Missouri has become the latest state to throw down a broad challenge to the enforcement of federal firearms laws, as Republican-controlled state legislatures intensify their fierce political counterattack against Democrats' gun-control proposals.
A bill recently signed by Gov. Mike Parson threatens a penalty of $50,000 against any local police agency that enforces certain federal gun laws and regulations that constitute "infringements" of Second Amendment gun rights.
At least eight other states — Arizona, Arkansas, Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, Tennessee, Texas and West Virginia — have taken similar action this year, passing laws of varying strength that discourage or prohibit the enforcement of federal gun statutes by state and local agents and officers.
The new law "is about protecting law-abiding Missourians against government overreach and unconstitutional federal mandates," Parson and Attorney General Eric Schmitt said in a letter defending the law on Thursday to the U.S. Justice Department. They said the state would "reject any attempt by the federal government to circumvent the fundamental right Missourians have to keep and bear arms to protect themselves and their property."
In interviews, the bill's sponsors in the Missouri House and Senate acknowledged that the law would most likely have little immediate effect on the current operations of local and state police agencies, since there is little difference between state and federal gun laws in Missouri.
There would be no change to the federal requirement for background checks before buying guns from licensed firearms dealers, they said, and local officers could still aid in federal gun law enforcement operations as long as the person being targeted was also violating a state law.
The GOP lawmakers said their main intent was to guard against the potential of more wide-ranging legislation from Washington, where Democratic lawmakers have proposed a major expansion of background checks, an extension of the time in which federal officials can review purchases and bills to restrict the sale of popular semi-automatic weapons like AR-15s.
"Missouri law almost mirrors federal law currently," said Rep. Jered Taylor, who sponsored the bill in the Missouri House. "So really I think the concern is what's next — what's coming down the road from the federal government?"