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Three weeks after Buffalo mass shooting, Hochul signs gun control bills into law

Darren McGee- Office of Governor
Governor Kathy Hochul signs new gun legislation into law, raising the age to purchase semi-automatic weapons to 21 as well as other measures to help stop gun violence.

Three weeks and two days after the mass shooting at a Buffalo supermarket, Governor Kathy Hochul signed ten gun control bills into law, including raising the age to buy a semi-automatic rifle from age 18 to 21.

Hochul’s hometown of Buffalo is grieving in the aftermath of a racially motivated shooting at the Tops market that killed 10 African-Americans.

I’m speaking to you today as a governor of a state in mourning,” Hochul said. “And the citizen of a nation in crisis.”

The bills are aimed at closing some loopholes that allowed the alleged 18 year old gunman to purchase a semi- automatic rifle, a bullet proof vest, and evade the state’s red flag laws.

Under the measures, law enforcement will now be required to ask a judge for an order to seize the guns of anyone they think might be a threat to themselves or others. The alleged shooter threated to commit a murder –suicide at his high school in 2021, but the red flag laws were never used.

Hochul says the purchase of body armor will be banned, except for law enforcement and people in professions that could be in danger. And--no one under 21 will be allowed to buy semi-automatic rifles in New York.

So no 18 year old can walk in on their birthday, and walk out again with an AR-15,” Hochul said. “Those days are over.”

Other bills signed into law require gun manufacturers to allow for the micro stamping of bullets, to better trace weapons used in commission of crimes. Another closes a loophole that allowed the category of ‘any other weapon’ which Hochul says are essentially guns, but are deliberately designed to evade gun control laws.

Hochul was joined by legislative leaders, the mayor of Buffalo, Byron Brown, and Attorney General Tish James, who says she will vigorously fight any challenges to the measures.

“To …all those drunk with power who think that they will challenge those laws,” James said. “The second amendment is not absolute.”

A California law that raised the age to purchase a semi automatic rifle to age 21 was struck down by a federal court.

Hochul says while New York responded rapidly to respond to the mass shootings, national action is needed. She says decades ago, car accidents were the number one killer of children in America, and the nation responded with seat belt laws and other safety measures that were unpopular at the time

“We took away the freedom to ride in a car without a seat belt,” Hochul said. “It was a very big deal when it happened.”

But she says people adapted.

“And guess what? We saved the lives of thousands of children,” The governor said. “So it was clearly worth it.”

Now, more children die from gun violence than from any other cause, and she says the nation has to act.

The governor says it is “a moment of reckoning” for the country, and history will judge our actions.

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau Chief for New York State Public Radio, a network of 10 public radio stations in New York State. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990. She is also a regular contributor to the statewide public television program about New York State government, New York Now. She appears on the reporter’s roundtable segment and interviews newsmakers. Karen previously worked for WINS Radio, New York, and has written for numerous publications, including Adirondack Life and the Albany newsweekly Metroland.