Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

New law blocked 500 gun sales to people under 21

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WASHINGTON — More than 500 gun purchases have been blocked since a new gun law requiring stricter background checks for young people went into effect in 2022, Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland said the day after a school shooting in Iowa left a sixth-grader dead.

The bipartisan law passed in June 2022 was the most sweeping gun legislatio­n in decades and requires extra checks for any gun purchases by people under age 21. Those denied a gun purchase include a person convicted of rape, a suspect in an attempted murder case and someone who had been involuntar­ily committed for mental health treatment, according to the Justice Department.

President Biden applauded the news, calling it an important milestone.

“Simply put: this legislatio­n is saving lives,” Biden said in a statement in which he called for additional measures such as universal background checks and a ban on assault weapons.

The Democratic president said he was “proud to have taken more executive action than any president in history to combat gun violence in America, and I will never stop fighting to get even more done.”

The news came Friday, the day after the country was rocked by another school shooting, this one carried out by a 17-year-old armed with a shotgun and a handgun who killed a sixthgrade­r and wounded five other people on the new year’s first day of classes at an Iowa high school and middle school, authoritie­s said.

The shooter, a student at the school in Perry, Iowa, died of what investigat­ors believe is a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

It wasn’t clear how the shooter got the weapons, but people under 18 can’t legally buy guns in purchases regulated by federal law.

The 2022 law was passed after a series of mass shootings, including the massacre of 19 students and two teachers at a Uvalde, Texas, elementary school. The measure was a compromise that also included steps to keep firearms from more domestic violence offenders and help states put in place “red f lag ” laws that make it easier for authoritie­s to take weapons from people found to be dangerous.

It mandates extra checks with state and local officials for young buyers, along with the FBI databases typically searched before someone is approved to buy a gun. Those steps have so far blocked 527 guns from being sold, Garland said.

Still, “this is not a time to relax our efforts,” he said in remarks that also touched on overall declines in homicides in many American cities. “We have so much more to do.”

 ?? Mariam Zuhaib AP ?? “WE HAVE so much more to do,” Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland said.
Mariam Zuhaib AP “WE HAVE so much more to do,” Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland said.

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