Three Major U.S. Cities File Lawsuit
Against Department Of Defense For Failing To Report Criminal Convictions
Of Military People
Three major U.S. cities on Tuesday
filed a lawsuit against the Defense Department for allegedly failing to
report criminal convictions of people in the military to the Federal
Bureau of Investigation and its national gun background check database.
The lawsuit – filed by officials in New York, Philadelphia and San
Francisco – seeks a court order to force the Pentagon to submit to
federal court monitoring of its reporting requirements.
The Pentagon recently acknowledged it has failed to comply with
requirements dating back to the 1990s.
“This failure on behalf of the Department of Defense has led to the loss
of innocent lives by putting guns in the hands of criminals and those
who wish to cause immeasurable harm,” New York Mayor Bill de Blasio
said.
The suit argues that having a federal court oversee compliance would
reduce the chance of a mass shooting like the recent tragedy in
Sutherland Springs, Texas.
In that incident, former airman Devin Kelley shot 26 people to death in
a Texas church. Kelley had been convicted in a military court of
domestic violence but his case wasn’t reported to the National Instant
Criminal Background Check System, which ideally would have prevented him
from buying a gun, the complaint claims.
“We cannot accept the level of gun violence in our country as ‘just the
way it is’,” San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera said in a
statement. “Twenty-six people being murdered at church can never be
normal.”
The Pentagon had no comment on the lawsuit though its acting inspector
general testified at a Senate committee earlier this month that there
was “no excuse” for the military’s repeated failure to comply with
reporting rules.
Most recently, military investigators found that nearly one in three
court-martialed convictions that should have prevented defendants from
purchasing guns had gone unreported.
NICS reporting is required for all federal agencies, including the
military, and include regular mandatory compliance reports. The federal
law was strengthened following the 2007 mass shooting at Virginia Tech.
The case is City of New York v. U.S. Department of Defense