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  • 2
    Apr
    2013
    3:52pm, EDT

    Guns in schools? Some officials say, 'Yes!'

    Every school should consider having someone inside with a gun, according to National School Shield Task Force director Asa Hutchinson. NBC's Pete Williams reports.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS
    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Months after the National Rifle Association first floated the idea of getting more armed staffers in schools to prevent another Sandy Hook massacre, the idea is slowly gaining traction in some states and districts.

    On Tuesday, the NRA fleshed-out leader Wayne LaPierre’s initial response to the mass shooting in Newtown, Conn. The report included a model program on how to train and arm school personnel to respond in the event of an active shooter.

    The goal is to “give the schools more tools to respond quickly and reduce the loss of lives,” former Republican congressman Asa Hutchinson said while presenting the report.

    LaPierre's idea was mocked by some political leaders when it was first proposed in Decmeber -- “What’s next? Armed guards at Starbucks and Little League games?” asked California Senate leader Darrell Steinberg, a Democrat.

    But polling suggests Americans are open to armed guards or staffers, and some lawmakers and school leaders are moving forward.

    The Florida House Education Subcommittee approved a bill at the end of March that would arm employees by allowing principals or district superintendents to select individuals to be exempted from prohibitions on carrying firearms on school property.

    Tennessee school districts would be allowed to hire additional security personnel or arm a staff member under new legislation.

    “This is just an option for those schools who don’t have school resource officers,” Tennessee Rep. Eric Watson, a Republican, told a local newspaper. “This gives schools an option to hire their own security or want staff members willing to serve in that security capacity. Of course, they have to go through a lot of series of training to get to that point.”

    Watson’s bill would require that applicants pass an 8-hour handgun safety course. Critics of bills like the one in Tennessee have questioned how much training should be required before someone is allowed to carry a gun in a building full of children.

    “Is it a good idea to have private citizens who have had a few hours of training bringing guns into schools? Probably not,” said Arkadi Gerney, a Center for American Progress fellow who works on gun policy. “That may end up creating risks instead of reducing risks.”

    The Connecticut towns of North Branford and Enfield have already approved the placement of armed guards in all of their public schools.

    “We want to throw as many hurdles as we can before an armed gunman can get into a building,” Enfield police Chief Carl Sferrazza said in March, The Associated Press reported. A job listing for a part-time armed school security officer is now posted on the department’s website. A section listing “Tools & Equipment Used” names one item: “Handgun.”

    Guards began patrolling the schools in Marlboro, N.J., barely two weeks after the Newtown, the first school in the state to bring in armed officers after the shooting.

    The measure drew skepticism from Republican Governor Chris Christie, who said placing guards among students risked turning school buildings into “an armed camp for kids.”

    “I don’t think that’s a positive example for children,” Christie said. “We should be able to figure out some other ways to enhance safety, it seems to me.”

    For the most part, critics say, there's been something less than a national movement to embrace arming school staffers.

    “It doesn’t look like a serious effort, certainly not a serious national effort to address the real problem,” said Jon Vernick, co-director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research. “There really isn’t any evidence that that sort of thing is effective.”

    Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio caused a stir in February when he recruited action film star Steven Seagal to train a group of volunteers in what the self-proclaimed “America’s Toughest Sheriff” said were exercises in how to protect against school shooters.

    “I am here to try to teach the posse firearms and martial arts to try to help them learn how to respond quicker and help protect our children,” Seagal said, according to Reuters.

    As lawmakers continue to debate tighter federal regulations on firearms, the rifle association’s decision to focus on school guards steers attention from other gun bills that could do more to curb gun violence, Gerney said.

    “To think of that as the only answer is a distraction and an effort to shift the debate away from the measures that are going to shift the debate from measures that would really make a difference,” Gerney said. “The best way to make our kids safer whether they’re in school or not in school is to make it harder for bad guys to get guns in the first place.”

    Related:

    • NRA unveils 'School Shield' recommendations
    • Disbelief in some quarters after NRA calls for armed guards at every school, blames movies
    • Defiant NRA leader rejects gun controls, asks to put police in schools

    410 comments

    Police State, here we come.. Thanks NRA.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: national-rifle-association, gun-control, nra, wayne-lapierre
  • 14
    Feb
    2013
    6:02pm, EST

    NRA exec accuses Obama of gun 'charade' at State of the Union

    Addressing the National Wild Turkey Federation in Nashville, NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre doubles down on his call for armed police or guards in every American school.

