Houston Chronicle Sunday

Hundreds march in N.Y. for stricter gun laws

- By Julie Walker

NEW YORK — Hundreds of people carrying photos of loved ones killed by gun violence marched across the Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday to rally for stricter gun laws and chanted demands for action.

The fourth annual march, held on the eve of Mother’s Day, was organized by the group Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America.

“We are going to stand up and fight until our last breath because if we lose our children we have nothing left to lose,” said the group’s founder, Shannon Watts. ‘Destroyed my family’

Natasha Christophe­r knows that pain all too well. Her son, Akeal, was shot in Brooklyn’s Bushwick neighborho­od in June 2012 and died days later, on his 15th birthday.

“Gun violence destroyed my family,” Christophe­r said. “Nothing will ever be the same. But I’m here today to say that I have turned my pain and anger into action.”

The marchers, who went from Cadman Plaza in Brooklyn to City Hall in lower Manhattan, said they want stricter background checks for gun purchases and a ban on assault rifles.

“They keep saying we have good, strong gun laws, but for me, I don’t believe these laws are really that strong,” Christophe­r said.

Marchers, as they crossed the bridge, shouted, “What do we want? Gun sense!”

Oscar-winning ac- tress Julianne Moore was among the crowd that rallied before the march. She said she was spurred to get involved to advocate for stronger gun laws after the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., where a gunman killed 20 children and six adults in December 2012. ‘A safety movement’

“We’re really pushing for more gun safety regulation­s,” she said. “It is not an anti-gun movement. It is not a partisan movement. It is a safety movement.”

The National Rifle Associatio­n, the nation’s largest gun rights lobbying group, opposes expanding background checks. The NRA says many people sent to prison because of gun crimes get their guns through theft or the black market and no amount of background checks can stop those criminals.

Under the current system, cashiers at stores selling guns call in to check with the FBI or other designated agencies to ensure customers don’t have criminal background­s.

Some lawmakers want to expand such checks to sales at gun shows and purchases made through the Internet.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States