Hello,
I am happy to explain the technology. I am also willing to get into details.
First, if people do not believe in the honesty of 99.9% of law enforcement, I am certain I will not be able to convince everyone of the merits, but I will try.
Costs:
The codes are activated, i.e. stored into the ERP/MRP system when the serial number is logged in, at the manufacturing site (firearm manufacturers assembly floor). There is no added cost, other than the bar-code is swiped off the part when it is kitted to the firearm assembly. This is part of normal linking of the serial number.
All info is at the manufacturer, unless it is logged into the BATF Access2000 computer which was adopted by four different firearm manufacturers. Other than that, BATF has to do its trace the same way, no new database.
Rights:
The microstamping is linked to the serial number, not sure how my rights change, if a firearm has the stamp or not. Remember, the way firearms are matched now are by the unintentional markings. Scratches and dings, which would still need to be done once a firearm is recovered.
Ballistic Imaging:
The Failures of MD and NY are due to the fact that 99.9% of gun owners do not commit heinous crimes and that imaging technology is flawed. Microstamping is a passive device, not active and only shows up if found at a crime scene.
Stolen Firearms:
I agree stolen firearms constitute a source of crime firearms. However, from what I have been briefed on, a majority of stolen firearms are acquired through organized theft rings, who stake out firing ranges, rifle clubs and gun stores. They will identify an owner than follow them home, monitor the gun owners schedule and then burglarize the home. Same with gun stores.
The rest are straw purchasers. With the balance being the original purchaser / owner.
In Ireland, I have read that in a four year period, nearly 1100 firearms were stolen as described above. (Mostly rifles)
What does microstamping do?:
Mapping. The saying goes "you don't go to war unless you have good maps." Same goes for targeting criminal enterprises that traffic in drugs, humans and firearms.
Tactical mapping is a method of deploying law enforcement more effectively. You should go to this site,
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/nij/maps/briefingbook.html, to get an overview on mapping and why having "fresh INTEL" is important to targeting trafficking and criminal trafficking networks.
I am not sure I can explain it to your satisfaction, but I think this is a worthwhile endeavor in supporting law enforcement. Like I stated, I am bias, but this allows law enforcement the chance to plot data and analyze trafficking patterns as soon as the firearm is used in a crime, which means that the source point is easier to identify or the source location, which goes back to theft rings operating in certain regions, counties or towns. Microstamping is trying to shorten the time to crime, so that the information on the pattern is fresh, instead of 3 to 8 years old.
Financial Gain:
The firearm industry will be given a royalty free license covering semi-automatic handguns for commercial applications (i.e. semi-auto guns sold to citizens and law enforcement).
I have of laugh at why you attack my rights grant to me as an inventor. One of the greatest founding fathers, Benjamin Franklin, left us the institution of patents and the personal right of a patent to protect the ideas of individual citizens.
He made it clear that the only one who can get a patent is an individual person. A corporation can not get a patent. A corporation can purchase the rights to a patent or hold can have the rights of a patent transferred to itself, but it can not create or be awarded a patent. The right can only be given to an inventor.
Mikey's Comments:
Tattoo a chicken, it is not quite analogous, but, Ok.
The key is firearms don't kill people ... people kill people. I think we can all agree on that. The issue is how do you stop the flow of firearms to criminals? You seek sources of INTEL or "Data" that you can analyze to provide "situational awareness" of a region, county, town and right down to a street if the data is good.
You should read Appendix J of the 2006 Army field manual, For Infantry Rifle Company. It shows you how important INTEL is to any situation.
The issue with your analogies is that in every case you have witnesses. Dad is sick, he's got mad cow, he ate with us at burger joint A, Burger joint A was working off shipment #23 of meat that week, shipment #23 was from lot #454 that was source from China Meats .. etc, etc.
If you have 45% of murders where there are no witnesses, but cartridges are left at the scene and you want to cut the flow of firearms, where do you start? Once again firearms don't kill people, people kill people. Most of these random killings have ties to organized gangs or other criminal networks. Each layer or map is intermingled. If you can have the firearm leave a lead to allow law enforcement to track the firearm to the source, you are able to identify where it came from and how far it traveled before being used in a crime. INTEL is key to narrowing in on the network.
The more data points, the better the map, the easier to identify the network.
As shifting criminal to knives that is a good outcome. I understand the technology doesn't work on revolvers as well as flintlock pistols.
I am not sure why people would be concerned about providing this data point, since it is the same as the serial number if your firearm is stolen.
Best regards,
Todd Lizotte