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Connecticut passes toughest U.S. gun laws

Doug Stanglin, USA TODAY
Paul Regish of East Hartford, Conn., holds signs as gun rights advocates enter the legislative office building at the Capitol in Hartford, Conn., Wednesday, where lawmakers were voting on tough new gun laws.
  • Gov. Dannel P. Malloy%2C plans to sign it at noon on Thursday
  • Opponents say it would not have prevented the Newtown massacre
  • The bill will set up the nation%27s first statewide registry of gun offenders

Connecticut has approved far-reaching gun control legislation that will be the toughest in the United States.

Following hours of respectful and at times somber debate, the House voted early Thursday in favor of the 139-page bill crafted by leaders from both major parties in the Democratic-controlled General Assembly. It passed the Senate in a 26-10 vote on Wednesday.

Democratic Gov. Dannel Malloy plans to sign it into law at noon on Thursday.

The bill strengthens an existing ban on semiautomatic assault rifles, limits the capacity of ammo magazines and requires background checks for all weapon sales, including at gun shows.

It would also establish the nation's first statewide registry for people convicted of crimes involving dangerous weapons. Access to the registry would be available only to law enforcement.

READ:A summary of the bill

As state senators debated the bill, supporters and opponents packed the Capitol. Many of those opposed to the measure arrived on shuttle buses from an East Hartford sporting goods outlet.

The bill was drawn up by a bipartisan task force spurred by the Dec. 14 Newtown shooting spree that left 20 schoolchildren and six adult staff members dead. The gunman, Adam Lanza, first killed his mother at her home and took his own life at Sandy Hook Elementary School after the rampage.

"The tragedy in Newtown demands a powerful response, demands a response that transcends politics," said Senate President Donald Williams,

Earlier, he called the measure the "strongest and most comprehensive gun bill in the country" that was "a model for the other 49 states and Congress."

Adam Lanza's student ID from Western Connecticut State University in 2008 when he was 16 years old.

While Republican state Sen. John Kissel of Enfield acknowledged that "you just can't have a heart at all if you don't feel for the families and friends and neighbors of the victims of that Newtown massacre," he expressed concern that the bill is ultimately harmful to lawful gun owners.

"When it comes to further regulations on guns and ammunition in one of the states that's touted as having, right now, some of the most tough gun laws in the United States of America, I think it goes one step too far," said Kissel, who said he opposed the bill.

Sen. Scott Franz, a Republican from Greenwich, another opponent, said there was "too much emphasis on gun regulations."

Among its provisions are a requirement of eligibility certificates for the purchase of any rifle, shotgun or ammunition. Penalties for illegal possession and firearms trafficking would also be significantly increased.

In addition to the controls on guns and ammunition, the law would set safety standards for school buildings, allow mental health training for teachers and expand mental health research in the state.

The bill would not ban large-capacity magazines outright, but would grandfather them in from Jan. 1, 2014. But the magazines could be loaded only with 10 or fewer rounds, except in the owner's home or at a shooting range. Owners would have to register the magazines by year's end.

The likely passage of the bill has spurred gun sales across the state, particularly on the purchase of large-capacity magazines, The (Danbury) News-Timesreports.

The newspaper says that sales at the K-5 Arms Exchange in Milford on Tuesday were brisk all day, especially for the popular AR-15 rifle used in the Sandy Hook shootings.

Gun rights advocates question whether the legislation would have done anything to stop 20-year-old Lanza's rampage. Police say he fired 154 shots from a Bushmaster .223-caliber rifle within five minutes.

"If it (the legislation) did something to prevent this incident, where the fault lies with the individual and the mother, not with the legitimate gun owners in this state, then we could probably support something," said Robert Crook, executive director of the Coalition of Connecticut Sportsmen.

Thursday would have been the 7th birthday of Ana Marquez-Greene, who died at Sandy Hook. In an op-ed column that appears Thursday in USA TODAY, her parents, Jimmy Greene and Nelba Marquez-Greene, write:

"We don't need new laws to begin strengthening the bonds of family and community. We can be more giving, loving parents, friends and neighbors. We can offer love to those who are outcasts or alone. We can look to God and form an eternal relationship built from nothing but love.

"But we must do more. Today (Thursday), the governor of our home state of Connecticut will sign historic bipartisan legislation designed by legislators to make our communities safer. Their cooperative spirit should be a model for Congress, when the Senate considers legislation next week to reduce gun violence."

Contributing: The Associated Press

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