for BigTrial.net
In the wake of the mass shootings on South Street, a self-described "heartbroken but angry" Mayor Kenney blamed Republicans in the state legislature, as well as the national government, for the gun violence that's plaguing his city.
"The unfettered access to guns is a problem," the buckpassing Kenney told 6ABC. "And in this state, when it's easier to get a gun than a driver's license, either the state legislature or the national government needs to do something similar to what Canada has done in banning guns."
"This is a national problem," Kenney insisted. "If we had some kind of regulations that would slow down the access to guns, we would certainly do it."
That's not true, Mr. Mayor. Because just six miles northeast of City Hall, over at the Police Department's Gun Permit Unit at 660 East Erie Avenue, they're handing out gun permits like candy.
Before the pandemic, it used to take up to 40 days to get a gun permit. That's because the Gun Permit Unit used to require applicants to come into the office and fill out a three-page questionnaire during a face-to-face interview. An applicant was also required to provide proof of residency, have their fingerprints taken, and then submit to a background check conducted by detectives in the unit. All that had be done before the city would issue anyone a permit to carry a firearm.
But in January 2021, facing a daily backlog of some 800 to 1,000 applicants, the Police Department under Danielle Outlaw, Kenney's handpicked police commissioner, dropped every one of those local safeguards I just mentioned above.
Instead, the Kenney administration, which had previously been challenged in court by two gun owners associations, rolled over and implemented a shorter questionnaire that could be filled out online. The city also decided to pass the buck on background checks to the state for a far less thorough review. As a result, where it used to take up to 40 days to get a gun permit, now it just takes just a week.
Since the city made the process faster and easier -- but not necessarily safer -- the number of gun permit applications has skyrocketed. And so has the number of gun permits issued.
In 2020, the Gun Permit Unit received 11,073 applications, and approved 7,555 permits to carry.
Last year, the police received a total of 70,789 applications for a gun permit, an increase of 639%! And last year, the Gun Permit Unit approved 52,905 licenses to carry, an increase of more than 700%!
So the Kenney administration has decided to accommodate gun owners, but it's come at the expense of public safety. And, in the opinion of a former senior attorney in the city Law Department who used to handle gun legislation for the city, the Philly P.D. is not only shirking its responsibilities, it's also breaking the law.
At the Gun Permit Unit, in the middle of a historic epidemic of gun violence, the epic giveaway continues. As of May 31st, the Gun Permit Unit has received 27,790 applications so far this year, and has handed out 23,528 permits.
In his remarks about the South Street shootings, Mayor Kenney praised the police for taking some 6,000 illegal guns off the street last year.
But in past 17 months, Kenney and Outlaw's Police Department has issued a total of 76,433 new permits to carry guns!
This in a city that just last year set all-time records for homicides, shootings and carjackings.
In the shooting on South Street, one of the alleged participants, Micah Towns, 23, had a gun permit issued by the Philadelphia police. I asked when Towns obtained that permit, and Police Officer Eric McLaurin responded, "We have received no information pertaining to your request at this time."
According to police, during the melee on South Stret, Gregory Jackson shot Towns and Towns responded by firing back at Jackson, killing him.
The shootings, which the cops say involved multiple gunmen, resulted in three people being killed and 11 others being wounded.
In a telephone interview, Corporal Jasmine Reilly, a spokesperson for the Police Department, blamed the candy-store giveaway of gun permits on the city's voluntary response to being sued by gun owners.
In 2020, the Gun Owners of America [GOA], as well as the Firearms Policy Coalition, sued the city, claiming that because of Covid, Philadelphia had delayed applications for gun permits way beyond the state's 45 day legal window. In some cases, the gun groups charged, the city had made applicants wait up to 18 months for a gun permit.
Andrew Austin, a lawyer who represented the Gun Owners of America in its suit against the city, told the Washington Free Beacon on Dec. 9, 2020 that Philadelphia officials decided to open up email applications because they were struggling to meet a self-imposed deadline that the city had given a state court for reopening in-person applications at the Gun Permit Unit.
Austin said the city's lawyers could see the writing on the wall.
So out went the Police Department's traditional requirement that any applicant for a gun permit would have to submit to being fingerprinted, as well as to having a background check done by a Philadelphia detective.
"Without knowing what the questions are, you would lose something along the way," Cpl. Reilly said about the shorter state questionnaire.
"It's unfortunate on our end," she said. "Those would be additional safeguards," she said of the questions that the Philly cops used to ask that the state doesn't.
The city's questionnaire used to have some 25 questions, many of which the state's shorter form, with a dozen questions, doesn't bother to ask.
