Tanzi addresses rally supporting her bill to keep guns out of
hands of domestic abusers
STATE HOUSE – Domestic abuse victims in Rhode Island need and
deserve better protection from armed abusers, Rep. Teresa Tanzi told a crowd of
supporters at a Rhode Island Coalition Against Gun Violence rally at the State
House last week.
“We have a problem in Rhode Island: It is far too easy for
dangerous domestic abusers to access guns,” she said.
“We know that when a gun
is present in a domestic violence situation, a woman is five times more likely
to be killed. In fact, more than half of American women murdered by guns are
killed by intimate partners or family members.”
Representative Tanzi (D-Dist. 34, South Kingstown, Narragansett)
is the sponsor of legislation (2016-H 7575) that would require anyone
convicted of a domestic abuse misdemeanor and anyone subject to a domestic
abuse protective order to surrender any firearms they have and would prohibit
those abusers from acquiring more.
Representative Tanzi spoke in support of protecting victims of
domestic violence, and noted that Rhode Island is “falling behind the rest of
the country” in terms of enacting common-sense gun measures that protect its
citizens.
“Twenty-six other states, including our neighbors Connecticut and
Massachusetts, have addressed this issue and closed important loopholes related
to domestic violence and guns,” she said. “We know that this is sound public
policy that will protect women and families, and does nothing to limit the
rights of law-abiding gun owners.”
Currently, courts may order those subject to domestic abuse
protective orders to surrender guns, but are not required to do so. Between
2002 and 2014, 1,609 protective orders were granted in Rhode Island, and judges
ordered abusers to surrender weapons in only 5 percent of those cases.
Representative Tanzi’s
legislation would require abusers to surrender firearms at the time of their
convictions, and temporarily surrender them upon the granting of a domestic
abuse protective order.
She noted that the change would bring Rhode Island law
in line with existing federal law, and further protect victims by requiring the
surrender of firearms the abuser already owns – a loophole that federal law
does not currently address.
“I will continue to fight for
you — and for Rhode Island children, women and families — until we pass these
vital pieces of legislation,” she told supporters at the rally.