Earlier this year, Eric Holder--along with Janet Reno and several other
former officials from the Clinton Department of Justice--co-signed an
amicus brief in District of Columbia v. Heller. The brief was filed in
support of DC's ban on all handguns, and ban on the use of any firearm for
self-defense in the home. The
brief argued that the Second Amendment is a "collective" right, not an
individual one, and asserted that belief in the collective right had been
the consistent policy of the U.S. Department of Justice since the FDR
administration. A brief filed by some other former DOJ officials
(including several Attorneys General, and Stuart Gerson, who was Acting
Attorney General until Janet Reno was confirmed) took issue with the
Reno-Holder brief's characterization of DOJ's viewpoint.
But at the least, the Reno-Holder brief accurately expressed the position
of the Department of Justice when Janet Reno was Attorney General and Eric
Holder was Deputy Attorney General. At the oral argument before the Fifth
Circuit in United States v. Emerson, the Assistant U.S. Attorney told the
panel that the Second Amendment was no barrier to gun confiscation, not
even of the confiscation of guns from on-duty National Guardsmen.
As Deputy Attorney General, Holder was a strong supporter of restrictive
gun control. He advocated federal licensing of handgun owners, a three day
waiting period on handgun sales, rationing handgun sales to no more than
one per month, banning possession of handguns and so-called "assault
weapons" (cosmetically incorrect guns) by anyone under age of 21, a gun
show restriction bill that would have given the federal government the
power to shut down all gun shows, national gun registration, and mandatory
prison sentences for trivial offenses (e.g., giving your son an heirloom
handgun for Christmas, if he were two weeks shy of his 21st birthday). He
also promoted the factoid that "Every day that goes by, about 12, 13 more
children in this country die from gun violence"--a statistic is true
only if
one counts 18-year-old gangsters who shoot each other as "children."(Sources:
Holder
testimony before House Judiciary Committee, Subcommitee on Crime, May
27,1999;
Holder Weekly Briefing, May 20, 2000. One of the bills that Holder
endorsed is detailed in my 1999 Issue Paper "Unfair
and Unconstitutional.")
After 9/11, he penned a Washington Post op-ed, "Keeping Guns Away
From Terrorists" arguing that a new law should give "the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms a record of every firearm sale." He also
stated that prospective gun buyers should be checked against the secret
"watch lists" compiled by various government entities. (In an
Issue Paper
on the watch list proposal, I quote a FBI spokesman stating that there is
no cause to deny gun ownership to someone simply because she is on the FBI
list.)
After the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the D.C. handgun ban
and self-defense ban were unconstitutional in 2007, Holder
complained that the decision "opens the door to more people having
more access to guns and putting guns on the streets."
Holder
played a key role in the gunpoint, night-time kidnapping of Elian
Gonzalez. The
pretext
for the paramilitary invasion of the six-year-old's home was that someone
in his family might have been licensed to carry a handgun under Florida
law. Although a Pulitzer Prize-winning photo showed a federal agent
dressed like a soldier and pointing a machine gun at the man who was
holding the terrified child, Holder
claimed that Gonzalez "was not taken at the point of a gun" and that
the federal agents whom Holder had sent to capture Gonzalez had acted
"very sensitively." If Mr. Holder believes that breaking down a door with
a battering ram, pointing guns at children (not just Elian), and yelling
"Get down, get down, we'll shoot" is example of acting "very sensitively,"
his judgment about the responsible use of firearms is not as acute as
would be desirable for a cabinet officer who would be in charge of
thousands and thousands of armed federal agents, many of them paramilitary
agents with machine guns.







