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Stamford Advocate - April 17, 2008

A call for gun control - Protest marks anniversary of Va. Tech shootings
By Zach Lowe, Staff Writer

STAMFORD - At 9, Peter Pillari knows Virginia Tech played his favorite baseball team, the New York Yankees, during spring training, but he is starting to understand the school's role in the gun control debate.

"I know you can go to a gun show and buy one," Peter said yesterday after he and 39 other protesters laid on the ground outside state Superior Court to commemorate the first anniversary of the shootings. "And some bad guy can just go and buy a gun and kill people."

It was one of nearly 80 "lie-ins" nationwide in which protesters, many wearing ribbons in Virginia Tech's maroon and orange, laid on the ground for three minutes - the length of time it took gunman Seung-Hui Cho to purchase the firearms he used to kill 32 people and then himself.

The protests were organized by ProtestEasyGuns.com, an organization Virginia resident Abby Spangler formed after the shootings. A similar event was held in New Haven, and members of the victims' rights group Survivors of Homicide gathered in Hartford to recognize National Crime Victims week.

The Virginia Tech shootings triggered calls for tougher gun laws and more oversight of mental health outpatients in Virginia and around the United States.

"I thought it was really important for him to see a protest on this kind of issue," said Peter's mother, Abby Pillari, who also brought his younger brother, Matthew, 7.

The debate has extended to Connecticut, where legislators and the gun lobby are discussing a bill that would require all new semi-automatic pistols sold in the state to have technology that marks each bullet cartridge with an alphanumeric code unique to the gun.

Gun control advocates, including many present yesterday, have called for Connecticut to eliminate a rule that allows customers at gun shows to buy long guns, such as rifles and shotguns, without a background check.

Proponents of microstamping, including the Southport-based Connecticut Against Gun Violence, have pushed the technology as the equivalent of a fingerprint.

But opponents in the legislature and the gun lobby have said the technology is unreliable because the code, which is on the gun's firing pin, may deteriorate with frequent use.

State Rep. Arthur O'Neill, R-Southbury, has said he is concerned that criminals could steal guns from innocent owners and use them at crime scenes to pin shootings on someone else.

"They make it sound like this is the equivalent of a fingerprint," O'Neill said last month. "It certainly is not that."

Lisa Labella, co-executive director of Connecticut Against Gun Violence, said police could easily sort through the evidence and separate the innocent from the guilty.

"The code is a piece of evidence that can start police on the right trail," she said.

California is the only state that has mandatory micro-stamping, leading to concerns that enacting the law in Connecticut would be meaningless with so few other states on board.

New York legislators are discussing micro-stamping, and Connecticut supporters say passing the law here could create momentum nationwide.

Erin Conway, a Darien resident and friend of Spangler who organized yesterday's demonstration in Stamford, said she would support what she termed "common sense" gun laws.

"This isn't about being anti-gun," Conway said. "It's about common sense."

Copyright (c) 2008, Southern Connecticut Newspapers, Inc.

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