Bump stock ban, electronic gun sale registry shot down

By Christen Smith | The Center Square

(The Center Square) – Bills banning bump stocks and creating an electronic gun sale registry came up short in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives on Tuesday.

The proposals failed by one vote amid a narrow divide in the lower chamber after critics said both violate the Second Amendment and, in the case of bump stocks, duplicate federal law.

“I understand the issues of gun violence,” said House Minority Leader Bryan Cutler, R-Quarryville. “I understand the desire to blame an inanimate object, which is what this bill does and which is why it won’t work.”

House Bill 335 defines accelerated trigger activators, or bump stocks, as “a part or combination of parts” that make a semi-automatic weapon – which requires a trigger pull each time a round is fired – perform like a machine gun, which does not.

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