    By Michael O'Brien, Political Reporter, NBC News

    The National Rifle Association’s CEO on Thursday accused President Barack Obama of orchestrating a “charade” to dismantle gun rights in his State of the Union address this week.

    Wayne LaPierre, the gun lobby group’s executive vice president and CEO, used a speech at a National Wild Turkey Federation conference in Nashville to decry the push for stricter gun laws made by Obama at the conclusion of his annual policy address on Tuesday.

    “For our Second Amendment freedoms, Mr. President, we will stand and fight throughout this country as Americans for our freedoms,” LaPierre said to applause. “We promise you that.”

    The gun rights advocate complained that “the words ‘school safety’ were nowhere to be found” in Obama’s address and renewed his call for funding to put an armed guard in every school in America. (Obama did speak of the need to “protect our most precious resource:  our children.”)

    A special weeklong examination of gun violence, gun ownership and gun legislation. NBC News journalists will report across "NBC Nightly News," "TODAY," MSNBC, CNBC, NBCNews.com, and more. The conversation will also extend across NBC News and MSNBC's social media platforms using the hashtag #GunsInUSA.

    “It was only a few weeks ago that they were marketing their anti-gun agenda as a way of protecting schoolchildren from harm,” LaPierre said.  “That charade ended at the State of the Union, when the president himself exposed their fraudulent intentions. It’s not about keeping kids safe in school.… They only care about their decades-long, decades-old gun control agenda.”

    Obama closed the speech by referencing victims of gun violence and victims’ families in attendance at his speech, forcefully repeating that those victims at least “deserve a vote” on the gun control measures proposed by the administration in the wake of the deadly December shooting at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn.

    "Gabby Giffords deserves a vote. The families of Newtown deserve a vote. The families of Aurora deserve a vote," Obama said to sustained applause. "The families of Oak Creek and Tucson and Blacksburg and the countless other communities ripped open by gun violence –- they deserve a simple vote."

    LaPierre has been as dogged as ever, though, in resisting those proposals, taking to conservative media in recent days to make his point. Writing Wednesday for the Daily Caller, LaPierre evoked a dystopian vision of a world without guns in the aftermath of last year’s Hurricane Sandy in New York.

    “After Hurricane Sandy, we saw the hellish world that the gun prohibitionists see as their utopia,” LaPierre wrote. “Looters ran wild in south Brooklyn. There was no food, water or electricity. And if you wanted to walk several miles to get supplies, you better get back before dark, or you might not get home at all.”

    However, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said at the time there were no murders committed during the storm or its very immediate aftermath.

    3082 comments

    What is needed: Ban Millitary style weapons, 90 days to turn in jail if found with one. Mandatory Registration Jail time is found with unregistered weapon. Mandatory background check Mandatory psych eval from a doctor like a prescription. Mandatory proof of gun lock or gun safe. Ban of large capacit …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: guns, barack-obama, national-rifle-association, gun-control, state-of-the-union, nra, wayne-lapierre, flashpoint, president-obama
  • 15
    Jan
    2013
    9:49am, EST

    New 'Practice Range' app says it's from NRA, which blamed video games for violence

    NRA: Practice Range / MEDL MOBILE

    Users of the "NRA: Practice Range" iOS app are taken to target practice, as seen in this screen shot.

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Just weeks after the National Rifle Association forcefully blamed violent video games for gun violence, a new shooter game is out that appears to be from the NRA.

     


    Follow @NBCNewsUS
    Follow @andrewjmach

    "NRA: Practice Range" was released Sunday in iTunes, the Apple-run site.

    It features a 3D-shooting range and offers users simulated target practice. It isn’t clear what connection the NRA has to the app, which is described as an "Official NRA Licensed Product" on iTunes. NBC News has reached out to the organization for comment but has yet to receive a response.

    The game's launch comes one month after the shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., which touched off a national debate over how to limit gun violence.

