The U.S. Supreme Court recently lifted a federal ban on bump stocks, a type of gun attachment allowing rifles and other semi-automatic weapons to rapid-fire rounds of ammunition. The Bureau of Alcohol ...
The Supreme Court ruled Friday that a ban on bump stocks — attachments that allow semi-automatic rifles to fire more quickly — implemented by former President Donald Trump in 2017 was ...
The court's six conservatives ruled to overturn the bump-stock ban, while its three liberal justices dissented. "Today, the Court puts bump stocks back in civilian hands," Justice Sonia Sotomayor ...
Fitting a bump stock to a rifle lets it fire hundreds of bullets per minute - akin to a machine gun The US Supreme Court has lifted a ban on bump stocks, the rapid-fire gun accessory used in ...
The hearing on bump stocks comes after the Supreme Court overturned a ban on the devices earlier this year. President-elect Donald Trump put the ban in place during his first administration.
One bill would ban so-called 'ghost guns,' which are firearms that are not registered with a serial number, and bump stocks ... However, that decision was overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court ...
Dick Durbin, (D-IL), the chair of the committee. Bump stocks were previously banned after being used in the 2017 Las Vegas Harvest Music Festival shooting, the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S.
Bump stocks were previously banned after ... But then Supreme Court overturned the administrative ban this summer, finding that it did not follow federal law, and that the ATF exceeded its ...
He argued it had been too broad in interpreting firearms law and that Congress never explicitly meant to ban bump stocks, challenging the law on statutory grounds, not Second Amendment protections.