SENATORS CALL ON SENATE LEADERSHIP TO BOLSTER BACKGROUND CHECK PROGRAM

WASHINGTON, DC] – With gun sales spiking since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, U.S. Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) and Chris Murphy (D-CT) urged Senate leadership and appropriators to include funding in the next relief package to address the dangerous backlog of background checks. The Senators called for an additional $20 million for the National Criminal History Improvement Program (NCHIP) to ensure states and local governments are able to maintain accurate records and keep guns out of the hands of abusers and others seeking firearms illegally.

“Prohibited purchasers put our communities in imminent danger,” wrote the Senators to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Richard Shelby (R-AL), and Senate Appropriations Vice Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-VT). “As gun sales continue to surge, we must provide additional funding to improve the submission of records into NICS in any future pandemic-legislation and work to pass the Background Check Completion Act in the immediate future. With these actions, we can keep firearms out of the hands of people who are prohibited from having them and, most importantly, save lives.

NCHIP was reauthorized in the bipartisan Fix National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) Act, and with additional funding, could address the unprecedented surge in background checks seen since March 2020. Without accurate records and timely background check processing, individuals who would otherwise be legally prohibited from obtaining guns may be able to obtain a weapon, as was the case with the shooter who killed nine people at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina.

In June, Blumenthal and Murphy introduced the Background Check Completion Act, which would close a loophole in existing law that allows gun sales to proceed if a background check is not completed after 72 hours, even if the gun buyer is not legally allowed to purchase a gun. The bill would require a completed background check for every gun buyer who purchases a gun from a federally-licensed gun dealer. The full text of the legislation is available here.

Blumenthal and Murphy also recently joined a letter to House and Senate leadership led by U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) to include the NICS Data Integrity Act, a bill that would allow the FBI to keep gun-purchase records until background checks are complete, in the next coronavirus relief package. Under current law, the FBI is required to purge incomplete background checks from its systems if they are not finalized within 88 days, a practice that often results in guns being sold without finished background checks.

The full text of today’s letter can be found here and below.

Dear Leader McConnell, Leader Schumer, Chairman Shelby, and Vice Chairman Leahy:

We are writing to urge you to include an additional $20 million for the National Criminal History Improvement Program in the next coronavirus relief package. Reauthorized in the bipartisan Fix NICS Act, this critical funding will help ensure that states and localities, already struggling financially because of the pandemic, are able to maintain accurate records in the face of an unprecedented surge in firearm sales. At a time when domestic violence is on the rise,[1] we must ensure that firearms stay out of the hands of abusers and others seeking firearms illegally.

As the COVID-19 pandemic rages across the United States, the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) has seen an unprecedented surge in background checks. In March 2020, when many states began to take necessary action to mitigate the spread of the coronavirus, there were more than 3.7 million background check transactions.[2]. This alarming trend has continued in subsequent months. June 2020 was the busiest month in the program’s history with more than 3.9 million background check transactions.[3] NICS reported its busiest week from March 16 to March 22, 2020; seven of its 10 busiest weeks have occurred between February and June 2020.[4] Now more than ever, Congress must do everything in its power to support the background check system to ensure guns do not fall into the wrong hands.

During the firearm background check process, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) or, in point of contact states, state authorities query NICS to determine if a prospective purchaser or transferee is legally prohibited from purchasing or possessing firearms. Most background checks are completed almost instantaneously; however, incomplete records can extend the time it takes to complete the record check because the case requires more investigation. If a final determination has not been made after three days, federal law allows a gun to be transferred at the Federal Firearm Licensee’s discretion—a result known as a “default proceed” transfer.

State and local authorities are responsible for submitting adjudication records to NICS, and most people who fail background checks do so as a result of an adjudication at the state or local level. However, many states and localities struggle to submit complete and timely records to NICS, submitting incomplete records or no records at all for some adjudications. Poor record submission can allow a person who is prohibited by federal, state, or Tribal law from possessing firearms to erroneously pass a background check or obtain a gun without a completed background check. This can lead to the transfer of a firearm to a person who is legally prohibited from purchasing or possessing firearms. Our nation knows all too well that this loophole in federal law can have dangerous consequences: in 2015, an ineligible individual obtained his firearm through a default proceed transfer and committed the horrific mass shooting at Mother Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina. This is why the “default proceed” rule is also known as the “Charleston loophole.”

