Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted June 14, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted June 14, 2024 Las Vegas ********* survivors stunned by Supreme Court **** ruling On 1 October 2017, Heather Gooze was serving drinks at the Route 91 music festival in Las Vegas when concert-goers began running into her bar, screaming and covered in blood. A gunman perched high in a Las Vegas hotel had opened ***** on the festivities below. He ******* 60 people and wounded over 400 more. He was able to carry out what is still the deadliest mass ********* in US history because of a mechanism he installed on his **** known as a bump stock. In the aftermath of the massacre, then-President Donald Trump banned bump stocks, a modification that allows a rifle to ***** like a machine ****. It was a rare example of the US making a change to its **** policies in the wake of a mass *********, and it was a reform that survivors of the ******* welcomed. The ban was all the more extraordinary because it was instituted by a *********** president and supported by the National Rifle Association, figures that would normally oppose a **** control proposal. On Friday, the This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , deciding in a 6-3 opinion that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives had overstepped its authority to outlaw the device. For survivors like Ms Gooze, who identifies as ******** and thought Trump’s ban was “phenomenal”, the ruling felt like a step backward for the country. “Who has ever used a bump stock for good?” she told the BBC. “There’s no reason for a civilian to use a mass ********* machine.” Ms Gooze, 50, still vividly remembers the panic of helping people flee the carnage, and the frantic battle to save the people struck by the more than 1,000 rounds that the gunman fired with the help of his *******’s modification. “I had my finger in the bullet ***** of one of our angels in the back of their head,” she said of one victim she tried to save. She stayed with the body of another victim for hours, using a phone she found in their pocket to contact the family. “I watched people’s lives change right in front of my face, as well as my own,” she said. One of those lives was Brittany Quintero’s. Ms Quintero was separated from her friend in the chaos of the *********, and though they both survived, she has spent years working through the trauma the ********* inflicted. She told the BBC that the Supreme Court’s decision had left her reeling. “It feels like another slap in the face, to be honest,” she said. Ms Quintero, 41, said she does not necessarily believe that more stringent **** restrictions would help prevent mass shootings. She also believes not enough proposed solutions address mental health. “I don’t think taking away people’s Second Amendment rights is going to solve these things that keep occurring,” she said, referring to the protections for **** owners enshrined in the US Constitution. “If someone has it in their mind to do it, they’re going to find a way or other means.” But despite her reservations, she still thinks the Supreme Court was wrong to reinstate access to bump stocks. The Route 91 survivors were not universally disheartened by the Supreme Court decision. Several were discussing the news in a private This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up group, Ms Gooze said, and some members of the community had responded that the ruling did not bother them. “A **** isn’t the issue, we need them to keep what little freedom we have left. It’s the government that’s the ******,” one survivor wrote in a message that Ms Gooze read to the BBC. **** ********* ******** a major public safety issue in the ******* States. The nation has experienced 215 mass shootings so far in 2024, according to the **** ********* Archive (their methodology defines a mass ********* as when four or more people are shot or *******, not including the shooter). Both Ms Gooze and Ms Quintero lamented that the **** debate had grown so politicised. “I don’t think I’m ever going to see in my lifetime a true law or decision that will be made to solve the **** ********* issue,” Ms Gooze said. Repeated attempts to ban bump stocks through federal legislation have stalled, and face little chance of passing in the near term due to a divided Congress. Trump, who is again running for president, said he would respect the Supreme Court’s decision to strike down his policy and reaffirmed his support for broader access to guns. “The Court has spoken and their decision should be respected,” Trump campaign spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said in a statement. “President Trump has been and always will be a fierce defender of Americans’ Second Amendment rights and he is proud to be endorsed by the NRA.” In video on X, formerly This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , the **** shop owner who challenged the bump stock ban at the Supreme Court celebrated his victory and said he had prevented the government from banning other **** parts. The nation’s highest court sided with his argument that the Trump administration overstepped when it sought to regulate bump stocks like machine guns. “I stood and fought,” said **** shop owner Michael Cargill, “and because of this, the bump stock case is going to be the case that saves everything.” This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #Las #Vegas #********* #survivors #stunned #Supreme #Court #**** #ruling This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up 0 Quote Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/46941-las-vegas-shooting-survivors-stunned-by-supreme-court-gun-ruling/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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