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Look like family problem cause man to kill in elementary school in USA

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http://newsone.com/2109310/bulletproof-backpacks/

http://www.euronews.com/2012/12/21/rising-demand-for-child-bulletproof-backpacks-in-us/

Bulletproof Backpack Sales Up 500% Since Sandy Massacre

Massachusetts-based armor company BulletBlocker has seen at least a 300 to 400 percent rise in sales since the massacre. Parents began buying the backpacks last Friday in such a frenzy that BulletBlocker Vice President Elmar Uy didn’t believe the numbers at first.
“Part of my daily activity is to monitor the numbers. I was seeing numbers I’d never seen before, and I thought it was a glitch. Our Web traffic was 10 times more than normal.”
Curious, Uy then turned on CNN and found out about what had transpired earlier in the day.
The company’s backpacks start at $199.99. They also offer $175 shields that can slide in to backpacks, laptop bags, and purses, weighing 20 oz.
Uy says he’s also received multiple calls from police officers since Friday, looking to protect their children.
Amendment II, a Utah-based combat apparel company, says their sales have jumped 500 percent since the tragedy. A majority of the orders were for the backpacks or bulletproof shields.
“When we’re selling a few a week, it doesn’t take many to increase your sales,” Amendment II co-owner and sales director Derek Williams said. “But yesterday we had over 200 requests for products.”
 
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singveld

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http://www.bulletblocker.com/bullet-proof-backpack-shield.html

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2012-12-19T204046Z_624344706_GM1E8CK0CSJ01_RTRMADP_3_USA-GUNS.JPG
 

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WASHINGTON — The National Rifle Association (NRA), which promotes gun ownership and the constitutional American right to bear arms, is a powerful voice against gun control in the United States.

On Friday, in response to last week's mass shooting at a Connecticut elementary school, the NRA urged the government to put armed guards at all U.S. schools, rejecting renewed calls for stricter gun control laws.

With about four million paying members, the NRA is a major political force. The group has promoted gun ownership for more than 141 years.

"The National Rifle Association is what we call a heavy hitter," says Kathy Kiely, managing editor of the Sunlight Foundation, a group that tracks political contributions made by the NRA. "They are powerful both because they have a wide membership base across the country and because they raise money and use it in politically savvy ways."

Through television ads and campaign contributions, analysts say the NRA spends millions of dollars every year to lobby members of Congress. It has successfully opposed efforts to reinstate a ban on assault weapons which expired in 2004.

The group is generous toward candidates who support its positions, and actively opposes those it sees as adversaries.

"Gun owners vote and its bad politics to be anti-Second Amendment [gun-ownership rights] in an election year," says Wayne LaPierre, NRA's outspoken executive vice president.

The NRA also gives grades to lawmakers who support its causes, which mmeans the NRA is often feared among politicians.

"They are feared because they can turn out the vote," says Kiely,"and they can turn out lots and lots of campaign contributions either to support a politician or oppose a politician."

This month's Connecticut school shooting, where 20 young children and six adults were killed by a man using an assault rifle, renewed the gun control debate.

It has also put the NRA on the defensive.

Now, some longtime allies of the gun lobby are calling on the NRA to work with Congress to enact sensible gun control laws.

"The NRA and other gun rights advocates groups, they are not wrong about everything in this issue," says Congressman John Yarmuth, a Democrat from Kentucky. "I don't believe they are wrong, but they have never been willing to participate in addressing reasonable approaches to gun violence. They've never been able to sit down at the table."

Even gun sellers question the NRA's ability to push back against calls for a ban on military-style assault weapons, and high-capacity ammunition magazines, similar to those used in the Connecticut killings.

"When you got 20 dead kids who are massacred it doesn't matter how much power the NRA has," says Andrew Raymond, a gun dealer in Maryland. "It is almost a foregone conclusion that we are going to see some sort of legislation that will severely restrict these guns."

The growing anger over senseless mass shootings may be a tipping point, perhaps altering the strength of the NRA's political power to fight back against stronger gun control laws.
 

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1,400 rounds of ammo, three Samurai swords and photos of dead people: Warrants reveal the chilling haul found in Adam Lanza's home - and how he shot 155 bullets in less than five minutes

The police dossier compiled in the aftermath of the Sandy Hook massacre reveal shooter Adam Lanza had amassed an astonishing arsenal of guns, with thousands of rounds of ammunition, samurai swords, spears and three photographs of what appear to be a dead person covered in blood.

