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Bulletin
Domestic policy adviser Susan Rice is leaving the Biden administration.
Firearm manufacturers are moving to gun-friendly states. Oklahoma wants to capitalize on the trend.
Curfews have been a common response to crime among young people since the 1990s, but research shows they don’t work. Teenagers, and advocates, say there are other options to reduce violence.
It’s been 24 years since two teenagers opened fire at a high school in Littleton, Colorado.
The names of four people who died in a shooting at a Dadeville dance studio have been released. Two were high school seniors.
Even after a spike in violence since the pandemic, New York City still has a lower homicide rate than the national average.
At least two people were killed when someone fired into a crowd at a park Saturday.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission doesn’t have the authority.
The Democratic primary, which essentially determines the next mayor, is weeks away.
Andy Beshear recently let the state become a “Second Amendment sanctuary” by neither signing nor vetoing legislation from the GOP-controlled General Assembly.
The branch has let service members leave the military rather than face a day in court.
The author of the landmark Bruen decision hasn’t disclosed the gifts since 2004.
“My father was assassinated with a rifle that would be the equivalent of what we call assault weapons today,” said Bernice King, Martin Luther King Jr.’s daughter. “Fifty-five years later we’re just increasing the access to these instruments.”
Martin Luther King Jr.’s daughter called on students to continue organizing until they see significant legislative action.
Republican lawmakers are trying to expel three Democrats for participating in a protest for gun reform.