Group launches anti-violence initiative

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Ian and Nicole Hockley, parents of Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting victim Dylan, listen at a news conference at Edmond Town Hall Monday in Newtown, Conn. One month after the mass school shooting at Sandy Hook, the parents joined a grassroots initiative called Sandy Hook Promise to support solutions for a safer community. (AP)
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“I’m just one member of a Virginia Tech family, Newtown has theirs, Aurora has theirs, Tucson has theirs, and now we’re starting to come together,” Michael Pohle said. “This coalition is growing, and it’s going to become more powerful, and we’re going to have the ability to influence elections as well.”

The gun control debate heated up after 20-year-old Adam Lanza shot his way into Sandy Hook Elementary School on Dec. 14 and killed 26 people before committing suicide as police arrived. He also killed his mother at their Newtown home before driving to the school and carrying out the massacre.

President Barack Obama is reviewing proposals from Vice President Joe Biden, who is leading a task force on ways to reduce gun violence. Obama told reporters Monday he is looking at actions he can take on his own to confront gun violence amid resistance from the National Rifle Association and wariness among lawmakers from both parties.

The NRA has fiercely opposed new gun control laws and has called for “a meaningful conversation” about school safety, mental health issues and marketing violence to children.

A number of governors were already moving ahead with proposals to toughen state laws.

New York’s Legislature was expected to vote as early as Monday night on a measure to tighten gun laws in a state that already has among the nation’s strictest gun rules. The tentative deal would further restrict New York’s ban on assault weapons and limit the size of magazines to seven bullets, rather than the current 10. It also would also make it easier to secure civil confinement for people determined to be a threat.

In Delaware, Gov. Jack Markell on Monday proposed background checks for private gun sales and a ban on military-style weapons. A package of gun control proposals also included a ban on magazines holding more than five rounds for rifles and 10 rounds for handguns, and a ban on guns within 1,000 feet of schools.

Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, speaking at the same Baltimore summit as Bloomberg, said he will be advocating a broad array of proposals this legislative session, including a ban on military-style weapons, stricter licensing requirements, school safety and mental health concerns.

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