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Slotkin Unveils Gun Storage Safety Bill in Wake of Oxford High School Shooting

December 15, 2021

Congresswoman’s Safe Guns, Safe Kids Act would require firearms to be secured when kids are present

WASHINGTON, D.C. –– U.S. Rep. Elissa Slotkin (MI-08) today announced that she will introduce the Safe Guns, Safe Kids Act, a bill to require safe and proper storage of firearms in households to prevent children and others from illegally accessing the weapon. Slotkin will introduce the bill in the wake of the shooting at Oxford High School on November 30, which left 4 teenage students dead.

"I'm introducing this bill because of the destructive role the parents of the killer had on the lives of four teenagers at Oxford High School, and thousands more in the community," said Slotkin. "At church services, vigils and funerals, and visits with parents, teachers, and law enforcement, everyone's priority is to keep our kids safe – and it's clear there's a gap in law that makes it hard to hold parents accountable for aiding their child in committing a crime with a gun."

"I come from a gun-owning family, and I carried two firearms on my three tours in Iraq with the CIA. There are millions of responsible gun owners in Michigan, including my own dad. This bill will require gun owners to store or lock their firearms when children are present, and will hold them accountable when they fail to do so. This legislation is a serious, common-sense effort to address a safety issue that is taking American lives all around the country. Ensuring that firearms are properly stored, and not left to fall into the hands of those who could use them for violence, is essential. The goal is to prevent another American town from experiencing the devastation we've felt in Oxford over the last two weeks."

The Safe Guns, Safe Kids Act would:

  • Require gun owners to safely secure their firearm when a child could reasonably access the firearm.
  • Impose a penalty of up to 5 years of prison time if a child does indeed access the gun, which they reasonably had access to, and uses the gun to injure themselves or others or uses the firearm in the commission of a crime.

4.6 million minors in the U.S. live in homes with at least one loaded, unlocked firearm, and studies show that between 70 and 90% of guns used in youth suicides, unintentional shootings among children, and school shootings perpetrated by shooters under the age of 18 are acquired from the home or the homes of relatives or friends. Data shows that there were at least 2,070 unintentional shootings by children between 2015 and 2020 – an average of nearly one shooting per day.

The gun used in the Oxford High School shooting was purchased legally by the shooter's father but, according to court documents, was not properly stored. Oakland County Prosecutor Karen McDonald has filed criminal charges against both parents of the gunman to that end.

The four students killed in the shooting were: Hana St. Juliana, age 14, Madisyn Baldwin, age 17, Tate Myre, age 16, and Justin Shilling, age 17.

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