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Updated: 11:36 AM Oct 24, 2011
Carson City Shooting Prompts A Call For Review of Nevada's Gun Laws
A deadly shooting rampage at a Carson City IHOP restaurant last month has prompted a call for a review of Nevada's gun laws.
Posted: 8:27 PM Oct 23, 2011Reporter: Associated Press Email Address: news@kolotv.com |
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A deadly shooting rampage at a Carson City IHOP restaurant last month has prompted a call for a review of Nevada's gun laws.
Assembly Judiciary Committee Chairman William Horne said it would be appropriate for lawmakers to consider changes to the state's gun regulations after a man with a history of mental illness shot 11 people with an assault weapon at the restaurant, killing three Nevada National Guard members and a civilian before killing himself.
Horne, D-Las Vegas, told the Reno Gazette-Journal that while he's a gun owner who supports gun rights, he questions why citizens
need to own an assault weapon.
"I think it's a good question to ask: Why does a typical citizen need to have an assault weapon?" he said. "I think we're at the point where we have to have that discussion. Can we protect citizens without impacting other people's rights?"
National Guard Sgt. Caitlin Kelley, who was seriously injured by Eduardo Sencion in the Sept. 6 rampage, said the mass shooting has
made her furious about gun laws.
"I can't imagine why we are even selling assault rifles to civilians," said Kelley, who now must use a wheelchair after being shot in the foot. "There's no reason for an AK-47 or an M-16 or an M-4 to be in a civilian's home."
Sencion's AK-47-style firearm was illegally modified to fire as
an automatic weapon.
Seven states have assault weapons bans: California, Connecticut,
Hawaii, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota and Virginia.
Robert Smith, president of the Nevada State Rifle and Pistol Association, said the problem is not guns; it's the people using
them.
"It isn't the weapon that's bad, it's the person" who commits crimes with the weapon, he told the Gazette-Journal. "If you keep them away from private citizens, you're making the private citizens unarmed targets."
Trying to make policy based on emotion - such as the response to the IHOP shooting - isn't good policy, said Carolyn Herbertson, a Sacramento, Calif.-based National Rifle Association lobbyist who's
registered to lobby at the Nevada Legislature. The NRA has three
paid lobbyists in Nevada.
"My job is to represent reason, and I take that very seriously," she said. "We represent reason to what often becomes an emotional issue."
Washoe County Sheriff Mike Haley said while he doesn't see "any
logic" to making assault weapons available to the public, a ban on
such weapons would spark a sharp response by gun-rights advocates.
Haley noted IHOP customers were helpless to defend themselves
against Sencion's assault weapon.
"But because of our love affair with weapons, we are subjecting the public to this type of violence," the sheriff told the Gazette-Journal. "If this is going to change, the public has to stand up and demand change."
Despite being diagnosed as schizophrenic, Sencion legally purchased the weapon from a private seller in California. He also
legally owned several other guns.
Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Latest Comments
For being a military service member SGT Kelley, you really have no common sense. If we take away our country's to own a weapon you will then be a part of the force that helps take away every right American's have. We have weapons so that in the case we need to put together militias we can arm them to. If you don't believe in our rights then I have no idea why you are in the military protecting them even if it isn't your full time job!
I love the last sentence about the gun being bought privately in California - semi-auto AK-47s have been banned there since 1989 (and private sales nearly as long)! If it's true then by definition a ban clearly won't work. There was a shooting in the UK last year in Cumbria where a guy shot dead 12 people with a double-barrel shotgun and a .22 bolt-action rifle.
hey KOLO- if someone in the IHOP would have legally been carrying a handgun like the one in your graphic, the carnage would likely have been much more brief. The problem with gun laws is that criminals dont care about laws. Look at the states with the most restrictive gun laws- they tend to have the highest crime rates!
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