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NY lawmakers act on gun control measures following recent mass shootings in Buffalo and Texas

The state capitol in Albany
Dave Lucas
/
WAMC

Two-and-a-half weeks after a shooting in Buffalo killed 10 people, the New York State Legislature is adjusting the state's gun laws.

Bills approved in the Senate and the Assembly and supported by Democratic Governor Kathy Hochul require a permit going forward to purchase a semi-automatic rifle. No one under 21 would be granted a permit, which would require a safety course and a background check.

The alleged gunmen in Buffalo and in the school shooting in Texas were both 18 and had recently purchased AR-15s.

The bills also would make it illegal to buy bulletproof vests, unless the purchaser works for law enforcement or other related fields.

Senator Tim Kennedy, a Democrat who represents portions of Buffalo, says Aaron Salter, the security guard at the Tops supermarket where the shooting occurred, might still be alive if the alleged gunman had not been able to purchase and wear body armor.

“That body vest that he wore prevented him from taking a bullet,” Kennedy said, calling the shooter a “white supremacist, coward and a racist.”

“Lieutenant Salter, who courageously fired back, and hit the perpetrator, (but) he was protected. Lieutenant Salter and nine others were murdered,” Kennedy added.

The measures also tighten the state’s red flag law. Police and district attorneys would be required to apply for an extreme risk protection order to temporarily seize a person’s weapons if there is probable cause that they pose a threat. The red flag law was not invoked after the alleged Buffalo gunman threatened to commit a murder-suicide at his high school in 2021.

Other bills include requiring that semiautomatic pistols made or sold in the state be capable of microstamping bullets to help law enforcement better trace weapons used in the commission of crimes. Social media companies would have to more closely monitor hate speech on their platforms, and set up a system for better reporting instances of hateful posts.

Several Republicans voted against the measures and offered an alternative amendment to require that every school in the state hire armed guards, known as school resource officers, to better protect schoolchildren from mass shooters.

“Requiring each school in New York State to have a school resource officer would help secure the safety or our students, teachers, administrators and school personnel,” said Senator Fred Akshar, a Republican from the Binghamton area.

Senator George Borrello, a Republican who represents a district south of Buffalo, linked the debate to other contentious criminal justice issues, including a movement to cut police funding, and the state’s 2019 bail reform laws, which ended cash bail for most crimes.

He blamed Democrats’ opposition to the amendment on “radical defund the police advocates” who he says don’t want a “trained officer in a school with a gun.”

“Even now, two years after the disaster of bail reform and the spikes in crimes that we’ve seen, they still believe that law enforcement is the enemy,” Borrello said. “You won’t do it because of politics.”

That led Senator Todd Kaminsky, a Long Island Democrat, to chide the Republicans. Kaminsky, the sponsor of a bill approved by the Senate to create the crime of making a terroristic threat, appealed for common ground in dealing with gun violence.

“I beg us to stop talking past each other,” said Kaminsky, who said that people want to know what the future of the country is “when we can’t protect our children, when we can’t protect our supermarkets.”

“That someone going to buy a bag of carrots doesn’t come home,” he said. “We can do this together. And our state, at least, is stepping up.”

The bills, once approved, go to the governor’s desk, where she is expected to sign them.

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau chief for New York State Public Radio, a network of public radio stations in New York state. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990.
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