Local lawmaker proposes ban on assault weapons

Rep. Jason Knight: 'We must get assault guns off the street…'

Posted 3/6/18

Barrington resident and District 67 representative Jason Knight paired with Sen. Joshua Miller to introduce legislation banning assault weapons. The bill also bans high-capacity magazines.

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Local lawmaker proposes ban on assault weapons

Rep. Jason Knight: 'We must get assault guns off the street…'

Posted

Barrington resident and District 67 representative Jason Knight paired with Sen. Joshua Miller to introduce legislation banning assault weapons. The bill also bans high-capacity magazines.

The legislation was already drafted before the Parkland, Fla., and has been introduced in various forms in previous sessions, but the sponsors say the school shooting in which 17 people were murdered at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School tragically illustrates the unnecessary lethal power such weapons provide those wielding them. Police said the alleged attacker was armed with at least one AR-15-style rifle that he had legally purchased, as well as multiple magazines.

“What further tragedy has to happen before we are willing to take action to get these extremely lethal weapons off the streets?" asked Rep. Knight (D-Dist. 67, Bristol, Warren). "Parkland is the latest, but several mass shootings occur every year in the United States. Every day that we allow the status quo to remain, we allow more people to die and be injured. We must get assault guns off the street, and we must start by taking them off the legal market.”

The legislation (2018-S 2493) would ban the purchase, possession, manufacture or sale of any semi-automatic assault pistol, rifle or shotgun in Rhode Island. It would also limit magazines to 10 rounds each. 

Violations would be subject to jail terms of between one and 10 years and fines of up to $10,000 each, and repeated violations would be ineligible for deferment or parole.

The act does allow current owners to be grandfathered, and also exempts law enforcement officers.

The bill contains detailed descriptions of what constitutes assault pistols, rifles and shotguns, as well as a long list of specific weapons it bans, including the AR-15.

Assault guns were banned across the United States from 1994 to 2004, but the federal act expired and was not renewed. Seven states —Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, California and Hawaii — plus Washington, D.C., currently ban them.

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