San Bernardino Killers Exploited A Loophole To Legally Buy Assault-Style Rifles In California

Lakhota

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Jul 14, 2011
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It's called the "bullet button loophole."

The two assault-style rifles that the attackers used to carry out a shooting massacre in San Bernardino on Wednesday were legally purchased in California due to a technical loophole in the state's assault weapons ban.

Meredith Davis, a spokeswoman for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), confirmed to The Huffington Post that the two long guns were bought legally in the state, but declined to identify the dealer who sold the weapons or the person who purchased them. Davis said that law enforcement is still investigating how the shooters, Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik, acquired the rifles, since someone else purchased them.

The Smith & Wesson M&P15 that Farook wielded and Malik's DPMS A-15 were both legal in California despite the state's tough assault weapons ban because they had button mechanisms to release their ammunition magazines. An exception known as the "bullet button loophole" allows rifles that would ordinarily be prohibited to be manufactured and sold if they have the button-release feature, since their magazines are then considered fixed rather than detachable.

The loophole has spawned a cottage industry for gun makers in California, some of whom specialize in specially manufacturing assault-style rifles to comply with state law.

More: How The San Bernardino Killers Exploited A Loophole To Legally Obtain Assault-Style Rifles In California

Another loophole? This just get crazier and crazier. Why can't our politicians close all these loopholes and pass universal background checks - along with feeding reliable data into the system?
 
It's called the "bullet button loophole."

The two assault-style rifles that the attackers used to carry out a shooting massacre in San Bernardino on Wednesday were legally purchased in California due to a technical loophole in the state's assault weapons ban.

Meredith Davis, a spokeswoman for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), confirmed to The Huffington Post that the two long guns were bought legally in the state, but declined to identify the dealer who sold the weapons or the person who purchased them. Davis said that law enforcement is still investigating how the shooters, Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik, acquired the rifles, since someone else purchased them.

The Smith & Wesson M&P15 that Farook wielded and Malik's DPMS A-15 were both legal in California despite the state's tough assault weapons ban because they had button mechanisms to release their ammunition magazines. An exception known as the "bullet button loophole" allows rifles that would ordinarily be prohibited to be manufactured and sold if they have the button-release feature, since their magazines are then considered fixed rather than detachable.

The loophole has spawned a cottage industry for gun makers in California, some of whom specialize in specially manufacturing assault-style rifles to comply with state law.

More: How The San Bernardino Killers Exploited A Loophole To Legally Obtain Assault-Style Rifles In California

Another loophole? This just get crazier and crazier. Why can't our politicians close all these loopholes and pass universal background checks - along with feeding reliable data into the system?

https://pjmedia.com/trending/2015/1...ernardino-shooting-were-illegal-in-California


"While we hear more grandstanding about the need for more gun control, keep in mind all the current laws that were broken to execute this violent massacre:

    • The shooters used weapons they did not purchase (sounds like a straw purchase or illegal transfer).

    • The shooters modified guns to accept high-capacity magazines.

    • The shooters modified guns for automatic fire."
 
The TardLogic™ used by both sides of the debate continues unabated.

LIBTARD: Guns just killed some more people. We must ban them.

RUBE: Cars kill a lot more people than guns. So I guess we should ban them, too, right? Right? Right?

FOX NEWS: Some more Muslims just killed some more people. Every time any Muslim anywhere kills someone, we will be right here to tell you all about it, with doom music.

RUBE: WE MUST BAN MUSLIMS!!!

The TardLogic™ used by both sides of the debate continues unabated.

LIBTARD: Guns just killed some more people. We must ban them.

RUBE: Cars kill a lot more people than guns. So I guess we should ban them, too, right? Right? Right?

FOX NEWS: Some more Muslims just killed some more people. Every time any Muslim anywhere kills someone, we will be right here to tell you all about it, with doom music.

RUBE: WE MUST BAN MUSLIMS!!!


Both sides are ridiculous. Ban Muslims, and allow terrorist suspects to purchase guns. The other side, let Muslims in, treat them like they are US citizens but those on the terrorist suspect list we need to ban selling guns to.

The logic on both sides is amusing to watch.
 
OK, OK, I give up, I have to put out my super secret proof of what is actually going on with all of this. I promised the CIA and FBI I would never tell the American public, but I have to, I just have to!

 
It's called the "bullet button loophole."

The two assault-style rifles that the attackers used to carry out a shooting massacre in San Bernardino on Wednesday were legally purchased in California due to a technical loophole in the state's assault weapons ban.

Meredith Davis, a spokeswoman for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), confirmed to The Huffington Post that the two long guns were bought legally in the state, but declined to identify the dealer who sold the weapons or the person who purchased them. Davis said that law enforcement is still investigating how the shooters, Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik, acquired the rifles, since someone else purchased them.

The Smith & Wesson M&P15 that Farook wielded and Malik's DPMS A-15 were both legal in California despite the state's tough assault weapons ban because they had button mechanisms to release their ammunition magazines. An exception known as the "bullet button loophole" allows rifles that would ordinarily be prohibited to be manufactured and sold if they have the button-release feature, since their magazines are then considered fixed rather than detachable.

The loophole has spawned a cottage industry for gun makers in California, some of whom specialize in specially manufacturing assault-style rifles to comply with state law.

More: How The San Bernardino Killers Exploited A Loophole To Legally Obtain Assault-Style Rifles In California

Another loophole? This just get crazier and crazier. Why can't our politicians close all these loopholes and pass universal background checks - along with feeding reliable data into the system?

In other words, they were totally legal. A law doesn't become a "loophole" just because morons like you don't like it. A magazine has to be removable. Otherwise there's no way to load it.
 
San Bernardino Killers Exploited A Loophole To Legally Buy Assault-Style Rifles In California


"Loophole" (n): A small remaining piece of freedom the government hasn't taken away yet.

:bow3:
 
It's called the "bullet button loophole."

The two assault-style rifles that the attackers used to carry out a shooting massacre in San Bernardino on Wednesday were legally purchased in California due to a technical loophole in the state's assault weapons ban.

Meredith Davis, a spokeswoman for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), confirmed to The Huffington Post that the two long guns were bought legally in the state, but declined to identify the dealer who sold the weapons or the person who purchased them. Davis said that law enforcement is still investigating how the shooters, Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik, acquired the rifles, since someone else purchased them.

The Smith & Wesson M&P15 that Farook wielded and Malik's DPMS A-15 were both legal in California despite the state's tough assault weapons ban because they had button mechanisms to release their ammunition magazines. An exception known as the "bullet button loophole" allows rifles that would ordinarily be prohibited to be manufactured and sold if they have the button-release feature, since their magazines are then considered fixed rather than detachable.

The loophole has spawned a cottage industry for gun makers in California, some of whom specialize in specially manufacturing assault-style rifles to comply with state law.

More: How The San Bernardino Killers Exploited A Loophole To Legally Obtain Assault-Style Rifles In California

Another loophole? This just get crazier and crazier. Why can't our politicians close all these loopholes and pass universal background checks - along with feeding reliable data into the system?

See how the far left narrative is running about "loopholes" that do not exist..
 

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