July 26, 2009 8:50 PM
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Gun Sales: Will The "Loophole" Close?
When the Virginia Senate voted in February on closing the gun show loophole, it was a real stunner: the bill lost by two votes. The gun rights forces prevailed.
"You had so much going for you. You had the emotion. You had parents. You had survivors speaking out," Stahl said to Virginia Tech survivor Lily Habtu. "Police chiefs. You had the governor of the state, and it still went down. Why?"
"I would have to say that the gun lobby must have a strong base in Virginia," Habtu replied.
And so she and Omar Samaha are looking to Washington now that the Democrats are in control and with so many fresh examples of gun violence: from the Mexican drug cartels along the United States' southern border to a string of deadly domestic shootings where assault weapons were used.
One of them happened in Alabama on March 10, when a gunman crossed the state killing 10.
On March 21 in Oakland, Calif., a man killed four police officers; two with an assault weapon.
And in Pittsburgh on April 4, three policemen were gunned down. The suspect's friends say that he had lost his job and was afraid President Obama was about to re-instate the assault weapons ban that had passed under President Clinton, but was allowed to expire under President Bush.
AKs [rifles] and other firearms, once forbidden under the ban, now fill entire tables at gun shows; you can buy them from private sellers without a background check.
"These assault weapons are essentially designed and made to kill numbers of people in close combat," Senator Dianne Feinstein of California told Stahl.
Sen. Feinstein was the author and champion of the assault weapons ban in 1994. "They become the guns of choice of drug cartels, of gangs, of people who are mentally incompetent. Our police on the streets are essentially outgunned. Lesley, Friday I was at a funeral in Oakland, California. Four police officers slain."
Feinstein wants to reinstate the assault weapons ban. But what are her chances?
This is what the number-two Democrat in the Senate, Dick Durbin of Illinois, said on the Senate floor: "We don't debate guns around here much anymore. We used to. Basically, we reached a point where there just aren't many people who will stick their political necks out to vote for sensible gun control - just too big a hassle."
A "hassle," because of what happened in 1994. After the assault weapons ban was passed, the Republicans won both houses of Congress and the National Rifle Association got a lot of the credit.
Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved. "You had so much going for you. You had the emotion. You had parents. You had survivors speaking out," Stahl said to Virginia Tech survivor Lily Habtu. "Police chiefs. You had the governor of the state, and it still went down. Why?"
"I would have to say that the gun lobby must have a strong base in Virginia," Habtu replied.
And so she and Omar Samaha are looking to Washington now that the Democrats are in control and with so many fresh examples of gun violence: from the Mexican drug cartels along the United States' southern border to a string of deadly domestic shootings where assault weapons were used.
One of them happened in Alabama on March 10, when a gunman crossed the state killing 10.
On March 21 in Oakland, Calif., a man killed four police officers; two with an assault weapon.
And in Pittsburgh on April 4, three policemen were gunned down. The suspect's friends say that he had lost his job and was afraid President Obama was about to re-instate the assault weapons ban that had passed under President Clinton, but was allowed to expire under President Bush.
AKs [rifles] and other firearms, once forbidden under the ban, now fill entire tables at gun shows; you can buy them from private sellers without a background check.
"These assault weapons are essentially designed and made to kill numbers of people in close combat," Senator Dianne Feinstein of California told Stahl.
Sen. Feinstein was the author and champion of the assault weapons ban in 1994. "They become the guns of choice of drug cartels, of gangs, of people who are mentally incompetent. Our police on the streets are essentially outgunned. Lesley, Friday I was at a funeral in Oakland, California. Four police officers slain."
Feinstein wants to reinstate the assault weapons ban. But what are her chances?
This is what the number-two Democrat in the Senate, Dick Durbin of Illinois, said on the Senate floor: "We don't debate guns around here much anymore. We used to. Basically, we reached a point where there just aren't many people who will stick their political necks out to vote for sensible gun control - just too big a hassle."
A "hassle," because of what happened in 1994. After the assault weapons ban was passed, the Republicans won both houses of Congress and the National Rifle Association got a lot of the credit.
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