For felons looking to trade guns, look no further than Arizona, Alaska and Wyoming — the top three states to buy, sell or traffic firearms, according to a new report.
The new ranking comes from the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, a group working to strengthen background checks for gun sales, which launched its latest state scorecard Thursday comparing gun laws’ ability to keep weapons out of the hands of criminals or abusers. A loophole in the federal system currently allows people to buy firearms sold online and at gun shows without first passing a background check.
The Brady Campaign analyzed 33 gun policies in each state and found that many make it “far too easy” for criminals and people with severe mental illnesses to obtain guns. Some of the areas the organization looked at include laws requiring companies to videotape all gun sales, stores to verify inventory through dealer records, individuals to report lost or stolen weapons and businesses to prevent bulk purchases of handguns to potential traffickers.
Twelve states — Louisiana, Montana, Arkansas, Virginia, Kentucky, Florida, Nevada, Maine, Mississippi, Idaho, New Mexico, and Alabama — also earned the group’s “2015 Criminals’ Choice Award.” And 10 states made the “Traffickers’ Top 10” list for laws accommodating criminals who buy guns in bulk in states with weak gun laws and then resell them in states with strong gun laws.
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The grades are showcased on a parody website, CrimAdvisor.com, which highlights the “friendliest states” for criminals to buy, carry or traffic guns. Their satirical motto reads: “A criminal’s best shot at finding a gun … No matter who you are or what you’ve done.”
The top states with gun-control legislation, referred to on the website as the “least friendly states,” include California, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey and New York, ranked in order. Law enforcement officials in California, for example, have full discretion when deciding who is lawfully able to carry a gun, the Brady Campaign points out.
In neighboring Arizona, however, residents can carry a loaded hidden gun without a permit and non-residents can get a carry permit through the mail. Four years ago, a gunman opened fire outside of a supermarket in Tucson, killing six people and wounding 13 others, including former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. The shooter, Jared Lee Loughner, had acquired his gun legally and was not prohibited from owning one.









