The guns used last week to end four lives in Burnsville should have never been in the hands of the man who unleashed more than 100 rifle rounds during an hourslong standoff.
It is still not publicly known what types of firearms or ammunition Shannon Cortez Gooden used to kill two Burnsville police officers, the paramedic who tried to save them and finally himself. But whatever weapons the 38-year-old man reached for, he was barred by law from possessing them because of a previous assault conviction.
The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) — with assistance from federal law enforcement authorities — is investigating how Gooden obtained the firearms and arsenal of ammunition he deployed in the chaotic standoff at his home on Feb. 18. But people banned from possessing guns have vast opportunity to get their hands on them. And those ordered to relinquish their firearms are often bound by an imperfect enforcement process — a process some critics call an “honor system.”
“If I had 100 defendants in my courtroom and I told them all that they have one hour to go buy a firearm and get back to the courtroom, 95 of them could do it,” said Chief U.S. District Judge Patrick Schiltz.
State and federal law carve out prohibitions for gun ownership in cases such as felony convictions, misdemeanor domestic violence convictions, involuntary commitments for mental illness and controlled substance abuse.
But people prohibited from owning guns or ammunition can still obtain them through theft or by buying illegally trafficked weapons and ammo. They also can get them through “straw purchasing” — where they enlist another person legally able to buy firearms to do so on their behalf, a state and federal crime.
Law enforcement officials in recent years have also increasingly investigated cases involving privately made firearms, or ghost guns, which can be assembled at home and often without serial numbers.
The BCA has not disclosed how or when Gooden acquired his guns. One of the two women with whom Gooden had children but was not living with him, told the Star Tribune on Friday that she did not know how he obtained the weapons. She said she learned about them only after the shooting, which took place while children were inside the home.