New data released through a Freedom of Information Act request made by Everytown for Gun Safety highlights how the danger caused by the “default proceed” rule has been compounded during the COVID-19 pandemic.[5] In March 2020 alone, it is estimated that at least 1,138 delayed background checks resulted in a firearm being obtained by prohibited purchaser because of this rule. The actual number for this one month may actually be significantly higher given delays in state and local offices. For reference, an estimated 3,960 prohibited purchasers obtained firearms this way in all of 2018.[6] As law enforcement agencies face shrinking budgets, staffing shortages, and new challenges in the face of this unprecedented pandemic, submitting complete records to NICS may be more burdensome than ever. Given the surge in gun sales, however, it should be a top priority. It is imperative that the records upon which the background check system relies be complete, accurate, and up-to-date. Two years ago we came together in a bipartisan fashion to pass the Fix NICS Act to improve our NICS recordkeeping system and reauthorize NCHIP. To facilitate the timely submission of records into NICS, an extra $20 million should be included for the National Criminal History Improvement Program in the next supplemental appropriations package. This flexible funding will ensure that states, state and local courts, local governments, and Tribes receive the guidance and resources they need to ensure that NICS operate effectively.

While additional funding for NCHIP is necessary given the current surge in firearm sales during this pandemic, it is only a short-term solution to a systemic problem. Five years ago, we first introduced the Background Check Completion Act, which would close the loophole by requiring a completed background check for every gun buyer who purchases a gun from a federally-licensed gun dealer. In the past five years, thousands of ineligible, dangerous people have been able to skirt around background checks and make illegal firearm purchases. The unprecedented numbers we now see today is a direct result of unjustifiable congressional inaction on this issue. It is beyond time for the Senate to take action and pass this legislation. No check, no sale must be the rule.

Prohibited purchasers put our communities in imminent danger. As gun sales continue to surge, we must provide additional funding to improve the submission of records into NICS in any future pandemic-legislation and work to pass the Background Check Completion Act in the immediate future. With these actions, we can keep firearms out of the hands of people who are prohibited from having them and, most importantly, save lives.

 

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Bridgeport News: Person Shot

UPDATE: Police say the came across a juvenile with a non-life-threatening gunshot to his jaw. He was transported to the hospital. Anyone with information on this incident is asked to contact the Bridgeport POlice at 203-576-TIPS.

 

2020-08-13@1:49am–#Bridgeport CT– Police are on the scene of a shooting in the 1400 block of Stratford Avenue.  No word on the victim’s condition.

 

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Look Who’s DoingItLocal!

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AG WANTS UNITED ILLUMINATING TO REIMBURSE CONSUMERS FOR COST OF LOST FOOD AND PRESCRIPTIONS

#Hartford, CT– Attorney General William Tong today urged Eversource and United Illuminating to do the right thing and immediately reimburse consumers for lost food and prescriptions using shareholders, not ratepayer funds.

 

“Eversource and UI need to do the right thing as ConEd has done in New York and reimburse consumers now for lost food and prescriptions. This needs to come out of shareholders—not ratepayer—funds. They have millions of dollars in profits they can use to cover this cost immediately without putting the burden back on ratepayers. Families were already struggling to pay for groceries before this storm. No one should go hungry because Eversource and UI didn’t do their jobs,” said Attorney General Tong.

 

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Reminders and Information on Power Restoration

Westport, CT – The following message was issued by First Selectman Jim Marpe, the Department of Public Works (DPW) and the Westport Emergency Response Team today:

Most roads are passable and maybe detoured if crews are in the area clearing debris.

Currently, 0.32 percent, or approximately 41, of Westport’s Eversource customers are without power. Those customers and others with specific outage issues are being addressed as quickly as possible.

  • Due to the heatwave and for those in need, the Cooling Center at Greens Farms Elementary School (17 Morningside Drive South) is open today from 11 AM to 5 PM. The entrance is located on the left side of the building by the bus loop.  Please wear a face covering and maintain social distance recommendations.

