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“This is to the firearms and ammunition world what the Detroit auto show is to the car world,” said Mark Oliva, a spokesman for the National Shooting Sports Foundation.
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The rhetoric of some gun rights groups rallying in Virginia on Monday borrows from a racist past some attendees may not be aware of.
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Northam cited “credible threats” from white nationalists and out-of-state rally attendees as justification for the measures, saying he hoped to avoid the sort of violent clashes like those at a far-right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017.
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In most American cities, gun homicides are on the decline. But some cities, including Durham, North Carolina, saw its homicides rise in 2019, leaving residents to cope with feelings of chronic violence.
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Every time someone buys a gun from a federally licensed firearms dealer their name is run through the FBI’s National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS). And according to the FBI’s data, 2019 could be a record year for the number of those checks.
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Victims of the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School are suing a gun manufacturer. After years of delays, the lawsuit is moving forward, which may force the gun industry to make public what it considers private.
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After police shot and killed a young black man in Colorado Springs in August, the community is grappling with the aftermath and what to do about it.
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American producers pumped out nearly 7,660,772 firearms and roughly 8.1 billion rounds rounds of ammunition in 2018, according to data compiled by NSSF from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
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After a much-anticipated showdown over gun regulations at the U.S. Supreme Court in early December focused on procedure over substance, advocates on all sides are waiting to see if the court dismisses the case.
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Cities and towns throughout the country are debating whether to allow the public to openly carry firearms in public buildings. They are trying to walk the line between public access and public safety.