by Joseph P. Tartaro | Executive Editor
Hundreds—maybe thousands—of gun rights activists lined Boston’s Beacon Street in front of the State House on the morning of July 30 to denounce Attorney General Maura Healey’s recent restriction on “copycat” assault rifles.
The number of gunowners who turned out to protest the non-legislative change in what they believed was the state’s law varied depending on which media covered the event. “Hundreds” in several reports became “more than 2,000” in a CBS News report. And some sources claimed the crowd was even bigger.
And as this issue of TGM went to press on Aug. 15, Gun Owners Action League (GOAL) had scheduled an evening rally and fundraiser dinner at the Boxborough Holiday Inn, with several national and state figures attending to speak. Among them, Lawrence Keane, vice president and general counsel for the National Shooting Sports Foundation, and Alan M. Gottlieb, chairman of the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms.
Between the July Boston rally and the August event, Healey’s “copycat” assault weapons ruling has involved not only the governor and state lawmakers, but in early August, US Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) who, as expected, has defended Healey’s interpretation of state law, saying gun activists “picked a fight with the wrong state and the wrong Attorney General.”
Warren urged supporters to sign a petition backing Healey’s move, log onto social media and write letters to local newspapers. Gabrielle Giffords, the former Arizona Congresswoman who launched a gun control group after she was shot, has issued notes of support for Healey.
So too has the Massachusetts Medical Society. On Aug. 9, Dr. James Gessner, president of the Medical Society, wrote in a letter to state officials that the Society “applauds Attorney General Healey for her notification to the Commonwealth’s gun manufacturers and sellers of an increase in enforcement of the assault weapons ban to now include sales of copycat weapons. This action will further reduce the number of dangerous firearms in Massachusetts.”
At the first Beacon Street rally, demonstrators were joined by about two dozen state legislators, including state Sen. Anne Gobi (D), who promised to fight in the closing days of the legislative session against what they called “reinterpretation without representation.”
The Boston Herald reported that State Senate Minority Leader Bruce Tarr (R-Gloucester) had filed a bill that would remove Healey’s authority to issue rules and regulations on firearms sales under the state’s consumer protection statute.
But the Associated Press and CBS News reported that the Bay State’s House Speaker Robert DeLeo said he expects the dispute over Attorney General Maura Healey’s crackdown on so-called copycat assault weapons to ultimately be decided in court.
DeLeo earlier he had ruled out any House action on the gun issue as lawmakers held their final formal sessions of the year.
The Democratic speaker also said Rep. John Fernandes, a Milford Democrat who chairs the Judiciary Committee, sent a letter to Healey asking her to clarify under what authority she acted when she recently sent an enforcement letter to gun dealers.
DeLeo also told AP and CBS that he’s not sure if Healey overstepped her authority and expects the courts to decide.
In mid-July, Healey sent a notice to the state’s 350 gun dealers, effective on July 27, requiring them to stop selling copycat, or slightly altered, versions of common semi-automatic rifles like the AR-15 or the AK 47. She argued that gun manufacturers and sellers were exploiting a loophole in the state’s 1998 “assault weapons” ban in order to sell functionally identical firearms, 10,000 of which she claimed were sold last year.
“The gun industry doesn’t get to decide what’s compliant,” she said at a press conference. “We do.”
Gun advocates have responded that Healey acted unilaterally, bypassing the state legislature while it was not in session, a move they say is an overstep of her powers.
But gun sales surged after Healey ordered the heightened ban, with many people also suspecting that they might be charged for violating her order. According to some reports, Massachusetts gun shops sold more than 2,500 of the guns at the center of the controversy in one day—nearly a quarter of the total sold in all of 2015. Sales dropped the following day, but were still above the same day total a year earlier.
The State House rally was led by the GOAL, but included gunowners from local gun clubs and associations across the state, wielding “Don’t Tread on Me” and American flags and signs depicting Healey with a Hitler mustache.
Legislators and advocates who took the microphone said Healey had transformed legal gun owners into “felons-in-waiting” overnight. They acknowledged that Healey had promised not to prosecute those who purchased the guns legally before her order, but said they did not trust her word.
The crowd erupted in chants several times, from “Blue Lives Matter” to “Charlie! Charlie!”, calling on Gov. Charlie Baker, a Republican, to join the rally, which he did not. However, he later commented that he was still studying Healey’s authority for re-interpreting the law.