Even the Mildest Form of Gun Control Could Have Prevented the Odessa Shooting

Photo credit: Cengiz Yar - Getty Images
Photo credit: Cengiz Yar - Getty Images

From Esquire

One of the current enthusiasms through which our government attempts to address this country's insane affection for its firearms is something called a "red-flag law." Basically, these laws allow courts to remove firearms from those people shown to be a threat to themselves and others. States—17 of them now—have been passing them for a while against the usual resistance from the usual quarters. Generally, however, they pass with considerable bipartisan support, largely because they seem relatively immune from the gun-fondling lobby's hatred for laws that make sense. Even Mitch McConnell expressed qualified support for the laws, and that was before Seth Ator went on his killing spree in west Texas. From the AP via ABC:

She said the orders have been used to protect people from "all walks of life," including students, employees, intimate partners, parents and children. Those disarmed by red flag orders include a man who made online threats of a mass shooting at a gay bar, a man who told a family member he was going to kill Muslims, and a man who made disturbing statements about guns and immigrants. To grant a final order under California's law, a judge must find evidence that the person poses "significant danger."

While the thwarted mass shootings get most of the publicity, red-flag laws have proven to be valuable in reducing gun-related suicides, which is an element of the gun debate too often ignored by the people who get paid to fight things like this. If the Republicans need to demonstrate that they are willing to do something about the national bloodletting prior to the 2020 elections, background checks and red-flag laws are perfect compromise measures. They are relatively mild and they enjoy overwhelming public support. All of this, of course, depends on the whims of an increasingly unmoored president*, whose internal chicken switch is delicately attuned to whatever the NRA wants. It's already caused him to back off on background checks and Mitch McConnell has said he won't move without White House support. Generally, the Republicans can't quit the NRA because the political withdrawal symptoms are too horrible to contemplate.

Photo credit: Cengiz Yar - Getty Images
Photo credit: Cengiz Yar - Getty Images

Which is too bad because, as we said, things like red-flag laws are the mildest form of gun-control as can be imagined. And the reason that they're mild is that they make too much sense. Thanks to some great reporting from JohnMcCormick of the San Antonio Express-News, we learn that Seth Ator pretty much was dressed in red flags for some time.

Ator lived in a metal shack that lacked electricity, plumbing, a floor and even furniture. The shack was on a piece of property he apparently owned on the far west side of Ector County. For electricity, he sometimes relied on generators. On cold nights, his neighbors said, he would sleep in his car with the motor running. His home is about 20 miles from downtown Odessa, on an unmarked caliche road off Kermit Highway and amid nodding pump jacks and property covered with sage, mesquite and huisache trees. Crime-scene tape still surrounded Ator’s property Monday. This is where many oil field workers live in the booming Permian Basin oil fields. It is the graceless side of the energy economy, a cluttered zone of mobile homes, oil tanks, service trucks, salvage yards and endless commercial metal buildings.Known to his closest neighbors as “El Loco,” the crazy one, Ator kept to himself. The nickname was partly a joke and partly an expression of community unease. “He had no communication with anyone. It was the way he acted. I thought, this person is not well,” said a neighbor who declined to be identified. “While he seemed to me to have an emotional problem, I never could have imagined him doing something like this.”

Ator did not exchange greetings, did not have visitors at his home and spent a lot of time shooting his black rifle from a second-floor window into the field below. Neighbors sometimes heard loud rock music... “When we first moved in seven months ago, he struck us as something new, but we got used to him,” said Salet Holguin, 24, who lives nearby. “He wasn’t friendly. My husband told me that if he ever came over here, to not open the door.”... On the one occasion she felt threatened, when he paid her an angry visit armed with his black rifle, she called the Sheriff’s Office, but authorities could not find the location and did not arrive...“He scared me when he came over with that rifle, and all the children were around,” she said. She said she and her husband have six children...“The owner told me that when he first moved in, he had a wife and kids,” she said...They also said he no longer resembled the healthy, grinning man depicted in a 2001 police mug shot, from when he was arrested in Waco on charges of criminal trespass and evading arrest. He later failed a firearms background check and was prevented from buying a gun. It was unclear how he obtained the rifle he used Saturday. “He had longer hair, he was thin and he had teardrop tattoos on his face,” said Cesar Garcia, 29, who lives nearby.

The guy was in a spiral. His neighbors knew it. The local police knew it. God knows, somewhere amid the dark stalactites of his mind, he knew it, too. And one day, the spiral ended in that place where too many of those spirals end. We really ought to do something about that some day.

Respond to this post on the Esquire Politics Facebook page here.

You Might Also Like