I think there should be some liability for gun owners who fail to secure their weapons. Not criminal, but civil.
The old case that gets cited a lot has to do with someone leaving their car with the keys in the ignition. A young kid (not the car owner's) jumps in and puts the car in gear and causes property damage. The car owner is liable for the damage along with the kid.
There should have been repercussions for the parents of the Van Maur shooter, as well as the OPD officer who's sidearm was used at Millard South.
I have a significant issue with requiring one person to take responsibility for the actions of another.
Most people have a hard enough time handling their own self-control issues---expanding it to make you responsible for someone else's self-discipline (or lack thereof) seems like a bad idea.
Once you start that sort of thing, suddenly you get people judging you based on "whether or not you did ENOUGH" --- where said "enough" is based on whatever enough people vote for----and we KNOW that will be wrong.
A shop teacher in a high school has plenty of tools around. Once, during a study hall period, a student took an exacto knife from the shop and stabbed another kid in the shop. (This didn't happen in my current school, but a previous one.) Is it the teacher's fault?
I leave my car with the keys in it---and indeed, a kid jumps into and takes off, and then crashes. That is my fault? Really? Yeah, because kids don't know that is stupid. Right.
I have a gun at home, and an adult offspring takes it and goes and shoots someone. This is
my fault?
No.
Oh---for those people with kids at home (where the kid is at least a teenager): If you think they don't know the combination to your safe safe by now, you are deluding yourself. Seriously.
Think about it----you want to make a legal precedent that says that someone else's actions are YOUR FAULT. Someone
else.
What on earth makes you think you can control other people's actions?