  • Homeowners should contact electricians to manage individual issues, such as wires that have been pulled from the home or electrical panels. These situations require a certified electrician to re-attach those wires. Neither Eversource crews or Town DPW crews are qualified to re-attach or service individual home electric panels.

 

Cable & Internet Service

 

If your power has been restored and your cable/internet access remains down, please contact your provider. Those providers rely upon electrical restoration or pole re-installation before their services can be addressed. Some fiber cables have been compromised. Town officials are also in contact with providers to encourage the facilitation of those services.

Optimum (also known as Cablevision/Altice) has reported that teams have been deployed around the clock restoring services as quickly as possible.  The percentage of customers in Connecticut without Optimum service due to the storm has fallen from more than 44% to less than 4% today.  Optimum would also like to share the following restoration tips with our residents:

Service Restoration:  Trouble Shooting Tips 

If you experienced a loss of power, it is best to restart your equipment using the following steps:

  • Unplug your equipment from its power source.
  • Wait 30 seconds.
  • Plug your equipment back into the power source.

If your service does not return after restarting, it is possible that:

  • The power that feeds our network in your area comes from a different commercial power source than the power that feeds your home or business location or there is another issue relating to network power that needs to be addressed.   We are coordinating with the electric companies to identify these issues and ensure the prioritization of repair or restoration.
  • There is damage to the Optimum network, like a downed utility pole or wire break, and our crews are proactively working to rectify this type of damage to restore service.

Optimum has created the opportunity for customers to check on service status online by doing the following:

  • Go to optimum.net/support/outage and sign in with Optimum ID and password. Next, under Support, located in the upper right corner, click “Service status”

Report Service Issues:

If you are experiencing a service issue, Optimum has created four channels for you to advise us of your issue.  Contacting Optimum via any of these channels will result in a trouble ticket being created that will direct a repair team to assess and address the issue:

 

Request A Credit:

Customers may submit a request for a credit by completing the information at optimum.net/support/request-a-credit

 

Safety Information:

 

Homeowners are often seriously injured trying to do their own post-storm cleanup work.

  • Consider consulting a professional before undertaking any major restoration or tree / large limb removal.

  • Do not use a chain saw if you are not experienced in properly and safely operating it, or if you are not physically fit.  If you must use a chainsaw, work only on the ground, not in a tree.

  • Use extreme caution when using ladders.

  • Stay safe in hot weather, hydrate, and pace yourself.

  • Westport Yard Waste Site at Bayberry Lane is open for those who wish to discard tree limbs and branches.

Food safety reminders: 

  • Any food remaining in a refrigerator or freezer during the outage should be considered contaminated. Do not rely upon appearance or smell to determine if it is safe to consume. When in doubt, throw it out.
  • When power comes back on, clean out your refrigerator and freezer BEFORE you put new food in it.  Wash the inside of the refrigerator and freezer with soap and warm water then wipe with a mild solution of ½ tablespoon bleach in a gallon of water. Keep doors open to allow to dry. Once dry, allow the unit to get cold before placing food inside.

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LEGISLATION TO EXPAND VETERANS’ MENTAL HEALTH RESOURCES

WASHINGTON, DC] – The Senate unanimously passed the Commander John Scott Hannon Veterans Mental Health Care Improvement Act last week, bipartisan legislation to improve veterans’ mental health services, which includes a provision authored by U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) to expand the Department of Veterans Affairs’ (VA) suicide prevention media outreach campaigns. Applauding the bill’s passage, Blumenthal released the following statement:

 

This issue unites us all. We’ve all seen the devastating impacts on our community from mental health, post-traumatic stress, traumatic brain injuries. Connecticut’s own Staff Sergeant Tyler Michael Reeb, who served as a sniper on various tours in the Marine Corps, took his own life in October of last year. His is one of countless heartbreaking stories, evidence of the failure of our mental health system to help those who gave their lives – literally – for our nation. This bill provides many critically – potentially lifesaving – programs and funding for veterans who may suffer from the invisible wounds of war. I will keep fighting to make sure it becomes law.”

