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Local police: Mental health issues must be priority

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McHenry County Sheriff Keith Nygren agreed.

“We’ve created [the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act], and people are afraid to talk to each other,” he said. “There are so many restrictions on what we can share.”

Perhaps the most discussed and most politicized aspects of Obama’s proposals have been his push to reinstate an expired federal assault weapons ban, as well as restore the 10-round limit on ammunition magazines.

Algonquin Police Chief Russell Laine is a proponent of an assault weapon ban; he lobbied in Washington, D.C., when the last one expired in 2004.

He participated in an International Association of Chiefs of Police summit that issued a 2007 report that included a recommendation for banning military-style assault weapons, armor-piercing handgun ammunition, .50-caliber sniper rifles “and other weapons that enable criminals to outgun law enforcement.”

What purpose the guns serve needs to be considered, Laine said.

“Are they designed for hunting? I certainly have no problem with that,” he said. “Weapons and guns that are designed specifically for the purpose of killing people should be banned.”

It’s part of the challenge of crime in a free society, Nygren said.

“As Americans, we cherish our freedoms, as we should,” he said. “We’re talking about restricting our freedoms, in the eyes of many people who know they would never do anything wrong and they never will.”

Whatever action is taken, it needs to be based on solid research and data, Nygren said.

“We need to backtrack ... and look at the common denominators that seem to be underlying violence,” he said. “And if we can attack those things – it could be mental health issues – we’re going to be using our resources more effectively.”

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