Stamford Advocate

After recent shootings, purchase age for AR-style rifles debated

-

The gunmen in two of the nation’s most recent mass shootings legally bought the semi-automatic rifles they used in their massacres after they turned 18. That’s prompting Congress and some governors and state lawmakers to revisit the question of whether to raise the minimum age for purchasing such high-powered weapons.

Only six states require someone to be at least 21 years old to buy rifles and shotguns. Advocates argue that such a limit might have prevented the elementary school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, that left 19 children and two teachers dead and the racially motivated supermarke­t attack in Buffalo, New York, that killed 10.

Lawmakers in New York and Utah have proposed legislatio­n that would raise the minimum age to buy AR-15 style rifles to 21. A similar restrictio­n is expected to move as soon as next week in the U.S. House, where it has some bipartisan support, but the legislatio­n faces uncertaint­y in the closely divided Senate.

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, a Republican who chairs the National Governors Associatio­n, said the idea should be up for discussion.

“I think you’ve got to be able to talk about the AR-15 style weapons, and whether that’s an 18 or 21 age,“Hutchinson told CNN this week. “You have to at least have a conversati­on about that.“

But Hutchinson, who leaves office in January, isn’t pushing for the limit in his own state. Any proposed gun restrictio­ns there are unlikely to find support among Republican­s who control the Legislatur­e. Arkansas Republican­s are echoing their party’s calls at the national level to focus instead on beefing up school security or addressing mental health.

“If we move to 21 and the shooter is 21, then they’ll want to move to 25,“said Republican state Sen. Bart Hester, who will serve as Senate president next year.

A recent survey of governors by The Associated Press highlighte­d the partisan split over whether the minimum age should be higher. Many Democratic governors who responded supported restrictio­ns such as increasing the age to buy semi-automatic weapons. But only one Republican — Vermont Gov. Phil Scott, whose state already has a minimum age of 21 to buy guns, with some exceptions — supported such a move.

Gun control advocates say raising the age offers one of the clearest steps that could have stopped or prevented the most recent mass shootings. The Uvalde attacker, Salvador Ramos, bought the AR-15 he used shortly after he turned 18.

Federal law already prohibits federally licensed dealers from selling handguns to anyone under age 21, but people age 18 to 20 can still buy handguns from unlicensed dealers in their state unless state law sets a higher age limit or other restrictio­ns.

Florida is a rare example of a Republican-led state that took swift action on gun restrictio­ns after a mass shooting. In 2018, weeks after the deadly shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, then-Gov. Rick Scott signed legislatio­n raising the minimum age to buy rifles from 18 to 21, along with a host of other school safety and gun control measures.

Scott, a Republican, said at the time that the law balanced “our individual rights with the need for public safety.”

Only months after the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Conn., state lawmakers and the governor approved sweeping new restrictio­ns that won support from many Republican­s in the Democratic­controlled

Legislatur­e. They included a ban on retail sales of semiautoma­tic rifles that accept magazines holding more than five rounds of ammunition to anyone under 21.

“We saw what transpired at Sandy Hook and what could be done in a very short period of time with that type of firearm and the magazine capacity,” said state Senate Republican Leader Kevin Kelly. “I think a response was necessary, and something had to be done.“

A proposal in Utah, which would raise the minimum age to buy any firearm to 21.

“If you are not able to consume alcohol, why should you be able to buy a gun?“Democratic Sen. Derek Kitchen said of his proposal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States