  

The Senate passed this comprehensive mental health package to provide critical programs and funding to strengthen access to mental health services for our country’s veterans. The bill includes a provision based on the Reach Every Veteran in Crisis Act, authored by Blumenthal. This provision would improve the operation, oversight, and evaluation of its suicide prevention media outreach campaigns. It adopts several recommendations from the Government Accountability Office (GAO), which reported in December 2018 that the VA’s suicide prevention outreach activities had “dropped off in 2017 and 2018.” The provision establishes targets to evaluate the efficacy of its mental health and suicide prevention outreach campaigns and creates a process to oversee VA’s suicide prevention media outreach campaigns.

 

The Senate-passed Commander John Scott Hannon Veterans Mental Health Care Improvement Act also includes provisions long-supported by Blumenthal to authorize a report on expanding care for veterans with other-than-honorable discharges who are currently ineligible to receive VA benefits and to strengthen support for service members transitioning from military to civilian life.

 

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Westport Police Make Stolen Motor Vehicle Arrest

#Westport, CT– On Tuesday August 11, 2020 at approximately 2:33am, Westport Police dispatch received a complaint of motor vehicle burglaries from a residence on Richmondville Avenue. The complainant reported that he had initially heard a vehicle speeding away from the area of his home. He then observed that multiple unlocked vehicles parked in his driveway had apparently been entered, noting that their interior lights were illuminated.

 

A responding officer initially observed a group of three vehicles traveling together a short distance from the location of the reported incident. Upon seeing the marked police cruiser all three vehicle operators turned off their headlamps in an apparent attempt to elude officers; fleeing the immediate area at a high rate of speed and traveling north on Weston Road toward the town line. Officers did not engage in pursuit. The officer who initially spotted these three vehicles was able to obtain a description of two of the three. This information was relayed to other responding officers who maintained a perimeter around the area.

 

A short time after the initial sighting of the two vehicles, a Cadillac Escalade and a Honda CRV-V, both returned to Westport heading southbound on Weston Road. An officer had positioned himself on Weston Road near the entrance ramps to the Merritt Parkway believing that the vehicles would travel back in that direction. At this time, he was able to successfully deploy a stop stick tire deflation device that was then struck by both of these vehicles as they passed his location. Both then entered the Merritt Parkway northbound at slow speeds with the officer following. It was confirmed through computer checks of their registrations that both vehicles were previously reported stolen and that both had been left unlocked with keys in the vehicles at the time of theft. The Cadillac had been stolen out of the town of Trumbull, Connecticut, and the Honda out of the town of Shelton, Connecticut. The Cadillac Escalade continued northbound on the Parkway, while the Honda CR-V exited into Fairfield with a Westport officer following. Shortly after exiting into Fairfield, the vehicle’s tires had fully deflated causing it to come to a stop. At that time four occupants were detained. The operator was identified as Tyjon Preston, age 18, of New Haven, Connecticut. He was in the company of three juveniles, also residing in New Haven, Connecticut. The Cadillac Escalade was recovered by the Connecticut State Police on Interstate 95 in the area of exit 30. It was unoccupied at the time of recovery. Found within the Honda CR-V that 20:47 2 had been recovered by Westport Police was an ignition key to a GMC Acadia. The matching GMC Acadia was located on Weston Road shortly thereafter within the town of Weston; also unoccupied. It was subsequently confirmed as having been stolen out of Easton, Connecticut. It too had been left unlocked with the key left in the vehicle at the time of theft. This was presumably the third vehicle that had been seen traveling with the Cadillac and Honda as was initially observed by the Westport Officer.

 

Tyjon Preston was taken into custody and subsequently charged with 53a-122 Larceny First Degree. Bond was set at $600.00. Preston was able to post this bond and was released. He is scheduled to appear at Norwalk Superior Court at 9:00am on Wednesday, September 30, 2020. The three juveniles that had been in the vehicle with Preston were not immediately charged as this investigation continues. They were released to the custody of parents. Although officers were successful in apprehending these individuals, this is not usually the case, as motor vehicle burglaries and stolen vehicles have become an all too common occurrence within our community in recent weeks. Although detailed in a prior press release by this agency, expect an additional follow-up message in the coming days that will continue to highlight the gravity of this situation and the urgent need for proactivity by our residents in taking preventative measures to avert further victimization.

