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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (April 28, 2017)
Page 10 Street Roots • April 28-May 4, 2017 Commentary cousu our fi A plea for I llillS H BY MARTHA GIES hold them hostage while cashing their checks. Instead, he shot them each twice in the head. Acremant has schizophrenia. The e are at the Lloyd Athletic Club, younger of the two victims was a cousin of and the conversation turns to new our friend. gun legislation introduced in the The Smith & Wesson .357-caliber Oregon Senate, when one of the people in pur group speaks up: “Four of my own revolver was identified as the source of the stray bullet that shot down Southwest cousins were shot to death.” Salmon Street, from Broadway to Second That gets our attention. This turns out to be a story that unfolded Avenue, and instantly killed a man who was walking hand-in-hand with his wife that June over two decades, involving four different 1997 evening. Five blocks west of the couple, 18-year-old Daniel Dejesus, in a branches of the family. scuffle with rival gang members, had And the guns? Not one of them should ever have been in the hands of the shooters snatched that gun from his buddy’s pocket and fired wildly. He was granted a sentence in the first place. Not even the NRA would reduction, thanks to the generosity of the argue with that. young widow, who refused to model a The .357-caliber revolver had been vengeful spirit to her young children. Yet stolen, along with a camera, from the home she was broken-hearted at the loss of her beloved spouse, who was a cousin of our had done some remodeling work. Two friend. months later, he carried that gun to a The short-barreled rifle was used popular Portland bar and music venue on execution style by Uriah Michael Dean Southeast Belmont where, by previous McKinley, who was loaded on arrangement, his half-sister unlocked the methamphetamine when he shot a former door for him after closing time, in the early employer in the head on Dec. 2, 2013, hours of March 21, 1995. In the course of stealing the $500 that lay in the till, he shot having heard the man had come into some money. The victim, age 30, lived in and killed the 32-yearold beverage manager Silverton and was a cousin of our friend. who had almost finished cleaning up for the Communities work together to eliminate night. She was the mother of two young exposure to lead and asbestos, and children - and a cousin of our friend. automobile companies routinely issue safety The .25-caliber pistol had a homemade recalls for everything from desiccated air silencer that Robert James Acremant had bag inflators to faulty brakes. We are a made himself. He told Medford police that he’d had it for years, but only recently came society that cares about safety, especially if a product, instrument or substance might up with the idea of killing someone. On C O N T R IB U T IN G W R IT E R ■ tililS i Dec. 4, 1995, he used it to abduct two women, ages 42 and 53, who ran a Medford property management firm, thinking to , v market. Just this Easter, Target recalled over half a million Hatch & Grow toys that, if ingested, could expand inside a child’s body and cause intestinal obstructions. Why then, whenever gun control laws are proposed, do we hear an argument that goes something like: “With such a glut of firearms already on the street, there is no point in trying to regulate gun sales now.” Why accept this fatalism? It’s true there is a glut- According to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the number of guns manufactured in the U.S. each year has recently almost doubled, from nearly 5.5 million in 2010 to nearly 10.9 million in 2013. Yes, the 300 million guns in this country - and these figures don’t count guns bought by the U.S. military - have become an enormous scourge. But we would never take a fatalistic attitude toward salmonella in food, drunken drivers on the road, or the current spike in heroin sales. And we won’t reduce gun deaths if we shrug our shoulders and walk 1 /A