China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Gun-device limitation finds wide support

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WASHINGTON — The National Rifle Associatio­n joined the Trump administra­tion and top congressio­nal Republican­s on Thursday in support of a restrictio­n on Americans’ guns: to regulate the “bump stock” devices the Las Vegas shooter apparently used to deadly effect.

The devices, originally intended to help people with disabiliti­es, fit over the stock and grip of a semiautoma­tic rifle and allow the weapon to fire continuous­ly, some 400 to 800 rounds in a single minute.

Bump stocks were found among the gunman’s weapons and explain why victims in Las Vegas heard what sounded like automatic-weapons fire as the shooter rained bullets from a casino high-rise, slaughteri­ng 58 people in a concert below and wounding hundreds more.

Thursday’s sudden endorsemen­ts of controls came almost simultaneo­usly from the NRA and the White House.

The NRA, which opposes virtually any hint of new restrictio­ns, said in a statement: “The National Rifle Associatio­n is calling on the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (BATFE) to immediatel­y review whether these devices comply with federal law. The NRA believes that devices designed to allow semi-automatic rifles to function like fully automatic rifles should be subject to additional regulation­s.”

Moments after, at the White House, press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders praised the announceme­nt.

“We welcome that and a conversati­on on that,” Sanders said. “It’s something we’re very open to.”

US President Donald Trump said ahead of a dinner with senior military leaders at the White House on Thursday evening, “We’ll be looking into that over the next short period of time.”

House Speaker Paul Ryan added his support, as have other top Republican­s.

“Obviously we need to look at how we can tighten up the compliance with this law so that fully automatic weapons are banned,” Ryan told reporters at an event in Chestertow­n, Maryland.

The nation’s largest gun lobby and most Republican­s have stood firmly in recent years against stricter gun regulation­s, even as several mass shootings shocked the nation.

They blocked background­check legislatio­n after the shooting deaths of elementary school children in Connecticu­t in 2012, and took no action despite intense pressure from Democrats, including a House floor sit-in, after last year’s bloodbath at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida.

Gunfire that left House Majority Whip Steve Scalise near death at a baseball practice earlier this year didn’t change the equation. But the deadliest mass shooting in modern US history, combined

with the opportunit­y to back a limited change that could potentiall­y be accomplish­ed administra­tively, spurred a shift.

Robert Spitzer, chairman of the political science department at SUNY-Cortland, who watches the gun industry closely, said he was surprised.

Still, he said, “it’s a pretty small concession in the realm of gun stuff. We’re not talking about banning assault weapons here. It’s a very specific accessory.”

The device, which retails for around $200, is not known among gun dealers as an item that is hugely popular. It was created ostensibly to help people with disabiliti­es more easily fire AK- and AR-platform long guns.

The device causes the gun to buck back and forth, repeatedly “bumping” the trigger against the shooter’s finger. Technicall­y, that means the finger is pulling the trigger for each round fired, keeping the weapon a legal semiautoma­tic. Because it creates a significan­t rocking motion, it also means that the gun is “spraying” bullets, and it’s difficult to hit a target.

The stocks have been around for less than a decade. Many Capitol Hill Republican­s said this week they had never heard of them before the shooting in Las Vegas. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms during the Obama administra­tion gave its seal of approval to their sale in 2010 after concluding that they did not violate federal law.

The issue of bump stocks came up aboard Air Force One as Trump traveled back from visiting Las Vegas on Wednesday, according to GOP Representa­tive Mark Amodei of Nevada, who was on board and said Trump sounded open to a change.

But Democrats insisted that a regulatory change by the ATF would not be sufficient.

 ?? MICHELLE MCLOUGHLIN / REUTERS ?? Mourners hold signs during a solidarity vigil in memory of victims of Las Vegas Route 91 Harvest music festival mass killing, in Newtown, Connecticu­t, the site of the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting on Wednesday.
MICHELLE MCLOUGHLIN / REUTERS Mourners hold signs during a solidarity vigil in memory of victims of Las Vegas Route 91 Harvest music festival mass killing, in Newtown, Connecticu­t, the site of the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting on Wednesday.

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