To: The Connecticut State House, The Connecticut State Senate, and Governor Ned Lamont
Ban the Sales of Bump Stocks and Ghost Guns in Connecticut
We demand that the proper legislation be passed banning the sales of bump stocks and regulating ghost guns.
Why is this important?
As Connecticut residents, we have seen the aftermath of the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, where 20 children and 6 educators were killed in 2012. Families and communities can no longer be torn apart due to careless acts of violence carried out with weapons that are not regulated properly. We demand legislation be passed that the vast majority of Americans want, not just legislation that aligns with special interest groups.
Currently, it is perfectly legal to go online and buy most of an unassembled gun, without a serial number and without any registration requirements. Only a modicum of skill is needed to put it all together. Firearms made from these DIY kits are known as ghost guns because they contain no serial numbers, are untraceable and require no background check to purchase. But these firearms are no playthings. Homemade assault weapons have been used in mass shootings and attacks on law enforcement around the country. Even in Connecticut, which passed some of the nation’s toughest gun laws in the wake of Sandy Hook, anyone could get a ready-to-assemble gun by mail within a matter of days. The passage of House Bill No. 5540 would regulate these guns and help reduce that number of unregistered, untraceable firearms, which are attractive to people prohibited from possessing firearms and for selling on the black market, destined to be crime guns.
Not only does the gun itself and how it is acquired need to be more closely regulated, it also should not be possible to modify a semi-automatic weapon to where it fires at an alarmingly close rate to an automatic weapon. A bump stock is one of these modifications, which harnesses the weapon’s recoil and causes the weapon’s trigger to be engaged many times faster than the average human could otherwise fire. Bump stocks allow assault weapons to operate as machine guns. The Las Vegas shooter used bump stocks to fire more than 1,100 rounds in just 10 minutes, killing 58 and injuring more than 500 concertgoers on October 1, 2017, in the worst mass shooting in U.S. history.
Machine guns are tightly regulated under the 1934 National Firearms Act that has effectively prevented their use in criminal activity and mass shootings, so why it is possible to modify a gun to almost the exact capabilities? The passage of House Bill No. 5542, would ban bump stocks, binary trigger systems and trigger cranks, all of which increase a gun’s rate of fire.
With that being said, we call upon Governor Malloy, the State House, and the State Senate to pass the legislation, H.B. No. 5542 and H.B. No. 5540, banning the sales of bump stocks and regulating ghost guns.
It is imperative that we pass these measures to protect our citizens. Not only do most people support them, but experts believe that they are important steps to take in the fight against gun violence. Now it is time for the Connecticut leadership to affirm, as the public already has, that the life of a child or innocent civilian is more important than someone’s semi-automatic rifle.
Currently, it is perfectly legal to go online and buy most of an unassembled gun, without a serial number and without any registration requirements. Only a modicum of skill is needed to put it all together. Firearms made from these DIY kits are known as ghost guns because they contain no serial numbers, are untraceable and require no background check to purchase. But these firearms are no playthings. Homemade assault weapons have been used in mass shootings and attacks on law enforcement around the country. Even in Connecticut, which passed some of the nation’s toughest gun laws in the wake of Sandy Hook, anyone could get a ready-to-assemble gun by mail within a matter of days. The passage of House Bill No. 5540 would regulate these guns and help reduce that number of unregistered, untraceable firearms, which are attractive to people prohibited from possessing firearms and for selling on the black market, destined to be crime guns.
Not only does the gun itself and how it is acquired need to be more closely regulated, it also should not be possible to modify a semi-automatic weapon to where it fires at an alarmingly close rate to an automatic weapon. A bump stock is one of these modifications, which harnesses the weapon’s recoil and causes the weapon’s trigger to be engaged many times faster than the average human could otherwise fire. Bump stocks allow assault weapons to operate as machine guns. The Las Vegas shooter used bump stocks to fire more than 1,100 rounds in just 10 minutes, killing 58 and injuring more than 500 concertgoers on October 1, 2017, in the worst mass shooting in U.S. history.
Machine guns are tightly regulated under the 1934 National Firearms Act that has effectively prevented their use in criminal activity and mass shootings, so why it is possible to modify a gun to almost the exact capabilities? The passage of House Bill No. 5542, would ban bump stocks, binary trigger systems and trigger cranks, all of which increase a gun’s rate of fire.
With that being said, we call upon Governor Malloy, the State House, and the State Senate to pass the legislation, H.B. No. 5542 and H.B. No. 5540, banning the sales of bump stocks and regulating ghost guns.
It is imperative that we pass these measures to protect our citizens. Not only do most people support them, but experts believe that they are important steps to take in the fight against gun violence. Now it is time for the Connecticut leadership to affirm, as the public already has, that the life of a child or innocent civilian is more important than someone’s semi-automatic rifle.