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President Clinton planned to express his desire today in Annapolis, where he was participating in a signing ceremony for a bill that made Maryland the first state in the nation to require by law built-in locks on handguns and other stringent gun-control rules, for a similar nationwide act. The event also kicks off Clinton^s outside-the-Beltway bid to push Congress to pass his stalled gun safety proposals. "This shouldn^t be the only signing ceremony going on this year. We should have one," said White House legislative adviser Joel Johnson. Clinton is taking a similar message Wednesday to Colorado, to help push a ballot initiative asking voters to approve a requirement that all gun-show gun sales, including those by unlicensed dealers, be subject to background checks. Initially, the White House had hoped Congress would pass gun legislation before April 20, the one-year anniversary of the Columbine High School massacre. Now, aides have resigned themselves to missing that deadline and are aiming for passage before year^s end. The Maryland bill, passed April 3, requires built-in locks on new handguns sold as of Jan. 1, 2003, and external locks on all handguns sold in the state as of Oct. 1 of this year. It sets a mandatory minimum sentence of five years for illegal firearms possession by felons convicted of a violent or drug crime, and bars those convicted of a violent crime as a juvenile from possessing a handgun until age 30. Also, police agencies would not be able to sell confiscated guns, gun makers would have to provide a ballistic fingerprint of shell casings of every new gun, and gun buyers would have to pass a two-hour safety course. Clinton planned to use Maryland^s bill, and recent moves by a handful of other states, to illustrate the need for national gun safety legislation. As he has consistently, he was blaming Congress^ delay on pressure from the National Rifle Association. Congress had plans of its own today: a House vote on Project Exile, a program that sends $100 million in block grants to states that impose mandatory sentences for gun crimes. The legislation emerged as a rallying point for critics of Clinton^s gun proposals, who say his administration should be focused more on the type of enforcement Project Exile represents. "Since the Clinton-Gore administration refuses to prosecute, it^s time Congress takes it upon itself to start protecting Americans from gun violence," said Jim Nicholson, chairman of the Republican National Committee. "Congress has an opportunity to accomplish a rare feat, and I hope that it^s a unanimous vote for what most Americans want, and that is tough enforcement," said NRA spokesman Bill Powers. "Our members are looking forward to a great vote in the House." The White House disputed the lax enforcement argument, calling the Project Exile vote "purely political" and saying Congress has sat on Clinton^s $280 million proposal to hire 1,000 new gun prosecutors and 500 new Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agents. Aides did not dismiss Project Exile out of hand, saying only that it should not be used to supplant further funding of enforcement. "I don^t think there^s anything in there we find objectionable or offensive. It^s just too little," Johnson said. "We shouldn^t be talking about how little we can get away with doing." ---

Uploaded: 4/11/2000