Search warrant affidavits relating to the Newtown school shootings were unsealed by a judge in Danbury at 9.01 a.m. this morning - providing a chilling picture of the 20-year-old mass murderer in the days before he killed 26 people, including 20 children at the Connecticut school on December 14th.

The released documents outline how he unleashed 155 bullets at the innocent children during a five-minute rampage and that he was an avid reader of an NRA guide to shooting and three other self-help books, 'Look at Me: My Life With Asperger's' and 'Born on a Blue Day: Inside the Mind of an Autistic Savant' and 'Train Your Brain to Get Happy'.

The inventory of the evidence seized from Lanza's home and the car he drove to carry out the massacre provided glimpses into the world of a troubled young man, but it does not answer the question of what could have motivated the attack.

Investigators say it will take until June or later to complete the investigation.

Prosecutors until now had made few details available, despite pressure to do so from the Connecticut governor, who criticized leaks to the press and lawmakers who clamored for more details as they craft legislation on mental health and gun control.

Indeed, up until now, the only portrait was of an identikit loner, who locked himself away in his room, obsessively playing video games and collecting powerful handguns and assault rifles.

Carnage at Sandy Hook Elementary School

Chief prosecutor Stephen Sedensky confirmed that Lanza killed all 26 victims inside Sandy Hook Elementary School with a Bushmaster .223-caliber rifle before taking his own life with a Glock 10 mm handgun.

He revealed Lanza had another loaded handgun with him inside the school as well as three, 30-round magazines for the Bushmaster.

When his body was discovered, Lanza's Bushmaster was loaded with 30-round magazine of which 14 bullets still remained in place with one round in the chamber.

Upon entering the school, the police documents state that law officials discovered, 'numerous school children and school personnel located deceased from apparent gunshot wounds in the first three classrooms off the main hallway, adjacent to the school's front entrance'.

Adam Lanza's body was found dressed in military camouflage wearing a bullet-proof vest on the floor in the classroom.

All the weapons Lanza was carrying were legally owned by his mother, Nancy, 52, who was discovered dead in her bed on the second-floor of the house she shared with her son with a gunshot wound to her forehead and a rifle on the floor nearby.

This new information from the police rules out any suggestion that Lanza tried to buy weapons himself before his massacre - which had been speculated previously.

A loaded 12-gauge shotgun was also found on the backseat of the Honda Civic Lanza drove to the school with two magazines containing 70 rounds of Winchester 12-gauge shotgun rounds.

Self-help books:

At the house, investigators found books about autism and Asperger's syndrome as well as an NRA guide to pistol shooting.

The self-help books included 'Look Me in the Eye – My life with Aspergers,' and 'Born on a Blue Day – Inside the Mind of an Autistic Savant.'

In the days after the shooting, former classmates of Lanza said that he did have Asperger syndrome, however, this has not been confirmed by investigators attached to the case.

Video gaming loner:

Police said they found a smashed computer hard drive and a gaming console in Lanza's bedroom.

And an unnamed source told investigators that Lanza was an avid gamer who obsessively played video games and was a loner.

The 'citizen witness', whose name is redacted in the documents, told investigators Lanza 'rarely leaves his home'.

They added Lanza was 'a shut in and an avid gamer who plays Call of Duty, amongst other games.
Investigators found articles on other shootings and a holiday card containing a check made out to Adam Lanza for the purchase of a firearm, authored by his mother, Nancy Lanza.

Documents indicate that authorities found Nancy's gun safe open with shotgun shells and numerous boxes of bullets - ruling out any speculation that Lanza had forcibly taken the weapons from his mother.

In a bedroom closet, they found ear plugs, a handwritten note regarding ammunition and magazines, paperwork on guns and a seven-foot-long metal bayonet with a blade on one side and a spear on the other.

In a top drawer of a filing cabinet, they found paper targets. In a duffel bag, they found ear and eye protection, binoculars, numerous other paper targets and Lanza's NRA certificate.

And in response to release of the new information linking Sandy Hook shooter Adam Lanza to the NRA, the powerful gun-rights group denied the accuracy of the police evidence.

