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Trump Orders Ban of Rifle `Bump Stocks' After Florida Shooting

Trump ordered a ban on gun accessories known as “bump stocks”, taking the administration’s first concrete measures.

Trump Orders Ban of Rifle `Bump Stocks' After Florida Shooting
Spent brass shell casings sit on the bottom of a Rigid Hull Inflatable Boat. (Photographer: Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump ordered a ban on gun accessories known as “bump stocks” that allow semiautomatic rifles to be fired more rapidly, taking the administration’s first concrete measures in response to a Florida school shooting last week.  

Trump said Tuesday that he had signed a memorandum directing the Justice Department to come up with rules prohibiting “all devices that turn legal weapons into machine guns.”

“I expect that these critical regulations will be finalized, Jeff, very soon,” he said, speaking to Attorney General Jeff Sessions during an event at the White House.

The school shooting has ignited new calls for restrictions on guns, especially AR-15 style rifles like the one used in a Florida school shooting to kill 17 people last week. The suspect in the Florida shooting didn’t use a bump stock, though the accused sniper in a mass shooting in Las Vegas in October used such a device in an attack that killed more than 50 concert-goers.

Sixty-six percent of American voters back stricter gun laws, up 19 percentage points from December 2015, according to a Quinnipiac University National Poll taken Feb. 16-19 in the aftermath of the Florida school shooting. Even among firearm owners, 50 percent support tougher gun laws.

Asked if Trump would support renewing a federal assault weapons ban that expired more than a decade ago, White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said at a briefing that “we haven’t closed the door on any front.” She also said it “hasn’t yet been determined” whether there should be a federal age limit for purchasing semiautomatic rifles like the one the Florida shooter bought as a teenager.

“Background checks are something that the president is supportive of making more efficient and looking at better ways to improve that process,” Sanders said.

A group of students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, where the attack occurred, traveled to the state capital to call for a ban on AR-15-style rifles like that used in the attack. Students from the school are also planning a march on Washington on March 24.

Trump will meet with parents, students and teachers who survived earlier shootings tomorrow and with police later this week to discuss the Feb. 14 attack, Sanders said. He’ll also discuss gun laws next week with governors. The president wants to “make sure we’re doing everything we can from every capacity, the state, federal and local level, to make sure incidents like this don’t happen again,” she said.

The suspect in the attack, 19-year-old Nikolas Cruz, killed 17 people in six minutes using an AR-15-style rifle that he had purchased legally.

Trump spoke to Texas Republican Senator John Cornyn on Friday about a bill he proposed last year with Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy, a Democrat, that would strengthen the current background check system for gun purchases.

The legislation aims to put more pressure on federal agencies to report relevant information to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System and also includes measures to reward states that comply with the system through federal grants. The National Rifle Association has expressed support for the legislation.

Trump on Friday visited a hospital where many of the shooting victims were treated, as well as the headquarters of the Broward County Sheriff’s Department. At the hospital, he spoke with a few of the victims and said it was “very sad something like that could happen.” He also praised emergency workers for rapidly responding to the attack.

"We must move past cliches and tired debates and focus on evidence-based solutions and security measures that actually work and that make it easier for men and women of law enforcement to protect our children and to protect our safety," Trump said Tuesday.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jennifer Epstein in Washington at jepstein32@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alex Wayne at awayne3@bloomberg.net, Mike Dorning, Joshua Gallu

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