, but that is at least deterred by Amtrak’s random baggage
inspections, even if they’re not as frequent and obtrusive as screening of
airline passengers.
Gov.
Gavin Newsom was clearly correct when he lamented that no matter how strong
California gun laws become, they can be thwarted by folks who visit other
states to buy weapons not available here.
For sure,
no background check anywhere would have ruled out a purchase by Tran, who had a
clean record before spraying a dance hall with 42 fast-fired bullets.
But
there’s already that network of examining stations where vehicles could be
inspected and illegal guns very possibly found and neutralized.
So far,
no one in power has thought to use the agricultural protection stations unique
to California entry points for seeking out illegal weaponry. Rather, they
exclusively examine fruits and vegetables before any are allowed into the
state. Some vehicles are searched more thoroughly than others, but not for
weapons. Without much controversy, inspectors look for weevils and other bugs
that can decimate forests and fields.
The
stations sit on or beside inbound lanes near every major California entry point
– along Interstate 80 at Truckee, on I-15 at Mountain Pass, on U.S. 101 near
the Smith River, on State Route 139 at Tulelake, on I-5 at Hornbrook near the
Oregon line, at Meyers on U.S. 50 and along interstates at Blythe and Needles
near the Arizona border.
Sure,
anyone who’s determined can circumvent these points, but only with significant
inconvenience. There are no stations (many call them “fruit stops’) along State
Route 374 where cars from Nevada can enter California through Death Valley, nor
on U.S. 95 south of Las Vegas or on State Route 167, where cars from Nevada can
begin to cross over the Tioga Pass entry to Yosemite National Park, to name a
few.
The 16
current stations sometimes go unstaffed. But those wide open times are
irregular and unpredictable for folks wanting to smuggle in weapons banned by
California.
These
stations could quickly gear up to scan or screen vehicles for guns. Starting
this would take no more than training up a few dozen Highway Patrol officers to
supplement the Food and Agriculture workers already at the fruit stops.
Deploying some new CHIPs for this kind of duty around the clock could close the
wide loophole through which unknown quantities of guns like Tran’s enter the
state.
The fact
this doesn’t happen and has never been seriously proposed as a state budget
item demonstrates a flawed sense of priorities. Essentially, it says protecting
plants is more important than protecting people. The dead and wounded on the
bloody floor of that Monterey Park dance hall were just one possible consequence.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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