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Federal judge compares Swiss Army knife to lifting ban on AR-15 attacks

Federal judge compares Swiss Army knife to lifting ban on AR-15 attacks

 



A federal judge overturned a ban on firearms in California on Friday in a ruling that equated the AR-15 with a Swiss Army knife. Assault weapons have been banned in California since 1989, according to the resolution. The law has been updated several times since it was originally passed. U.S. District Court Judge Roger Benitez of the San Diego court ruled that banning assault weapons violates the right to have Second Amendment weapons and deprives Californians of possession of assault-style weapons commonly accepted in other states. Benitez gave a final order on Friday that the law cannot be complied with. “Like the Swiss Army knife, the popular AR-15 rifle is the perfect combination of a home defense weapon and homeland defense equipment,” Benitez said in the resolution. “Firearms that are considered ‘weapons of attack’ are fairly common, well-known and modern rifles.” In his ruling, the judge also criticized the news media and wrote, “It must be forgiven if the media and others are convinced that the nation is riddled with deadly AR-15 assault rifles. The facts, however, do not support this hyperbole and the facts matter.” According to 2019 FBI data, the gun was the most widely used weapon in homicides and there were 6,368 victims in 2019. There were 1,476 murders with knives or cutting tools, 364 rifle casualties and “firearms, not stated.” 3,281 victims, data show. However, the AR-15-style rifle has been chosen as the weapon for the most violent massacres in the history of history, including in a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado; Pittsburgh Tree of Life Synagogue; The Las Vegas Route 91 Harvest Music Festival; The massacre at a church in Texas; Orlando’s Pulse nightclub; The Parkland Institute in Florida; and Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut. #CNN # News #PoloSandoval.

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