Top law enforcement officials in Minnesota demanded Wednesday that legislators overhaul the state's faulty background check system for people seeking to buy firearms and reform a broken justice system that mistreats the mentally ill and places the public at heightened risk.
"For Minnesota, this is a public health issue and public safety issue," said Hennepin County Sheriff Rich Stanek. "We believe gun control alone will not solve the complex problems of guns and extreme violence. We have an 'access' problem when it comes to guns -- the severely mentally ill should never have access to guns."
The proposed reforms were largely in response to a Sunday Star Tribune article on how a 32-year-old Carver County man -- who murdered his mother in 1995 at age 14 -- was able to legally get a permit to buy firearms despite his long history of mental illness.
The case of Christian Oberender described how Minnesota's criminal background check system failed on all levels to prevent him from being issued a permit last May. The newspaper found that a faulty information system among law enforcement, Carver County court administrators, the mental health system and a database operated by the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension allowed Oberender able to assemble an array of 13 firearms before he was arrested three weeks ago.
A Star Tribune review of state court records also found that at least 84 people have been charged since 2000 with illegal gun possession or assault with a dangerous weapon even though they had previously been committed by a judge as mentally ill. Of that group, 29 were charged with multiple counts of weapons possession and nine were considered by a judge to be mentally ill and dangerous.
Stanek, along with Hennepin County Judge Jay Quam and Carver County Sheriff Jim Olson, were among a coalition of prosecutors, police chiefs and a bipartisan group of lawmakers that held a packed news conference near the Capitol to outline their proposals.
They said they were determined to influence public policy reforms when it comes to gun access and treatment of people with mental illness.
State Sen. Ron Latz, DFL-St. Louis Park and chair of the Judiciary and Public Safety Committee, voiced strong support for his coalition's proposals, referring to when he worked as a lawyer in the attorney general's office to ensure that the mentally ill under state care received proper medications. "The confluence of mental health issues and guns is very unnerving," Latz said.