Pro-gun groups are a significant obstacle for manufacturers trying to present safer firearms to the marketplace, one researcher believes.
Donald Sebastian, senior vice president for research and development at the New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT), described the issue of “smart gun” technology as a “chicken-and-egg situation.” The aura created by most gun organizations — that a business will be boycotted or shut down if management attempts to stock shelves with safer firearms — discourages sellers from attempting to introduce the technology to consumers.
Take the German-based Armatix: the company created a pistol that cannot be fired without a corresponding radio-controlled watch held within 10 inches of the weapon. Twice, manufacturers announced plans to sell the gun, but soon reversed course in both instances because of intense backlash — including death threats — from gun rights activists.
“There is a barrier because gun advocacy groups like the NRA see the mandates as an incursion into Second Amendment rights; therefore, gun safety gets derailed in fights about gun control,” Sebastian told msnbc.
Smart guns could revolutionize the firearms business. But advocacy groups fear that once such a gun reaches the market, the government could make the firearms technology mandatory and prevent people from buying traditional weapons. The NRA, along with Gun Owners of America, continue to push to prevent smart guns from reaching the market. The NRA didn’t respond to msnbc’s request for comment for this story, nor to messages left for previous articles.
The NRA previously warned that technologically advanced weapons have the “potential to mesh with the anti-gunner’s agenda, opening the door to a ban on all guns that do not possess the government-required technology.”
The NRA, the country’s leading gun rights group, doesn’t oppose new technological developments in firearms; however, members are opposed to government mandates that require the use of expensive, potentially unreliable features, such as grips that would read an individual’s fingerprints before a gun fires, according to the organization’s website.
But people in favor of reform believe such systems could prevent future mass shootings. (In the United States, there have been at least 110 mass shootings, in which four or more people die, in the past six years.) New Jersey lawmakers adopted legislation in 2002 that will eventually require the state’s gun dealers sell only smart guns within three years after the first one becomes commercially available. The measure, however, had the unintended consequence of rallying opposition from pro-gun supporters to a single smart weapon.
Similar mandates have been introduced in Maryland and California.
New Jersey Senate Majority Leader Loretta Weinberg, a Democrat, said during an interview with msnbc in May that she would reverse her state’s existing law if the NRA agrees not to stand in the way of smart gun technology.
Another challenge with potential mandates is enforcing an exact definition of a “smart gun,” Sebastian said.