 

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LEGAL ACTIONS TO HOLD EVERSOURCE AND UNITED ILLUMINATING ACCOUNTABLE FOR FAILED STORM RESPONSE

Hartford, CT) – In a series of motions filed Tuesday, Attorney General William Tong escalated his legal actions to hold Eversource and United Illuminating accountable for their failed storm response.  In a motion before the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority – which by law serves as the principal regulator and legal forum in which to make claims against the utilities – Attorney General Tong demanded once again that PURA open a contested case and prudence review– legal proceedings which would enable the Attorney General to make the strongest claims on behalf of ratepayers and the state; seek fines, penalties and injunctive relief; and oppose the utilities’ requests for profits and reimbursement of storm-related costs. Failure by PURA to do so at the onset of the investigation could “set the stage for an endless series of related proceedings taking years to reach conclusion,” Attorney General Tong cautioned.

Separately, Attorney General Tong filed his first series of interrogatories as part of PURA’s investigation, asking the companies for detailed information regarding their storm preparation and management.

Attorney General Tong filed a motion last Thursday urging PURA to expand the scope and structure of its investigation to allow for the strongest and swiftest possible penalties. PURA denied that motion Friday, and the Office of the Attorney General is now seeking reconsideration of that denial. Back in 2011, PURA similarly constrained the scope of its investigation, and pointed to those self-imposed limitations as the reason for fines that fell far short of what the Office of the Attorney General and ratepayers had demanded.

The Office of the Attorney General will be aggressively involved in every step of the PURA proceeding on behalf of ratepayers who deserve full accountability, including the potential for restitution for customer losses, fines and other penalties, for Eversource and United Illuminating’s failures.

“Consumers are justifiably outraged by the unacceptable response to this storm, and we are relying on PURA’s investigation for answers and accountability. After the 2011 storms, ratepayers invested millions of dollars in communications upgrades, tree trimming, and system resiliency to prevent exactly this kind of debacle. Why were Eversource and United Illuminating so woefully underprepared once again? They owe all of us a detailed explanation for their staffing policies, their weather forecasting, the models and simulations they used to test their IT systems, and more. PURA must clearly and unequivocally preserve all possible options to impose the strongest fines and penalties without delay. I will use the full weight of my authority throughout this investigation to hold Eversource and UI accountable for this stunning failure,” said Attorney General Tong.

The full list of questions is copied below.

  1. Please provide a copy of your current Emergency Response Plan (“ERP”) together with all supporting documents.
  1. Please provide a high-level summary of the Company’s management of Tropical Storm Isaias (the “Storm”) that occurred during the period August 2, 2020 up to and through complete system restoration and repair. Include the following:
  1. A detailed timeline and description of the steps the Company took to prepare for the Storm, including what efforts were made when to solicit assistance from contractors and mutual assistance from other utilities;
  2. Identify any factors unique to the Storm that hindered service restoration efforts;
  3. Any factors that constrained resource deployment during restoration efforts; and
  4. Descriptions of the methods the Company used to track, prioritize and repair outages during and after the Storm period.  Include a detailed description of the methods the Company employed to efficiently coordinate its own crews, crews acquired by mutual assistance, contractors and town emergency response resources such as tree removal crews working for municipalities.
  1. Please provide an accounting of the number of line crews and other personnel assigned to storm restoration duties (referred to herein as “work crews”) from August 3, 2020 through the completion of the restoration effort.  Include at least one data point every eight hours throughout the Storm and restoration period.  Provide this data differentiated by the smallest possible geographical level of detail.  Include the Company’s own personnel, contractors, and line crews obtained through mutual assistance from other utilities. Additionally, state the maximum current number of Company field staff available for service restoration in Connecticut, differentiated by job function.
  1. Please describe all advance preparations for the management, supervision and oversight of the work crews identified in response to AG-3.
  1. Describe the management, supervision and oversight of the work crews identified in response to AG-3.  Please include in this response:

Continue reading LEGAL ACTIONS TO HOLD EVERSOURCE AND UNITED ILLUMINATING ACCOUNTABLE FOR FAILED STORM RESPONSE

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