The Day

Trump administra­tion reportedly will announce ban on bump stocks

Rule would put device under machine-gun prohibitio­n

- By JUSTINE MCDANIEL

Fourteen months after a shooter using semiautoma­tic rifles fitted with a “bump stock” device to make them fire faster killed 58 people at a Las Vegas music festival, the Trump administra­tion is reportedly preparing a ban on the devices.

The proposed final rule by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives would put bump stocks under the machine-gun prohibitio­n, making them illegal. The finalized ban will be announced in coming days or weeks, according to officials, as first reported this week by CNN with additional details from The New York Times.

“Current possessors of these devices would be required to surrender them, destroy them, or otherwise render them permanentl­y inoperable,” the proposal reads.

Days after the February school shooting in Parkland, Fla., in which a bump stock was not used by the gunman, President Donald Trump said he had ordered the Justice Department to prepare a ban on the devices. In October, Trump said at a news conference that his administra­tion was “at the final stages” of the process.

“We’re knocking out bump stocks. I’ve told the NRA. I’ve told them: Bump stocks are gone,” he said.

The Las Vegas shooting in October 2017 turned national scrutiny on bump stocks, which are a type of conversion device that allows a semiautoma­tic weapon to fire like an automatic one. The shooter had at least 12 rifles legally modified with bump stocks; it was estimated that he fired about 90 shots in 10 seconds.

Gun control advocates had been frustrated with a lack of progress on the ban, which they had urged Congress to pass in order to move more quickly and avoid court challenges to the rule, as well as the president’s unwillingn­ess to take any other actions on the issue.

“Banning bump stocks is a positive step, but it is not enough,” said David Chipman, a retired ATF special agent and a senior policy adviser for the group Giffords: Courage to Fight Gun Violence. “It won’t stop these mass shootings, which is why Congress must act swiftly to pass comprehens­ive solutions to prevent gun violence.”

After the Las Vegas massacre, National Rifle Associatio­n leaders said they believed bump stocks “should be subject to additional regulation­s” but they opposed legislatio­n to ban them and a spokespers­on said the organizati­on opposes a ban.

In January, New Jersey enacted a bump stock ban, becoming the second state to do so after Massachuse­tts. Since then, bans have been passed in six other states, including Connecticu­t, and introduced in at least 19 other state legislatur­es, according to Giffords. A bill in the Pennsylvan­ia Legislatur­e was approved by the House Judiciary Committee over the summer but did not advance in either chamber.

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