     

    “Guns don’t kill people. Video games, the media and Obama’s budget kill people,” NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre said at a Dec. 21 press conference where he addressed the tragedy at Sandy Hook. "There exists in this country, sadly, a callous, corrupt and corrupting shadow industry that sells and stows violence against its own people, through vicious, violent video games with names like ‘Bulletstorm,’ ‘Grand Theft Auto,’ ‘Mortal Kombat’ and ‘Splatterhouse.’”

    The free app was initially recommended for ages 4 and up, according to the iTunes rating system, but later Monday was recommended for 12 and up.

    The site said it offered "a 3D shooting game that instills safe and responsible ownership through fun challenges and realistic simulations.” The app description added, "It strikes the right balance of gaming and safety education, allowing you to enjoy the most authentic experience possible.”

    Users don’t shoot live subjects in the app, but instead are given guns and sent to target practice in three immersive shooting ranges. 

    In the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, the National Rifle Association held a news conference in Washington, D.C, blaming the media and video games for cultivating a culture of violence.

    The description in iTunes says it puts the NRA’s “broad scope of resources in the palm of your hand – with 2nd Amendment newsfeeds, gun law information centers and educational materials that you can access anywhere, anytime.”

    The app has received three-and-a-half out of five stars in the iTunes store, but has attracted several scathing customer reviews, some calling for it to be pulled from the iTunes store.

     

    “Is this some kind of sick joke?” asked one user known as Papershipsonfire. “The NRA complains about violent games and then releases one a week later. Sure you’re not shooting humans but does it really matter?”

    “What a dumb move,” posted Mansonr6. “Good luck getting anyone to take your video game theory serious after this.”

    But others praised the educational content offered in the game.

    “This is fun and informative plus there is no need for eye and ear protection,” wrote Joe in BrynMawr. “A must have for any gun enthusiast and defender of the U.S. constitution.”

    Last week, after a meeting with Vice President Joe Biden’s gun reform task force, the NRA slammed the White House.

    "It is unfortunate that this Administration continues to insist on pushing failed solutions to our nation's most pressing problems," the NRA said in a statement. "We will not allow law-abiding gun owners to be blamed for the acts of criminals and madmen."

    Editor’s note: The headine and story have been amended to reflect the fact that the NRA has not acknowledged the new app was launched by the organization.

     

    NRA: Practice Range / MEDL MOBILE

    For 99 cents, users can upgrade their firearm from a free M9 to a Beretta, a Browning or a Colt in the app, which offers indoor, outdoor and skeet shooting modes.

    1964 comments

    I support freedom of guns, but blaming the issue on video games is not the way to go. Video games are NOT the problem. Mental health and healthcare services ARE. As well as parenting in this country.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: guns, crime, national-rifle-association, gun-violence, nra
  • 1
    Jul
    2012
    4:28pm, EDT

    Chicago gun buyback unknowingly raises money for NRA kids' gun camp

    By Isolde Raftery, msnbc.com

    Follow @msnbc_us

    Chicago’s firearm buyback program, titled “Don’t kill a dream, save a life,” aims to get dangerous weapons off the street. But a pro-gun rights group gleefully says it used the program to turn in “non-firing junk” to raise money for a National Rifle Association youth shooting camp.

    Guns Save Life, based in Champaign, Ill., three hours south of Chicago, turned in dozens of guns and BB guns it had collected – “rusty scrap metal,” the group called the load – taking home $6,240.


    Of the 5,500 guns turned in on June 23, 60 came from Guns Save Life.

    The Chicago Police Department program pays $100 for every gun and $10 every BB gun, air gun or replica, no questions asked. The money is given in the form of a Visa debit card.

    “We are redirecting funds from people who would work against the private ownership of firearms to help introduce the next generation to shooting safely and responsibly,” John Boch, head of Guns Save Life, told the Chicago Sun-Times.

    Boch said the money will go toward paying for ammunition for the youth camp.

    Police spokeswoman Melissa Stratton was not amused, according to the Sun-Times.

    “It’s unfortunate that this group is abusing a program intended to increase the safety of our communities,” Stratton said.

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    705 comments

    “It’s unfortunate that this group is abusing a program intended to increase the safety of our communities,” Stratton said. Sounds like a good use of the program...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: chicago, police, guns, crime, national-rifle-association, gun-control, featured, nra

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