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What The So-Called Gun Show Loophole Really Looks Like

About 40,000 people attend Wanenmacher's Tulsa Arms Show, which is held twice-annually in Tulsa, Okla.
About 40,000 people attend Wanenmacher's Tulsa Arms Show, which is held twice-annually in Tulsa, Okla.

As Fred Nelson shuffled through a crowded convention center in Tulsa, Oklahoma, a man tapped him on the shoulder to ask about a gun.

The man knew Nelson was selling thanks to the handwritten menu taped on Nelson鈥檚 backpack advertising more than a dozen handguns, rifles and shotguns.

He offered $300 for a Glock 19 pistol listed at $350.

鈥淢eet me in the middle at $325,鈥 Nelson responded. 鈥淚t鈥檚 never been fired. You can look down the barrel.鈥

鈥淚 can do $300 cash, that鈥檚 all I can do,鈥 the buyer responded, before pausing. 鈥淚 haven鈥檛 even looked at it yet.鈥

Nelson eventually relented and turned over the gun for $300.

Another man approached moments later, offering $300 for a semi-automatic rifle. Nelson pocketed another wad of cash.

In the span of about four minutes, he had sold two guns to two different strangers for $600. And he did nothing illegal.

This is what鈥檚 known as the 鈥済un show loophole.鈥 Private gun sales don鈥檛 require a background check, whereas purchases from a licensed dealer do. That dichotomy is on display twice a year at the Tulsa Arms Show, which calls itself the largest gun show in the world.

What Is The Gun Show Loophole?

Talk of the gun show loophole emerged in the 1980s and 1990s, said David Chipman, a retired ATF agent who now works for a gun control advocacy group called the Giffords Center.

鈥淧eople were selling guns through newspapers and classifieds,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd gun shows, which were primarily just flea markets, became more popular because they allowed private sellers of guns to go to locations where buyers of guns would be. What you had was this interesting circumstance where 鈥 a licensed gun dealer set up next to a private party. Both would be selling the same gun, but they would have to abide by different laws.鈥

That circumstance 鈥 where private sellers are exempted from conducting the background check required of gun dealers with a federal firearms license 鈥 became known as the 鈥済un show loophole.鈥 Gun stores, whether a local mom-and-pop or a giant chain, must obtain a federal license as a gun dealer.

Gun advocates have long claimed the gun show loophole is a myth. A from the National Shooting Sports Foundation, an industry trade group, declares flatly: 鈥淭here is no gun show loophole.鈥

The organization correctly notes that the rules for selling guns aren鈥檛 any more lax at gun shows than they would be in most parking lots.

It鈥檚 also true that most vendors at gun shows are licensed dealers.

But many gun shows allow people who aren鈥檛 licensed dealers to rent tables too. Some exhibitors are gun collectors who aren鈥檛 considered to be selling firearms as a business, but have plenty of guns to sell as they consolidate their collection.

Then there are people like Nelson, who walk around trying to sell guns. At the Tulsa Arms Show, many private sellers are essentially walking billboards, advertising their guns on a backpack or by sticking a flag down the barrel of a rifle slung over their shoulder.

The 鈥済un show loophole鈥 might be more aptly termed the 鈥減rivate sale exception.鈥 While the vast majority of guns sold in the U.S. 鈥 some estimates say more than 75 percent 鈥 are sold by licensed dealers, sales between private citizens can be arranged online or in person at any place and any time.

When Are Background Checks Required?

Whichever term you prefer, or even if you think the loophole doesn鈥檛 exist, the phrase represents a real phenomenon under federal law: Not every gun sale is preceded by a background check.

The laws vary, but in most states private sellers only break the law if they knowingly sell to a prohibited person.

For example, Nelson is not supposed to sell a gun to convicted felons, or to people who live outside of Oklahoma. He doesn鈥檛, however, legally have to ask about those things.

