The Welland Tribune

Bump stock maker will stop accepting orders

Largest producer of the device for rifles was sued following the Las Vegas massacre that claimed 58 lives

- MICHAEL BALSAMO

LOS ANGELES — The largest manufactur­er of bump stocks, which allow semi-automatic weapons to fire rapidly like automatic firearms, announced Wednesday that it will stop taking orders and shut down its website next month.

The announceme­nt comes about a month after President Donald Trump said his administra­tion would “ban” bump stocks, which he said “turn legal weapons into illegal machines.”

The devices became a focal point of the national gun control debate when they were used in October when a man carried out the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history.

About a dozen bump stocks were found among the weapons used by Stephen Paddock when he unleashed a hail of bullets from his highrise Las Vegas hotel suite, killing 58 people and leaving more than 800 others injured.

Slide Fire Solutions, which is based in Moran, Texas, posted a message on its website saying the company will stop taking orders at midnight on

May 20.

There was no immediate response to a request for comment sent through Slide Fire’s website and the company’s founder and CEO, Jeremiah Cottle, did not immediatel­y respond to a LinkedIn message seeking comment.

The Brady Center for Gun Violence filed a lawsuit against Slide Fire after the Las Vegas mass shooting and alleged that the company “provided a product that turned a semi-automatic gun into the functional equivalent of a machine-gun, thereby evading long-standing federal law.”

Mimi Carter, a spokespers­on for the Brady Center, did not immediatel­y respond to a message seeking comment Wednesday.

The Justice Department said last month that it had started the process to amend federal firearms regulation­s to clarify that federal law defines bump stocks as machine-guns. That would reverse a 2010 decision by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives that found bump stocks did not amount to machine-guns and could not be regulated unless Congress amended existing firearms law or passed a new one.

Some states have also sought their own restrictio­ns. Last week, Vermont Gov. Phil Scott, a Republican, signed a package of bills that included a ban on bump stocks.

A far-reaching school safety bill signed last month by Florida Gov. Rick Scott, also a Republican, included a bump stocks ban and was immediatel­y met with a lawsuit by the National Rifle Associatio­n.

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