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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, Assault weapons are military-style guns designed | ||||||
3 | and manufactured for the sole purpose of killing the largest | ||||||
4 | number of people in the shortest amount of time possible; and
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5 | WHEREAS, Military-style assault weapons are the guns of | ||||||
6 | choice for criminals, enabling them to commit some of America's | ||||||
7 | deadliest crimes, including the 1989 Stockton, California | ||||||
8 | schoolyard shooting, the 1999 massacre at Columbine High | ||||||
9 | School, and the 2002 DC-area sniper attacks; and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, Military-style assault weapons threaten the | ||||||
11 | safety of America's law enforcement officers, having been used | ||||||
12 | to kill one in five officers slain in the line of duty between | ||||||
13 | 1998 and 2001, according to FBI statistics; and | ||||||
14 | WHEREAS, International terrorist organizations urge their | ||||||
15 | recruits to exploit America's lax gun laws and arm themselves | ||||||
16 | with military-style assault weapons; and | ||||||
17 | WHEREAS, The United States Congress in 1994, recognizing | ||||||
18 | the grave threat to public safety posed by the continued | ||||||
19 | availability to civilians of military-style assault weapons, | ||||||
20 | banned the manufacture and sale of specific models of assault | ||||||
21 | weapons; and | ||||||
22 | WHEREAS, Since 1994 many gun manufacturers have ignored the | ||||||
23 | spirit of the law by manufacturing "copycat" guns nearly | ||||||
24 | identical to those banned but for minor cosmetic changes; and | ||||||
25 | WHEREAS, The federal ban on military-style assault | ||||||
26 | weapons, which was enacted on September 13, 1994, contained a | ||||||
27 | sunset provision providing for the automatic repeal of the ban | ||||||
28 | ten years following that date, or September 13, 2004; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, As a result of the 1994 assault weapons ban, | ||||||
2 | domestic manufacturers are prohibited from manufacturing or | ||||||
3 | selling new high capacity magazines (except for a limited | ||||||
4 | number of magazines for police, military, and nuclear plant | ||||||
5 | protection use); and | ||||||
6 | WHEREAS, The 1994 high capacity magazine ban did not apply | ||||||
7 | to foreign magazines, and between September of 1994 and | ||||||
8 | December of 2000, 47.3 million large magazines were approved | ||||||
9 | for importation for civilian use, from 50 different countries; | ||||||
10 | and | ||||||
11 | WHEREAS, The federal ban does not affect firearms designed | ||||||
12 | for hunting or other legitimate sporting uses; and | ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, The federal courts and U.S. Attorney General John | ||||||
14 | Ashcroft have declared the federal assault weapons ban to be | ||||||
15 | constitutional and in no way an infringement on the Second | ||||||
16 | Amendment; and | ||||||
17 | WHEREAS, Military-style assault weapons should be | ||||||
18 | completely and permanently eliminated from our streets and our | ||||||
19 | communities; therefore, be it
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20 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE | ||||||
21 | NINETY-THIRD GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
22 | the House urges the United States Congress and the President of | ||||||
23 | the United States to renew and strengthen the federal ban on | ||||||
24 | military-style assault weapons, closing the loopholes that | ||||||
25 | have allowed gun manufacturers to continue to design, | ||||||
26 | manufacture, market and sell to civilians military-style | ||||||
27 | assault weapons; and be it further
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28 | RESOLVED, That assault weapon ban reauthorization contain | ||||||
29 | a large capacity ammunition magazine import ban consistent with | ||||||
30 | the domestic ban on large capacity ammunition magazines.
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