'There is no record of a member relationship between Newtown killer Adam Lanza, nor between Nancy Lanza, A. Lanza or N. Lanza with the National Rifle Association. Reporting to the contrary is reckless, false and defamatory,' the statement said.

According to its website, the NRA doesn't offer formal certificates for membership.

Planned Massacre:

In addition to a weapons cache police found items that could offer some clues on Adam Lanza's thinking.

This included an article from The New York Times about a 2008 school shooting at Northern Illinois University and three photographs of what appeared to be a dead person covered with plastic and blood.

The article was dated February 18th, 2008 and was about the school shooting carried out by Steven Kazmierczak at the university in DeKalb, Illinois during which he killed 5 people and injured 21 on Valentine’s Day before he killed himself.
Authorities found numerous knives, including samurai swords. They found a military-style uniform in Lanza's bedroom and handwritten notes containing the addresses of local gun shops.

The warrants also make an obscure reference to Lanza's obsession with Sandy Hook Elementary School, which the documents state was the shooters, 'life'.

A Danbury Superior Court judge on Wednesday granted a request by Sedensky, the prosecutor overseeing the investigation, to withhold some details.

Sedensky asked to redact the name of a witness, saying the person's safety might be jeopardized if the name were disclosed.

He also asked that the release not include other information such as telephone numbers, serial numbers on items found and a few paragraphs of an affidavit.

Authorities have said it will take until June or later for the investigation to be completed.

Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy, who has been pushing for much stricter gun-control laws, said the facts in the search warrants 'only add starker detail to what we already know.'

'This is exactly why we need to ban high-capacity magazines and why we need to tighten our assault weapons ban,' Malloy said. 'I don't know what more we can need to know before we take decisive action to prevent gun violence. The time to act is now.'

The Associated Press and other news outlets have reported previously that Lanza showed interest in other mass killings and authorities found literature on other massacres at his house.

There have been reports that Lanza was obsessed with other mass killers, including Anders Breivik, who killed 77 people in a shooting and bomb attack in Norway two years ago.

All over in Five-Minutes: Lanza unleashed 155 bullets inside Sandy Hook Elementary in astonishing attack
Adam Lanza fired 155 bullets in less than five minutes on the day he killed 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School, the chief prosecutor investigating the massacre said on Thursday.
The total included 154 fired from a Bushmaster .223-model rifle and a final bullet, fired from a Glock 10mm handgun, that Lanza used to take his own life, said Stephen Sedensky, the chief prosecutor investigating the shooting
Among school shootings in the United States, the death toll from Newtown is second only to the 32 people killed at Virginia Tech in 2007.

Malloy announced last week that additional information would be released at his request. He expressed concern that some information about the shooting rampage at Sandy Hook reportedly disclosed by a top state police commander at a recent law enforcement seminar in New Orleans was leaked.

'Like many others, I was disappointed and angered to learn that certain information about the Newtown shooting had been leaked, specifically with concern for the victims' families who may have been hearing this news for the first time,' the governor said in a statement.

A column published last week in the New York Daily News, citing an unnamed police officer who attended the seminar, reported that Col. Daniel Stebbins discussed evidence that suggested the Newtown gunman studied other mass slayings and dedicated extensive planning to the rampage.

The seminar was designed for only law enforcement professionals, and sensitive information dealing with the tactical approaches used by first responders to the Sandy Hook shootings was discussed, state police spokesman Lt. J. Paul Vance said.
 

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Terrifying Inventory: What police found during their investigation

At the school:

1 Bushmaster .223 caliber model XM15 rifle with a 30-round magazine
1 Glock 10mm handgun
1 9mm Sig Sauer P226 handgun
1 Saiga 12 shotgun with two magazines containing 70 rounds
6 30-round magazines, three of them emptied

At the home:

