May 21, 2010 5:59 PM

Chicago Mayor Regrets "Up Your Butt" Comment

By
CBSNews
Mayor Richard Daley speaks at a news conference in Chicago, Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2009. Attorney General Eric Holder (right) listens in the background.The recent beating death of a Chicago high school student has brought U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Dunc

Mayor Richard Daley speaks at a news conference in Chicago, Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2009. Attorney General Eric Holder (right) listens in the background.The recent beating death of a Chicago high school student has brought U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Dunc (AP Photo/John Smierciak)

(CBS 2 Chicago)  Mayor Richard M. Daley said Friday that he regrets his choice of words when he suggested he'd stick a rifle with a bayonet up a reporter's "butt," but he said he was trying to "shock" the media into exposing gun manufacturers who flood the streets with firearms.

"I want to shock you, maybe scare you, to realize this is serious," he said.

Asked if he was sorry for how he went about illustrating his point, Daley said, "Sure I'll be sorry... I'm not going to sing the song 'I'm Sorry' now, but sure, you can write it. But I hope I shocked you that you can write about now the gun manufacturers."

The mayor said the focus should not be on his remarks, but about the impact of gun violence in urban America.

The mayor was talking about his controversial remarks on Thursday during a news conference on the city's handgun ban and what the city plans to do if the U.S. Supreme Court overturns the ban this summer.

At that news conference, Chicago Reader reporter Mick Dumke asked Daley if the ban has been effective, given how many people are shot in the city every year. The mayor responded by picking up a rifle with a bayonet from among several seized guns that Chicago police had put on display.

"It's been very effective," Daley said as he held the rifle. "If I put this up your butt, you'll find out how effective it is. Let me put a round up your, you know."

Daley said without the gun ban, people would be in danger from people with weapons such as the one he picked up. But since such weapons can be confiscated, lives have been saved, he said.

On Friday, Daley said he didn't go into Thursday's news conference planning to shock reporters, but believed his outburst would spur more discussion about gun violence.

Asked what prompted him to pick up the rifle in the first place, Daley said, "It was a gun with a bayonet. … just think, a gun with a bayonet. What is a bayonet used for?"

When a reporter pointed out bayonets are not traditionally used for sticking up someone's butt, Daley said, "you stick it everyplace."

Daley added that he wants the news media to report more stories about gun manufacturers that are filling the streets with firearms.

"Why is it that the media is silent as to who the gun manufacturers are?" he said.

"I hope we don't just become complacent," Daley said of gun violence. "We should be outraged. We should be shocked."

"I want you to be as passionate as I am," he added.

Daley said at the Thursday event that he is hopeful that the city will prevail in the pending case McDonald v. Chicago, which challenges the city's 28-year-old handgun ban on Second Amendment grounds. But if the city does not prevail, the mayor is calling for new ordinances to regulate guns.

Daley discussed requiring gun owners to buy insurance or take firearms training classes, as well as "look for new ways to challenge gun manufacturers."

"You have to go through driver's ed, you have to get a license, you have to pass a test for drivers, but you really don't have to do anything to own a gun," Daley said.

Daley lauded Illinois lawmakers for passing several "common-sense gun laws" recently. The new laws require mandatory minimum jail time for gang members caught with illegal guns, and increase penalties for shooting on or near school grounds or public transportation. A new interstate gun trafficking task force has also been established.

He added that fighting the gun industry is often futile, because of its immunity to civil litigation.

The Supreme Court heard arguments in March in McDonald v. Chicago, which challenges handgun bans in the city of Chicago and in Oak Park. The suit also asks the high court to extend to state and local jurisdictions the sweep of its 2008 decision in the District of Columbia v. Heller case, which struck down a gun ban in the federal enclave of Washington, D.C.

In Heller v. D.C., the court ruled that the Second Amendment gives individuals a right to possess guns for self-defense and other purposes, but presently, that decision only applied to federal laws, such as those of Washington, D.C. But the court has ruled that most of the rest of the Bill of Rights applies to state and local governments.

