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Protesters: Buying guns is too easy

Maggie Ybarra

Issue date: 4/17/08 Section: News
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Students Victor VanDoren and Elyse Forbes lie down to protest lax gun laws on the one-year anniversary of the Virginia Tech shootings.
Media Credit: Vanessa Sanchez / Daily Lobo
Students Victor VanDoren and Elyse Forbes lie down to protest lax gun laws on the one-year anniversary of the Virginia Tech shootings.

When Robert Forbes was a teenager, doctors diagnosed him with a mental illness.

But when a sporting goods store ran a background check on him when he wanted to buy a gun, a look into his medical records wasn't required, said Peter Forbes, Robert's father.

"He went out and bought a gun," he said. "He then went out to a sporting good store and bought ammunition, and then he killed himself. That's the story with our son."

Forbes and 31 people gathered at Smith Plaza on Wednesday to protest how easy it is to buy a gun.

The protesters dressed in black to honor the number of students who died last year at Virginia Tech. They laid on the plaza for three minutes, the time it takes to get a background check and buy a gun.

Forbes said background checks don't include a person's history of mental illness. If they did, his son would still be alive, and the massacre at Virginia Tech wouldn't have happened, he said.

"The bottom line is that our son, Robert, contracted a genetic mental illness in his late teens," he said. "He was actually getting better, but the thing is that he was committed by a judge to a mental hospital on four different occasions. So, there were plenty of records that he had a mental illness and that he should have been in the system."

Alumna Monique Garza said she participated to support Robert's family.

"They lost their son because it was too easy for him to get a gun," she said, "and my son was a very good friend of his."

Garza said people begin to pay attention to the message when it gets personal.

"When it hits close to home - that's what brings people out," she said.

Robyn Forbes, Robert's mother, said she participated because of the Web site ProtestEasyGuns.org. She said she was impressed by the group's founder, Abigail Spangler.

"Within five days after the Virginia Tech incident, she got her friends together and went in front of the courthouse and did this - and just started this movement," she said. "She's actually doing one today in front of the Supreme Court, and there's going to be hundreds of people there."

She said she hopes the movement will spread across America.

Peter Forbes said a shooting can happen at UNM if gun laws aren't changed.

"The odds are definitely - I hate to say - in favor of such a negative thing," he said.
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Viewing Comments 1 - 4 of 4

growler

mateo

posted 4/17/08 @ 9:39 AM MST

While I'm very sorry for the family's loss of their son, it had little or nothing to do with the current gun laws in effect today. I'm sure his parent were elated when he got his driver's license just as I'm sure if had gone out and bought a cheap car and drove it into a tree at 80 MPH they would say the driver's license process was flawed for allowing their son to buy a car. (Continued…)

garand

Jesse

posted 4/18/08 @ 12:52 AM MST

College campuses are something called soft targets. You have a bunch of people who have no means of defending themselves, they generally feel safe and are not always aware of their surroundings. (Continued…)

DaveBe

Dave Bergeron

posted 4/18/08 @ 11:24 AM MST

I too feel sorrow for the Forbes in the death of their son. Contrary to Ms Garza, Robert Forbes committed suicide because of his mental illness, not because he was able to buy a gun easily. (Continued…)

converse02

Converse02

posted 4/18/08 @ 11:30 PM MST

There are nations besides the US that are awash with guns, yet do not suffer the same high rate of gun violence as the US.

There is something with the culture that needs to be changed. (Continued…)

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