Twenty Years Since a Nightmare: Stockton, CA School Shooting of 35 Led to Strengthening...

* Reuters is not responsible for the content in this press release.

Thu Jan 15, 2009 2:51pm EST

Twenty Years Since a Nightmare: Stockton, CA School Shooting of 35 Led to
Strengthening of Gun Laws

WASHINGTON, Jan. 15 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Twenty years ago this Saturday
in Stockton, a close-knit farm city in the heart of California's Central
Valley, a man with a history of arrests, mental illness and problems with
alcohol shot and killed five students and wounded twenty-nine others along
with a teacher at Cleveland Elementary School.  

The shooter, Patrick Purdy, spray-fired 106 rounds of ammunition in about two
minutes using an AK-47 assault rifle equipped with a 75-round ammunition drum.


The tragic shooting in 1989 spurred advocates and legislators in California
into action.  The California Legislature quickly passed the nation's first ban
on assault weapons.  And it was the beginning of a string of many legislative
victories in California during the next twenty years.

"Many people who were sitting on the sidelines on the gun issue finally said
'enough is enough' after the Stockton schoolyard shootings," said Paul Helmke.
 "The tragedy in Stockton helped to propel people into activism that has
resulted in California now having the strongest gun laws in the country."  The
latest victory was the cutting-edge microstamping measure that was signed into
law in 2007.

The Stockton schoolyard shooting and the deadly shooting at a high-rise office
building at 101 California Street in San Francisco in 1993 led to the
enactment of the Federal Assault Weapons Ban signed by President Clinton in
1994.  Congress and the Bush Administration allowed the law to expire in 2004.
 California, meanwhile, went on to strengthen its assault weapon law in 1999,
and now has the strongest ban on assault weapons in the country.

The significance of the Stockton shootings is not lost on the California Brady
Campaign Chapters.  

"Many of our advocates across the state recall the day of shootings in
Stockton," said Amanda Wilcox, President of the Sacramento Valley Chapter of
the Brady Campaign.  "Our chapter leaders and members continue to work for
sensible laws and policies that will further reduce gun violence in
California."  

The Brady Campaign opened up offices in California in the early 1990s in Los
Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco.  Now the Brady Campaign has twenty
California chapters that represent areas from Nevada County to San Diego.  
 
"Stockton was a critical moment in the history of the fight for sensible gun
laws in America," Helmke said.  "This week, the dedicated volunteers in this
movement are remembering those who suffered and those who lost a child there. 
We mourn for them and we renew our commitment to this important cause."

"Over the last twenty years California has made it harder for dangerous people
to get dangerous weapons.  We are working to make sure other states and
Congress heed California's example," Helmke concluded.

As the nation's largest, non-partisan, grassroots organization leading the
fight to prevent gun violence, the Brady Campaign, with its dedicated network
of Million Mom March Chapters, works to enact and enforce sensible gun laws,
regulations and public policies.  The Brady Campaign is devoted to creating an
America free from gun violence, where all Americans are safe at home, at
school, at work, and in our communities.  

Visit the Brady Campaign website at www.bradycampaign.org.  For continuing
insight and comment on the gun issue, read Paul Helmke's blog at
www.bradycampaign.org/blog/.  

Contact: Peter Hamm, 202-898-0792



SOURCE  Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence

Peter Hamm of Brady Campaign, +1-202-898-0792
Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.