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KC3 Seeks To Restore NICS Exception For KY CCDW Licensees
Attorney General Asked For Opinion
By James R. Hall
2nd VP, KC3
According to Title 18 United States
Code, Section 922(t)(3), the necessity to contact The National Instant
Check System (NICS) "shall not apply to a firearm transfer between a
licensee and another person if - such other person has presented to
the licensee a permit that - allows such other person to possess or
acquire a firearm; and was issued not more than 5 years earlier by the
State in which the transfer is to take place; and the law of the State
provides that such a permit is to be issued only after an authorized
government official has verified that the information available to
such official does not indicate that possession of a firearm by such
other person would be in violation of law..."
Kentucky concealed carry deadly weapon
licensees (CCDWL) were once granted this exception to the NICS
requirements on a firearms purchase. The 1998 Regular Session of
the General Assembly amended Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) Chapter
237 through passage of House Bill (HB) 318. One of the intents of this
legislation was to provide for conducting a record check on license
applicants in the manner necessary to exercise the exception to the
NICS requirements under the “Brady Law” on the purchase of a firearm.
HB 318 was signed into law in April, 1998 and took effect in July of
the same year.
According to the amended KRS 237.110
(1), before a concealed carry license is issued "The Department of
State Police or the Administrative Office of the Courts shall conduct
a record check, covering all offenses and conditions which are
required under 18 U.S.C. sec. 922(g) and this section, in the manner
provided by 18 U.S.C. § 922(s)." The only passage found
within 18 U.S.C. § 922(s) that provides for conducting a record check
is subparagraph (2): "A chief law enforcement officer to whom a
transferor has provided notice pursuant to paragraph (1)(A)(i)(III)
shall make a reasonable effort to ascertain within 5 business days
whether receipt or possession would be in violation of the law,
including research in whatever State and local recordkeeping systems
are available and in a national system designated by the Attorney
General."
In order to comprehend the situation,
one must first understand the Brady Law. Certain provisions of
the Brady Law could not be implemented immediately because a central
database of criminal history was not available. There were a
number of compilations of this data but it would take a while to put
it all in one place. In order to implement the Brady law as soon
as possible, some provisions were temporary and the 1993 law provided
a time frame of 5 years for the permanent system to be built and
installed. The permanent NICS system went into effect on
November 30, 1998.
The Kentucky State Police (KSP) used
the "information available" to determine the legal fitness of CCDWL
applicants and licenses issued after July 15, 1998 qualified for the
exception. Because the permanent NICS system went into effect in
November, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (BATF)
implemented new regulations to unify the system. According to
Kent M. Cousins, Chief, Firearms Programs Division, BATF "The
regulations provide that as of November 30, 1998, the "information
available" to a government official issuing permits includes NICS.
[Title 27of the Code of Federal Regulations] § 478.102 (d)(iii). Thus;
in order for a permit issued on or after November 30, 1998 to qualify
for the permit exception, a NICS check must have been done before the
permit was issued."
So, the window opened July 15, 1998 and
was then closed November 30, 1998. But the law did NOT change.
Kentucky statutes basically provide that the check must be done in the
manner required to claim the exemption. Going back to KRS 237
"The Department of State Police or the Administrative Office of the
Courts shall conduct a record check... in the manner provided by 18
U.S.C. § 922(s)." The key phrase to the puzzle can be
found in 18 U.S.C. § 922(s). "...including research in ... a national
system designated by the Attorney General".
The “national system” indicated would seem to be the NICS.
According to the Federal Register, “NICS means the National
Instant Criminal Background Check System” [Pg 58308, Vol. 63, No. 210
/ Friday, October 30, 1998 / Rules and Regulations] Correspondence
directed to The Office of the Attorney General of The United States
(US AG) asked that he verify that NICS is indeed the “national system
designated by the Attorney General” as referred to in 18 U.S.C. sec
922(s). A reply from the US AG, dated February 4, 2004, stated
that “the ‘national system designated by the Attorney General’ is
specifically the NICS” and that “any reference to a ‘check’ in the Gun
Control Act does refer to the NICS.”
The logical conclusion, therefore, is that applicants for a
Kentucky license permitting the concealed carry of deadly weapons
shall have a NICS check performed prior to issuance of the license.
However, according to the February 12, 2003 letter from Mr. Cousins,
“Kentucky does not conduct NICS checks before issuing concealed carry
licenses.” This was subsequently confirmed by Captain Alecia Webb-Edgington,
Commander, KSP Criminal Identification and Records Branch:
"The Kentucky State Police conduct a more thorough criminal
record check than that provided by NICS. The check conducted by our
agency includes all files that are searched by NICS plus
supplementary Administrative Office of the Courts files. These files
include a listing of all mental health involuntary commitments, and
Law Information Network of Kentucky (LINK) "hot files" which
include, active and historical Emergency Protective Orders (EPO's)
and Domestic Violence Orders (DVO's), as well as, the wanted files.
We also examine the Kentucky Criminal History. The Kentucky State
Police has designated the aforementioned process as a
more comprehensive approach as compared to the utilizationof NICS.
That's fine but the law demands that they shall do "research
in whatever State and local recordkeeping systems are available and
in a national system designated by the Attorney General"
KC3 sent a request to the Kentucky Attorney General that he weigh
in on this issue. KRS 15.025(4) provides that, if, in his
discretion, a "question presented is of such public interest that an
Attorney General's opinion on the subject is deemed desirable", he
shall provide one. We asked of him the following three
questions, each one qualified by the one before it:
-
Whereas Kentucky Revised
Statute 237.110(1), provides that before a concealed carry license
is issued, "The Department of State Police or the Administrative
Office of the Courts shall conduct a record check, covering all
offenses and conditions which are required under 18 U.S.C. sec.
922(g) and this section, in the manner provided by 18 U.S.C. sec.
922(s)"; And whereas the manner provided by 18 U.S.C. sec. 922(s)
would include “research in whatever State and local recordkeeping
systems are available and in a national system designated by the
Attorney General"; And whereas, according to the Office of the
Attorney General of the United States, “the ‘national system
designated by the Attorney General’ is specifically the NICS” and
that “any reference to a ‘check’ in the Gun Control Act does refer
to the NICS”; Therefore, does the law of this Commonwealth in fact
require that a NICS check be conducted upon applicants for a
Kentucky license to carry concealed deadly weapons?
-
If so, then: Regardless
that the Kentucky State Police provides a “more comprehensive
approach as compared to the utilization of NICS”, does this satisfy
the specific requirement of KRS 237.110(1) to perform a NICS check
in addition to “research in whatever State and local recordkeeping
systems [that] are available“?
-
If so, then: Whereas KRS
237.110(1) has been in effect in its current codification since
prior to the November 30, 1998 implementation of 27 C.F.R. § 478.102
(d)(iii) and the designation of NICS as the “national system
designated by the Attorney General“, is the Kentucky State Police or
the Administrative Office of the Courts required to perform a NICS
check upon each concealed carry license application submitted since
the November 30, 1998 implementation of the new interpretation?
Now we wait for an answer,
if he will give us one. If he won't, we will try to find a
legislator that will ask him. Then he will surely grant us an answer.
If he agrees that a NICS must be done on all applicants, then we can
go back to the BATF and ask if the exception will then be granted.
There is no indication in prior correspondence that there are any
other reasons for the denial. But, if so, we'll cross that
bridge when we come to it.
Of course, if he doesn't
see things the same way we do, we will go to the legislature and
attempt to clarify the language of the law.
16 MAR 2004
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