My ears perked when I heard the NRA’s Wayne LaPierre mention Richmond, VA, during Wednesday’s Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on gun violence.
Not once. Not twice. At least three times LaPierre went out of his way to namedrop Virginia’s capital. Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Alabama, even sang its praises.
My hometown was having its big moment in the spotlight:
“‘Project Exile’ worked in Richmond, VA.”
“When [Asst. Federal Prosecutor] Dave Schiller and ‘Project Exile’ cleaned up Richmond years ago…”
Sen. Sessions: “Richmond was a great model.”
“Richmond,” “great,” and “model”: Three words I’d never heard in the same sentence before. But there these men were, applauding the city for lowering the crime rate via federal prosecution of gun offenses, “Project Exile.”
“What they started to do,” LaPierre explains, “is they caught a drug dealer with a gun, they put up signs all over this city saying ‘if you have an illegal gun in Richmond, under federal law you’re going to be prosecuted 100% of the time.’ Drug dealers, gangs and felons stopped carrying guns.”
My ears perked up again. Something was wrong. The way they were telling it: Federal prosecutions—literally, making a federal case out of things—helped lower the murder rate in Richmond, a perpetual Top of the Pops when it came to per capita crime. And that was it: case closed. No need to pay attention to the stats behind the curtain.
To be fair, there’s a something of a bipartisan consensus around that version of events. For instance, Tim Kaine is a big bad Virginia Senator and Friend of Obama (FOO) now. But in the Before Time, he was the Democratic mayor of Richmond (which at that time meant you held the scissors during the Grand Openings). And Mayor Tim Kaine used “Exile” to tout his crime-fighting ways in his 2005 gubernatorial run.
Still, LaPierre was the one in front of a national audience (that means D.C. and New York); so let’s stick with him.
“Project Exile” was, as one of the few studies to grade it’s performance suggests, a “prison sentence enhancement.” In other words, this wasn’t about new officers patrolling the streets for no-goodniks. No. Drug dealers or felons or domestic abusers caught with a firearm faced a sentence in federal prison.
As this Virginia Dept. of Criminal Justice Services report indicates, “Exile does not prosecute gun violence per se, but rather prosecutes cases in which a felon is in possession of a firearm.” The plan was exceptionally well publicized on billboards, in print and on television—“An illegal gun will get you five years in federal prison”—with the theory being that fear would be the ultimate Robocop.









