Part 2 of 2 The problem, Rollins said, is that the Republican version does not limit the number of gun purchases. Supporters of gun control contend that allowing unlimited gun purchases by state residents has made Virginia a haven for out-of-state criminals who buy the guns themselves, using false identification, or hire state residents to buy weapons for them in so-called straw purchases. Sen. Kenneth W. Stolle (R-Virginia Beach), a former police vice squad officer, said the governor and other advocates of gun control need "a dose of reality." Stolle said criminals seldom buy guns, but steal them instead. Of 55 violent crimes involving guns studied in Virginia Beach, Stolle said, only one of the weapons used was bought in a gun store. Both measures are opposed by the National Rifle Association, the leading opponent of gun control legislation. NRA lobbyist Charles Cunningham, speaking against the GOP idea, said most gun purchases occur on weekends, at dealers or gun shows, when many small police departments would not be open to receive requests. **** CHECK OUT THE FIRST LINE OF THE NEXT PARAGRAPH***** Richard Parsons, a lobbyist for Handgun Control Inc., arguing in favor of Wilder's plan, said the Republican option doesn't deal with the problem of straw purchases. The panel gave its blessing to another Republican measure, offered by Sen. Edgar S. Robb (R-Charlottesville), a retired 22-year employee of the FBI, that seeks to strengthen the state's instant background checks of would-be gun buyers. The bill would require police agencies to record felony warrants in a statewide computer within 72 hours of issuing them. Robb estimated that 12,000 to 18,000 outstanding felony warrants have not been put in the computer that is used by gun dealers to check whether a potential buyer has a criminal record.