Such as:
-- The city used to ask for the names of an applicant's parents, where the applicant was previously employed, the name of the employer, and whether the applicant had a card for medical marijuana.
-- The city used to ask if an applicant had ever been arrested, whether they'd ever been enrolled in an alternative program to jail, and whether they had ever been accused of domestic violence, and if so, what was the name of their spouse.
-- The city used to ask if an applicant had ever been treated for mental health issues, and if so, the name of the person who treated them.
-- While the state form asks if an applicant was ever convicted of a crime, the city form used to ask if the applicant had ever been arrested or charged with a crime, or had a crime that they had been found guilty of expunged from their record.
-- The city also used to ask if the applicant had ever had a license to carry revoked or confiscated.
-- The city also used to ask if the applicant had ever had a lawsuit or a civil complaint filed against them.
-- The city also used to ask married women if they had ever gone under any previous name.
But, thanks to new system that uses the shorter online state form, "We can't ask those questions now," Cpl. Reilly said.
Another safeguard that went out the window, according to police sources, was proof of residency. Cops in the Gun Permit Unit were previously required to make sure that the applicant's address on their driver's license matched the address on their application for a gun permit, but the cops no longer do that.
In response, Cpl. Reilly said she was not aware that the Gun Permit Unit no longer required proof of residence.
During the pandemic, Cpl. Reilly said, with the restrictions imposed by social distancing, requiring people to personally come into the office to be fingerprinted in order to get a gun permit posed a hardship on applicants, as well as police.
With Covid and all of it's accompanying restrictions, Reilly said, "We had to limit the amount of people that could come in throughout the day."
With all of the local safeguards that have been dropped, and the accompanying proliferation of gun permits, I asked Corporal Reilly if she could understand why residents might feel less safe.
"I totally get that," she responded.
I asked Corporal Reilly to refer me to somebody in the city's law department who could explain why the city appeared to have caved to the gun dealers, but over two days, nobody was either willing or available to comment.
A spokesperson for Mayor Kenney also did not respond to a request for comment.
The City Rolls Over
In the absence of official comment, I asked Mark Zecca, a retired senior attorney in the city Law Department who has previously represented the city on gun issues, for his take on how the city was handling gun permit applications.
Zecca, who, although he retired from the city is still practicing law, immediately sent me the licensing section of the Pennsylvania Uniform Firearms Act of 1995. The section states that the local authority, which Zecca defined as the police commissioner in Philadelphia, had, in Zecca's words, a "key role under that section to reject:"
An individual whose character and reputation is such that the individual would be likely to act in a manner dangerous to public safety.
That's what the Pennsylvania Uniform Firearms Act says in section (e) (1) (i).
"Deferring to the State on this seems to make no sense to me and is contrary to this State law," Zecca wrote in an email. If gun owners were unhappy enough to sue over a backlog of gun permit applications, Zecca wrote, "the answer to that would be to clear up the backlog, not to abdicate the required review."
"If there was any lawsuit that asked the City to drop the required steps, then the City should definitely have fought that," Zecca wrote.
"Gun violence is such a crisis in Philadelphia that the proper review of these licenses is essential," he wrote. According to the Pennsylvania Uniform Firearms Act, "The Philadelphia Police Department has a legal duty to evaluate whether the applicant would be likely to act in a manner dangerous to public safety," Zecca wrote.
"The investigatory process is very important," Zecca wrote. "We have seen with the recent South Street shooting where a gun permit was issued in Delaware County to one shooter who should not have had a permit."
"The Philly Police Department was known to find things that properly disqualified a person," Zecca wrote. "Such as whether the person had committed acts for which they had received Accelerated Rehabilitative Disposition [ARD [and so no conviction]," Zecca wrote. But an applicant's actions "might show they should not have a gun," Zecca wrote. "And the permit would be refused on the basis of those actions."
Zecca took a dim view of the city's decision to stop conducting background checks on applicants for gun permits.
"I don’t believe that kicking this to the State," Zecca wrote, "could possibly be as thorough."
"And in Philly, we need that thoroughness," Zecca wrote. "Allowing laxity here seems to be contrary to everything the Mayor and [City] Council are saying about the need to fight gun violence."
"So bottom line is — Philly should not have an unreasonable backlog" of gun permit applications," Zecca said. Instead, he said, "It should assign staff to the process. This process is very important."
But Zecca added, "There is no excuse for not doing the proper thorough review. The City should not allow the threat of lawsuits to prevent the proper thorough review. And the State government does not have the authority to tell the City to do otherwise."
"I find it hard to believe that anyone in authority in the State Government told the City to skip the steps in the law," Zecca concluded. "And that law requires an essential judgment call by the [Police] Commissioner, which must be preceded by a certain amount of investigation" by the Police Department.
