Memories Of Va. Tech Permeate Gun Debate

Lying on their backs to represent people killed by guns in Virginia last year, protesters called for requiring background checks for all gun-show purchases.
Lying on their backs to represent people killed by guns in Virginia last year, protesters called for requiring background checks for all gun-show purchases. (By Steve Helber -- Associated Press)

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By Sandhya Somashekhar
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, January 22, 2008

RICHMOND, Jan. 21 -- Hundreds of advocates flooded the state Capitol on Monday to urge the Virginia General Assembly to enact reforms on such issues as the environment, immigration and gun control.

On a day dominated by personal lobbying, memories of the massacre at Virginia Tech pervaded the Capitol as activists from across the state converged to call on lawmakers to make changes in Virginia's gun laws and mental health system.

Although Monday was a federal holiday commemorating the birth of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., the General Assembly was in session. The House of Delegates voted tentatively to repeal the high fees on bad drivers and to delay until 2010 the requirement that schoolgirls be vaccinated against a virus that can cause cervical cancer.

Gun-control advocates, including survivors of the April 16 shooting rampage that took the lives of 32 victims at Virginia Tech, poured into a Senate committee meeting to support a bill that would require background checks for all gun-show sales. They then staged a "lie-in," lying on their backs outside the Capitol to draw attention to gun deaths in Virginia last year.

Many gun-rights activists also showed up at the committee meeting -- some wearing guns -- and came in force to watch the protest. The gun-show law, which failed in a House committee last week and is not expected to pass this year, would not have stopped Virginia Tech senior Seung Hui Cho from killing fellow students and himself last year, they have argued.

"I think it's a huge display of ignorance," said Anne Burke, 47, gesturing to the people lying in the grass. The Spotsylvania County resident wore a sticker that said, "Guns save lives."

But the counter-demonstration drew a tearful reaction from Kate Villars, 19, of Centreville, whose friend Reema Samaha died in the Virginia Tech attack.

"I respect their right to express their views, but I felt they were very disrespectful," she said, wiping away tears.

Elsewhere, environmentalists lobbied lawmakers in support of a bill that would require that 20 percent of the state's energy come from such renewable sources as wind and solar energy. And activists from Northern Virginia held a news conference to try to garner support for more than 100 immigration bills that have been introduced in the General Assembly, many of which would curb services to illegal immigrants.

Earlier in the day, hundreds of people involved in mental health and mental retardation issues gathered at a church across the street from the Capitol to call for additional money for counseling and drug treatment, among other things. The legislature has begun sorting through the dozens of bills introduced this session to reform the state's mental health system in the wake of the Virginia Tech shootings.

The most visible activists, however, were those on both sides of the gun-show law. Currently, unlicensed gun vendors at gun shows are not required to conduct background checks on purchasers. Gun-control advocates say that is a loophole in the law that could lead to another massacre.

But gun-rights groups argue that the killings at Virginia Tech would not have been prevented by the law because Cho did not buy his weapons at a gun show. Moreover, they say, requiring average citizens, who often sell at gun shows, to do background checks could threaten privacy rights and hurt business.


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