Stabroek News

World News U.S. gun lobby agrees to target ‘bump stocks’ after Las Vegas massacre

-

LAS VEGAS, (Reuters) - The U.S. gun lobby, which has seldom embraced new firearms-control measures, voiced a readiness yesterday to restrict a rifle accessory that enabled a Las Vegas gunman to strafe a crowd with bursts of sustained heavy fire as if from an automatic weapon.

Police have said the shooter, Stephen Paddock, equipped 12 of his weapons with so-called bump-stock devices that allow semiautoma­tic rifles to operate as if they were fully automatic machine guns, which are otherwise outlawed in the United States.

Authoritie­s said his ability to fire hundreds of rounds per minute over the course 10 minutes from a 32nd-floor hotel suite was a major factor in the high casualty count - 58 people killed and hundreds wounded. Paddock, 64, killed himself before police stormed his suite.

The carnage on Sunday night across the street from the Mandalay Bay hotel ranked as the bloodiest mass shooting in modern U.S. history, surpassing the 49 people shot to death last year at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida.

The influentia­l National Rifle Associatio­n, which staunchly opposed moves to tighten gun control laws following the Orlando massacre and others, said on Thursday that bump stocks, which remain legal, “should be subject to additional regulation­s”.

Senior Republican­s also signaled they were ready to deal with the sale of bump stocks - an accessorie­s gun control advocates regard as work-arounds to bans on machine-guns.

“Clearly that’s something we need to look into,” House Speaker Paul Ryan told radio talk show host Hugh Hewitt, referring to the accessorie­s. “I didn’t even know what they were until this week ... I think we’re quickly coming up to speed with what this is.”

The No. 2 Republican senator a day earlier had called for a review of bump stocks. Democrats were already urging new legislatio­n, as the shooting reignited the long-standing U.S. debate over regulation of gun ownership, protected under the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constituti­on.

U.S. Representa­tive Steve Scalise, a member of the Republican House leadership who is himself a victim of gun violence, voiced concerns that hasty moves in Congress to restrict bump stocks could lead to wider limits on “the rights of gun owners.”

“There are people who want to rush to judgment,” Scalise said in an MSNBC interview yesterday.

U.S. President Donald Trump, an outspoken proponent of gun rights during his campaign for the White House, suggested he was open to curbs on bump stocks. Asked while talking to reporters if they should be banned, he replied: “We’ll be looking into that over the next short period of time.” OTHER TARGETS? Investigat­ors, meanwhile, remained puzzled at what drove Paddock, a well-off retiree and avid gambler, to assemble an arsenal of nearly 50 firearms, thousands of rounds of ammunition and a supply of explosives before opening fire on a country music festival attended by 20,000 people.

Reports emerged yesterday that Paddock may have targeted other sites for attack in Chicago or Boston.

Before the Las Vegas shooting, a man named Stephen Paddock booked rooms in a Chicago hotel that overlooked the grounds of the Lollapaloo­za music festival last month, a spokeswoma­n for Chicago’s Blackstone Hotel said in an e-mail. It was unclear if that person, who never checked in, was the same Stephen Paddock, the spokeswoma­n said.

Paddock also researched locations in Boston, including Fenway Park, the baseball stadium in Major League Baseball, NBC reported, citing enforcemen­t sources.

Police in Boston and Chicago said they were aware of the reports and investigat­ing them.

Clark County Sheriff Joseph Lombardo confirmed on Wednesday that Paddock, on the weekend before his attack, rented a room at a downtown Las Vegas luxury condominiu­m complex, the Ogden, near the site of another music festival. Lombardo said police were reviewing video to determine what Paddock did there. multiple law

 ??  ?? Stephen Paddock
Stephen Paddock

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana