GETTING MILITARY-STYLE ASSAULT WEAPONS OFF OUR STREETS and out of OUR SCHOOLS 1/20 304861 Confronting Assault Weapons in Society
ASSAULTASSAULTASSAULT WEAPONSWEAPONSWEAPONS BANBANBAN aug. 2019 oct. 2018 feb. 2018 nov. 2017 Sutherland Springs, TX Dayton, OH Parkland, FL Parkland, Pittsburgh, PA 9 killed 11 killed 17 killed 26 killed oct. 2017 dec. 2015 dec. 2012 Newtown, CT Las Vegas, NV Las Vegas, San Bernadino, CA U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein 58 killed 14 killed 27 killed 331 Hart Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510 http://feinstein.senate.gov GETTING MILITARY-STYLE ASSAULT WEAPONS OFF OUR STREETS AND OUT OF OUR SCHOOLS 1/20 304861 Confronting Assault Weapons in Society Fifteen years have passed since the federal Assault Weapons Ban on military-style firearms ex- pired in 2004. Since then, more than 887 people have been killed and more than 1,578 injured by these weapons. Towns like Parkland, Las Vegas, Newtown, Aurora and San Bernardino and are now known for the mass shootings that shocked the nation. Mass murders in these towns and others across America demonstrate all too clearly the need to regulate deadly assault weapons and high-capac- ity ammunition magazines. On January 9, 2019, we introduced a new Assault Weapons Ban of 2019. This legislation, stron- ger than the 1994 bill, has two primary goals: • First, halt the sale, manufacture, transfer and importation of 205 of the most commonly-owned military-style assault weapons and ban an additional group of assault weapons that are particularly lethal because they can accept a detachable ammunition magazine and have one or more military characteristics. • Second, ban large-capacity magazines and other ammunition feeding devices that hold more than 10 rounds of ammunition.
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