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by VoteThemOut2010 May 27, 2010 10:33 AM EDT
An 80-year-old Chicago man shot and killed an armed man who broke into his two-story house in a pre-dawn home invasion Wednesday on the city's West Side.

At about 5:20 a.m., the homeowner and his wife, also in her 80s, discovered the intruder entering their home through a back door. The homeowner, who had a gun, confronted and killed the burglar on the doorstep, police said. Cops said the intruder also fired his gun during the struggle.

"It's a good thing they had a gun, or they might be dead," said Curtis Thompson, who lives next door to the couple, the Chicago Sun-Times reported.

GOOD SHOT ! ! !
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by whjohnsonjr May 27, 2010 10:20 AM EDT
Mayor Daily is a not-very bright-fellow who would not have been elected if not for his father's name. This country loves to have mini monarchies whenever possible. To hell with competency.

Someone with a famous name should have a greater expectation from the public--not an assumed ability that is usually absent.
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by Dusty5309 May 26, 2010 4:45 PM EDT
Why wasn?t the Mayor charged with Aggravated Assault? According to Illinois criminal law, an assault is the threat of physical harm or battery that puts a person in fear of harm or injury. That action may be charged as an aggravated assault if you use, threaten to use, or brandish a weapon. (See Illinois Assault laws 720 ILCS Sec. 12-1 and 12-2.)
Clearly that is exactly what the Mayor did; he brandished a weapon (the bayonet) and threatened grave bodily harm to the reporter. Surely a police officer witnessed this, why was he not arrested?
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by Perish1 May 22, 2010 7:29 PM EDT
Did the mayor first check to see if the gun was loaded before brandishing it at anyone? If the weapon had a bayonet, it was probably stolen from some law abiding gun owner or collector. That city has a problem with crime that won't be addressed by talking down gun manufacturers who are already struggling against foreign competition that could care less about some Chicago mayor. Like most crime ridden communities, they need to quit playing the blame game and start looking at their problem internally.
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by Perish1 May 22, 2010 7:25 PM EDT
Did the mayor first check to see if the gun was loaded before brandishing it at anyone? If the weapon had a bayonet, it was probably stolen from some law abiding gun owner or collector. That city has a problem with crime that won't be addressed by talking down gun manufacturers who are already struggling against foreign competition that could care less about some Chicago mayor. Like most crime ridden communities, they need to quit playing the blame game and start looking at their problem internally.
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by Dgunner May 22, 2010 1:31 PM EDT
Nothing cuts deeper than a sharp tongue. Bill Clinton sent two ATF agents to the Cousel Of the Great Nation of the Cherokee to investigate thier suposed cache of weapons. The agents reported , qoute" Mr. President it would take one hundred agent one thousand days to gather the arms of the Cherokee Nation, if they wanted thier arms gathered." unqoute.To simply single out one city is ludricous at best.How many murders were on the resevation last decade ? Three.Chicago? I stopped counting at fifty in just one year.
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by tsigili May 22, 2010 1:23 PM EDT
It isn't the guns. The guns have ALWAYS been here. It is the people, and the fact we do NOTHING about the people.

If we didn't protct the criminals and gang members and allow them to roam our streets, we would NOT have a problem.

You can thank your lawyer, and judge, friends for that!!! If you want your streets back for decent people, the solution is simple......reform the judicial system!
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by CZ452 May 22, 2010 8:05 AM EDT
What a ****** Daley is and Chicago is a dump nothing is going to change that fact. How many GUNS does Daley have protecting him in his GUN FREE Utopia? Now I am off to step OUTSIDE my door and shoot :) see I am a FREE MAN in a FREE Country and that is what FREE people do. Sucks to be you Chicago lol.
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by brianbwb2011 May 22, 2010 11:10 AM EDT
Don't forget to put the open end in your mouth first, even one less bagger improves America.
by larrryshrine May 22, 2010 4:22 AM EDT
Gotta love free speech:)
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by wdh3007 May 22, 2010 2:30 AM EDT
Maybe Daley was speaking to some illegal aliens from Arizona? anyway it's surprizing that he would know where is own butt is much less anyone's else's.
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