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Obama announces plan to cut gun violence

By: Associated Press//January 5, 2016//

Obama announces plan to cut gun violence

By: Associated Press//January 5, 2016//

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By Josh Lederman
Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama on Tuesday announced an array of measures aimed at the control of firearms in the U.S., using his presidential powers in the absence of legal changes he had implored Congress to pass.

Obama accused the gun lobby of taking Congress hostage, but said “they cannot hold America hostage.” He insisted it was possible to uphold the Second Amendment while doing something to tackle the frequency of mass shootings in the U.S.

“This is not a plot to take away everybody’s guns,” Obama said in a ceremony in the East Room. “You pass a background check, you purchase a firearm. The problem is some gun sellers have been operating under a different set of rules.”

Obama wiped tears away from his eye as he recalled the 20 first-graders who were killed in 2012 at Sandy Hook Elementary School. He paid tribute to the parents, some of whom gathered for the ceremony, who he said had never imagined their child’s life would be cut short by a bullet.

“Every time I think about those kids, it gets me mad,” Obama said.

At the centerpiece of Obama’s plan is the adoption of a broader sweeping definition of gun dealers, a change the administration hopes will increase the number of sales that are subject to background checks. Under current law, only federally licensed gun dealers must conduct background checks on buyers. But at gun shows, websites and flea markets, sellers often skirt that requirement by declining to register as licensed dealers.

Mike Howse, left, helps David Foley as he shops for a handgun at the Spring Guns and Ammo store Monday, Jan. 4, 2016, in Spring, Texas. President Barack Obama defended his plans to tighten the nation's gun-control restrictions on his own, insisting Monday that the steps he'll announce fall within his legal authority and uphold the constitutional right to own a gun. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
Mike Howse (left) helps David Foley as he shops for a handgun at the Spring Guns and Ammo store on Monday in Spring, Texas. President Barack Obama defended his plans to tighten the nation’s gun-control restrictions on his own, insisting Tuesday that the steps he announced fall within his legal authority and uphold the constitutional right to own a gun. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

Aiming to narrow that loophole, the Justice Department’s Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives is issuing updated guidance that says the government should deem anyone “in the business” of selling guns to be a dealer, regardless of where he or she sells the guns. To that end, the government will consider other things, including how many guns a person sells, how frequently, and whether those guns are sold for a profit.

The White House also put sellers on notice that the administration planned to strengthen enforcement — including deploying 230 new examiners the FBI will hire to process background checks.

To lend a personal face to the issue, the White House assembled a cross-section of Americans whose lives were altered by the nation’s most searing recent gun attacks, including former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and the relatives of victims from Charleston, S.C., and Virginia Tech. Mark Barden, whose son was shot to death at Sandy Hook Elementary School, introduced the president with a declaration that “we are better than this.”

Invoking the words of Martin Luther King Jr., Obama said, “We need to feel the fierce urgency of now.”

Obama’s package of executive actions aims to curb what he’s described as a scourge of gun violence in the U.S., punctuated by appalling mass shootings in Newtown, Conn.; Charleston, S.C.; and Tucson, Ariz., among many others. After Newtown, Obama sought far-reaching, bipartisan legislation that went beyond background checks.

When the effort collapsed in the Senate, the White House said it was thoroughly researching the president’s powers to identify every legal step he could take on his own.

A more recent spate of gun-related atrocities, including in San Bernardino, Calif., has spurred the administration to give the firearms control another look, as Obama seeks to make good on a priority that he’s set time and again but has failed until now to advance.

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