Nov 30, 1993
President Clinton signed into law the Brady bill, which required a 5-day waiting period & background checks
#GunChannels
#GunLaws #NeverForget #IfALawDontWorkRepealIt
Nov 30, 1993
President Clinton signed into law the Brady bill, which required a 5-day waiting period & background checks
#GunChannels
#GunLaws #NeverForget #IfALawDontWorkRepealIt
March 17, 2000
Smith and Wesson signed an unprecedented agreement with the Clinton administration to include safety locks with all their handguns & any new firearms would not take a magazine holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition, in return, the agreement called for federal, state and city lawsuits against the gun maker to be dropped.
Nov 30, 1993
President Clinton signed into law the Brady bill, which required a 5-day waiting period & background checks
#GunChannels
#GunLaws #NeverForget #IfALawDontWorkRepealIt
March 17, 2000
Smith and Wesson signed an unprecedented agreement with the Clinton administration to include safety locks with all their handguns & any new firearms would not take a magazine holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition, in return, the agreement called for federal, state and city lawsuits against the gun maker to be dropped.
Nov 30, 1993
President Clinton signed into law the Brady bill, which required a 5-day waiting period & background checks
#GunChannels
#GunLaws #NeverForget #IfALawDontWorkRepealIt
March 17, 2000
Smith and Wesson signed an unprecedented agreement with the Clinton administration to include safety locks with all their handguns & any new firearms would not take a magazine holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition, in return, the agreement called for federal, state and city lawsuits against the gun maker to be dropped.
Nov 30, 1993
President Clinton signed into law the Brady bill, which required a 5-day waiting period & background checks Continue reading
March 17, 2000
Smith and Wesson signed an unprecedented agreement with the Clinton administration to include safety locks with all their handguns & any new firearms would not take a magazine holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition, in return, the agreement called for federal, state and city lawsuits against the gun maker to be dropped.