In the state Uniform Firearms Act, it actually states the sheriff, or in a first-class city like Philadelphia, the police commissioner, has a duty to:
(1) investigate the applicant's record of criminal conviction;(2) investigate whether or not the applicant is under indictment for or has ever been convicted of a crime punishable by imprisonment exceeding one year;
(3) investigate whether the applicant's character and reputation are such that the applicant will not be likely to act in a manner dangerous to public safety;
(4) investigate whether the applicant would be precluded from receiving a license . . . relating to persons not to possess, use, manufacture, control, sell or transfer firearms); and
(5) conduct a criminal background, juvenile delinquency and mental health check following the procedures set forth in section 6111 (relating to sale or transfer of firearms), receive a unique approval number for that inquiry and record the date and number on the application.
What Happened At The Gun Permit Unit During The Pandemic
During the pandemic, the Gun Permit Unit was shut down for several months in 2020. When it finally reopened in January of 2021, there was a big backlog. According to police sources, Chief Inspector Frank Vallore Jr., who could not be reached for comment, ordered that the backlog to be disposed of ASAP.
The Gun Permit Unit went to two shifts, and expanded its office hours.
Before the pandemic, the Gun Permit Unit used to open at 8 a.m., accept in-office applications until 1 p.m., and then close the office at 4 p.m.
When the unit went to two shifts, the Gun Permit Unit accepted applicants until 8 p.m., and closed at 10 p.m.
When the cops stopped doing background checks, staffers there were upset.
"Everybody was like, this is crazy," one police source said.
At one point, the cops in the Gun Permit Unit were asked to put their badge numbers and initials on all applications that they processed, but some officers, citing the relaxed standards, refused to do it.
Customers seeking gun licenses, however, were happy about the new system.
As one customer put it, "Hold up, so y'all just giving them away, huh?"
Or as one cop quipped, "Free turkeys!"
Before the pandemic, the Gun Permit Unit used to run applications and fingerprints through the Pennsylvania State Police and the National Criminal Information Center [FBI] databases searching for criminal records, mental health problems or protection from abuse orders.
But at the Gun Permit Unit, they got rid of their fingerprinting machine last year because it was no longer needed.
Today, police sources say, after you fill out your online questionnaire, all you need to do is show up at the Gun Permit Unit with a $20 fee and an ID to get your gun permit.
When somebody fills out an application for a gun permit, the cops at the Gun Permit Unit now check to see if the applicant has answered every question, and has included a copy of their driver's license.
If applicants meet those two requirements, the cops send the application on to the state, where they tap into the Pennsylvania Instant Check System [PICS] used by firearms dealers to verify who can legally buy a firearm.
The applications usually come back from Harrisburg in a day, often in a matter of hours. It the applicant gets through PICS, then, at the Gun Permit Unit, the application is considered approved.
And, in addition to a huge increase in volume, gun permit applications in Philadelphia are being approved at increasingly higher rates.
In 2020, out of 11,073 applications, 7,555 were approved, or 68%.
In 2021, out of 70,789 applications, 52,905 were approved, or nearly 75%.
In the first five months of this year, out of 27,790 applications, 23,528 were approved, or nearly 85%.
Meanwhile, the gun violence in the city continues unabated.
Last year, the city recorded 562 murders. As of yesterday, with 222 murders, the city is just 6% off its record pace of last year. At this rate, the city will rack up 528 murders this year. But with a long hot summer ahead, Philadelphia could easily set a new record for dead bodies.
Last year, the city also set another all-time record with 1,835 non-fatal shootings. As of Wednesday, the city had 790 nonfatal shootings.
Last year, the city also set a record of 847 carjackings. And last month, Steve Keeley of Fox 29 was reporting that with 546 carjackings so far this year, the city was way ahead of last year's pace.
In response to the South Street shootings, Mayor Kenney, who could not be reached for comment for this story, told reporters that the city is "doing everything it can" to fight gun violence.
But the river of gun permits flowing out of his own police department says otherwise.
If the city was "doing everything it can" to fight gun violence, it would have stood up to the gun lobby in court. And at the Gun Permit Unit, they'd still be doing background checks, fingerprinting applicants, checking for proof of residency, and making those applicants fill out the city's longer, three-page form.
Instead, the hypocritical Kenney administration has rolled over, and, in a city already under siege, it has eliminated all those local safeguards and in the process, opened the floodgates for more guns on the street.
And, despite all his evasive rhetoric, it's not the Republicans in the state Legislature who are responsible for this disaster, or the national government, Mayor Kenney.
No, the responsible parties are only you, Mr. Mayor, and your hand-picked identity politics hire of a police commissioner.