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Diaz was assistant managing editor of ''[[The Washington Times]]'' from 1985 to 1991. From 1991 to 1993 he worked at a think tank specializing in international organized crime and counter-terrorism. From 1993 to 1997 he was the lead Democratic counsel on counterterrorism and firearms issues for the Crime Subcommittee of the U.S. House of representatives, helping to conduct fact-finding hearings and write key antiterrorism and gun control legislation. He was also the lead Democratic counsel during 10 days of intensive House hearings in 1995 on the [[Waco Siege|events at the Branch Davidian church]] in [[Waco, Texas]] in 1993.
Diaz was assistant managing editor of ''[[The Washington Times]]'' from 1985 to 1991. From 1991 to 1993 he worked at a think tank specializing in international organized crime and counter-terrorism. From 1993 to 1997 he was the lead Democratic counsel on counterterrorism and firearms issues for the Crime Subcommittee of the U.S. House of representatives, helping to conduct fact-finding hearings and write key antiterrorism and gun control legislation. He was also the lead Democratic counsel during 10 days of intensive House hearings in 1995 on the [[Waco Siege|events at the Branch Davidian church]] in [[Waco, Texas]] in 1993.


Diaz is known for his public policy stances that eschew the pragmatic political approach taken by others in the gun control community, such as [[Americans for Gun Safety]] and the [[American Hunters and Shooters Association]]. For example, Diaz openly stated that the 1994 Federal [[Assault Weapons Ban]] would not have any impact on violent crime statistics and that it only affected cosmetic features on [[semiautomatic]] firearms.
Diaz is known for his public policy stances that eschew the incremental political approach taken by others in the gun control community, such as [[Americans for Gun Safety]] and the [[American Hunters and Shooters Association]]. For example, Diaz openly stated that the 1994 Federal [[Assault Weapons Ban]] would not have any impact on violent crime statistics and that it only affected cosmetic features on [[semiautomatic]] firearms.


He is also the author of the books ''Making a Killing'' and ''Lighting Out of Lebanon''.
He is also the author of the books ''Making a Killing'' and ''Lighting Out of Lebanon''.

Revision as of 01:25, 12 October 2007


Tom Diaz is a senior policy analyst at the Violence Policy Center and is one of the more prominent advocates for a strict system of federal gun control in the United States.

The son of a career Army officer, Tom Diaz is a graduate of the University of Florida and the Georgetown University Law Center, where he was an editor of the Law Journal. He has been in private and government practice since 1972.

Mr. Diaz was counsel to the Congressional House Subcommittee on Crime and Criminal Justice from August 1993 to January 1997. During that time, he was the lead Democratic counsel in the House on firearms and terrorism, but worked on a range of other issues.

Diaz has written numerous monographs on the proliferation of firearms in the United States and on the impact of the easy availability of specific classes of firearms on gun crime, death and injury in the United States. He has appeared on numerous television and radio media outlets, has been written about and quoted in print media, and his op-eds have been widely published.

File:MakingAKilling2.jpg
Tom Diaz's book

He has charged that the gun industry uses claims of increased lethality to increase sales. David Corn wrote:

In his book Making a Killing: The Business of Guns in America, Tom Diaz, a former NRA member and competitive shooter who became a gun control activist, shows that the gun industry in recent years responded to flat sales by producing increasingly deadly guns. But the gun culture—centered on a device that enables lethal violence — is not part of the right’s "culture of death." [1]

He has also been the intellectual backing behind the campaign to ban rifles chambered in .50 BMG.

Diaz was assistant managing editor of The Washington Times from 1985 to 1991. From 1991 to 1993 he worked at a think tank specializing in international organized crime and counter-terrorism. From 1993 to 1997 he was the lead Democratic counsel on counterterrorism and firearms issues for the Crime Subcommittee of the U.S. House of representatives, helping to conduct fact-finding hearings and write key antiterrorism and gun control legislation. He was also the lead Democratic counsel during 10 days of intensive House hearings in 1995 on the events at the Branch Davidian church in Waco, Texas in 1993.

Diaz is known for his public policy stances that eschew the incremental political approach taken by others in the gun control community, such as Americans for Gun Safety and the American Hunters and Shooters Association. For example, Diaz openly stated that the 1994 Federal Assault Weapons Ban would not have any impact on violent crime statistics and that it only affected cosmetic features on semiautomatic firearms.

He is also the author of the books Making a Killing and Lighting Out of Lebanon.