In the absence of required formal background checks, Nelson, a retired police officer and Air Force veteran, said he developed his own system to judge who to sell his guns to. If they look younger than 21, for instance, or if they look 鈥渢huggish,鈥 he says he won鈥檛 sell.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to have any of the guns that are in my name fall into the wrong hands,鈥 Nelson said.

In comparison, when a gun dealer sells a firearm they must conduct an FBI background check regardless of where the sale takes place. And if they sell to an out-of-state resident, the gun must first be transferred to a licensed dealer in the resident鈥檚 home state.

Thousands of tables at the Tulsa Arms Show sell guns, rifle barrels and gun accessories.

Chris Haxel / KCUR

Who Is Policing Illegal Gun Sales?

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) is tasked with policing gun sales across the country.

Chipman, the retired ATF agent, spent part of his career investigating firearm trafficking at gun shows and elsewhere. He said the agency sometimes has undercover agents at gun shows, but usually only in response to a specific tip.

鈥淩arely, if ever, did we do 鈥榝ishing expeditions,'鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think the public doesn鈥檛 understand how small ATF is. ATF has 2,600 special agents 鈥 I think the Capitol Police Department here in [Washington, D.C.] has 2,200 sworn officers.鈥

Both the Trump and Obama administrations have taken steps to target gun crimes, but .

Is There Support For A Solution?

Over time, federal legislation that specifically targets gun shows by proposals for , which would cover almost all gun sales. So far, none of the proposals have garnered enough Republican support to become law.

Republicans aren鈥檛 completely opposed to the idea of background checks for more guns, said , a gun advocate, researcher and University of Denver law professor.

Rather, he said past negotiations broke down over disagreements about how to implement the change: Force all gun sales to go through the current dealer-based background check system? Or let private sellers access the system themselves?

The key difference is that gun dealers have to keep permanent records of every transaction, which the ATF can later use to trace guns that are ultimately used in crimes.

Kopel believes the underlying motive is about 鈥渞egistering all guns and gun owners,鈥 which could make it easier for gun seizures at some point in the future.

When Senate Democrats unveiled their latest universal background check proposal in January, 97 percent of Americans support requiring checks before every gun purchase.

PolitiFact found that claim 鈥,鈥 and polls consistently show more than 80 percent of Americans agree with the idea.

But support in three recent state-level votes in , and topped out at 60 percent.

鈥淚 think there鈥檚 a world of difference between a one-sentence polling question and the law,鈥 Kopel said. 鈥淲hat the actual election results show is, this is not a 97 percent issue. It鈥檚 not an 80 percent issue. When people begin to learn the facts the public makes that much more of a 50/50 issue.鈥

Can Background Checks Reduce Gun Violence?

Studies have generally found some evidence that universal background checks help reduce gun violence, but the research is . found that over 10 years, universal background checks had no effect on gun homicide or suicide rates in the state of California.

Experts say the differences between state-level laws makes the effects tough to measure. Right now, 14 states, including Connecticut, Colorado and Oregon, and the District of Columbia require background checks before every gun purchase through either universal background checks or a permitting system.

Chipman, the former ATF agent, said the current patchwork of laws is ineffective because it makes trafficking guns as simple as a road trip. But the trafficking itself is evidence that universal background checks in a state such as New York are effective.

鈥淭he only reason that a New Yorker will drive all the way down [Interstate 95] to Georgia to get a gun is because it鈥檚 difficult for a criminal to get a gun in New York,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f it was easy, they wouldn鈥檛 do the drive.鈥

is a public media reporting project on the role of guns in American life.

Copyright 2021 Guns and America. To see more, visit .

Chris comes to KCUR as part of Guns & America, a reporting collaboration between 10 public media stations that is focused on the role of guns in American life. Hailing from Springfield, Illinois, Chris has lived in seven states and four counties. He previously served in the Army, and reported for newspapers in Kansas and Michigan. Chris lives in downtown Kansas City. He roots for St. Louis sports teams, which means he no longer cares about the NFL.
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