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Data from the FBI's firearms background check database shows six days in March of this year were among the top 10 highest days of firearms background checks since 1998.
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An influential state senator and chairman of Florida鈥檚 Republican Party says he is a 鈥渟olid no鈥 on expanding gun background checks as Donald Trump Jr. and鈥
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Florida adopted a red flag law last year after the shooting that killed 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. Since then, courts there have approved about 2,500 risk protection orders.
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U.S. Rep. Brian Mast, who once had an 鈥淎鈥 rating from the National Rifle Association, says Congress should 鈥 and will 鈥 pass new gun restrictions in the鈥
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"There is a mental illness problem that has to be dealt with. It's not the gun that pulls the trigger 鈥 it's the person holding the gun," Trump said to a standing ovation.
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President Trump says he supports "really intelligent background checks." It's unclear what exactly that means, but support for universal background checks is near universal among Americans.
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The president said the issue "isn't a question of NRA, Republican or Democrat" and indicated he could split from the National Rifle Association.
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The measure seeks to close the so-called "Charleston loophole" that allowed an avowed white supremacist to buy a gun he used to kill 9 people at Mother Emanuel AME in Charleston. S.C., in 2015.
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The legislation mandates background checks be performed on all gun sales, including firearm purchases made privately. The Senate is unlikely to take it up.
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Dylann Roof was able to buy a gun two months before the Charleston church massacre because of a background check error. A new plan by the FBI aims to fix what critics call the "Charleston Loophole."
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Florida鈥檚 Agriculture and Consumer Services Commissioner says he wants to set the record straight about what happened when close to 300 background...
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