A gun safe that belonged to Nancy Lanza that was open with no evidence that it was broken into to
1,400 rounds of ammunition in different locations across the house
Several rifles, handguns and shot guns including an Enfield Albian bolt-action rifle, a Savage Mark II rifle, a BB gun and a .22-caliber Volcanic starter pistol
Three Samurai swords, ten knives
One seven-foot-long spear
One bayonet
Three photographs of an unknown dead person covered in plastic and blood
A military style uniform inside Lanza's bedroom
National Rifle Association certificate's for Nancy and Adam Lanza
A holiday card with a check made out to Adam Lanza for the purchase of a CZ-83 handgun (firearm), authored by Nancy Lanza.
Seven of Lanza's personal journals
An NRA guide to the basics of shooting
A book entitled 'Look at Me: My Life with Asperger's and another book, 'Born on a Blue Day: Inside the Mind of an Autistic Savant'
A New York Times article about the 2008 Northern Illinois University shooting
A damaged computer hard drive
Sandy Hook report card for Adam Lanza
His mother Nancy was discovered in her room with one gun shot wound to the head and a rifle lying on the bed next to her
 

singveld

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OK corral in University of Colorado, dun go there.
 
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Nelson, Georgia Family Protection Ordinance Approved, Would Make Gun Ownership Mandatory For Some

NELSON, Ga. -- The city council in a small north Georgia town voted Monday night to make gun ownership mandatory – unless you object.

Council members in Nelson, a city of about 1,300 residents that's located 50 miles north of Atlanta, voted unanimously to approve the Family Protection Ordinance. The measure requires every head of household to own a gun and ammunition to "provide for the emergency management of the city" and to "provide for and protect the safety, security and general welfare of the city and its inhabitants."

Not that every household must go out and purchase a firearm.

The ordinance exempts convicted felons and those who suffer from certain physical or mental disabilities, as well as anyone who objects to gun ownership. The ordinance also doesn't include any penalty for those who don't comply.

But backers said they wanted to make a statement about gun rights at a time when President Barack Obama and some states are pushing for more restrictions in the wake of the Connecticut elementary school massacre in December that left 20 children and six educators dead.

Councilman Duane Cronic, who sponsored the measure, said he knows the ordinance won't be enforced but he still believes it will make the town safer.

"I likened it to a security sign that people put up in their front yards. Some people have security systems, some people don't, but they put those signs up," he said. "I really felt like this ordinance was a security sign for our city. Basically it was a deterrent ordinance to tell potential criminals they might want to go on down the road a little bit."

The city council's agenda says another purpose of the measure is "opposition of any future attempt by the federal government to confiscate personal firearms."

Nelson resident Lamar Kellett was one of five people who spoke during a public comment period and one of two who opposed the ordinance. Among his many objections, he said it dilutes the city's laws to pass measures that aren't intended to be enforced.


"Does this mean now 55 miles an hour speed limit means 65, 80, whatever you choose? There's not a whole lot of difference. A law's a law," he said.

Kellett also said the ordinance will have no effect, that it won't encourage people like him who don't want a gun to go out and buy one.

The proposal illustrates how the response to the Newtown, Conn., massacre varies widely in different parts of the country.

While lawmakers in generally more liberal states with large urban centers like New York and California have moved to tighten gun control laws, more conservative, rural areas in the American heartland have been going in the opposite direction, seeking to loosen restrictions, arm educators or even require gun ownership.

Among the other efforts to broaden gun rights that have surfaced since the Newtown killings:

_ Earlier Monday, lawmakers in Oklahoma scuttled a bill that would have allowed public school districts to decide whether to let teachers be armed.

_ Spring City, Utah, passed an ordinance this year recommending that residents keep firearms, softening an initial proposal that aimed to require it.

_ Residents of tiny Byron, Maine, rejected a proposal last month that would have required a gun in every home. Even some who initially supported the measure said it should have recommended gun ownership instead of requiring it, and worried that the proposal had made the community a laughingstock. Selectmen of another Maine town, Sabbatus, threw out a similar measure. The state's attorney general said state law prevents municipalities from passing their own firearms laws anyway.

_ Lawmakers in about two dozen states have considered making it easier for school employees or volunteers to carry guns on campus. South Dakota passed such a measure last month. Individual communities from New Jersey to Colorado have voted to allow administrators or teachers to carry guns in school.

Located in the Appalachian foothills, Nelson is a tiny, hilly town with narrow, twisting roads. It's a place where most people know one another and leave their doors unlocked.

It used to be a major source of marble, with the local marble company employing many in town. But that industry is mostly gone now, Mayor Mike Haviland said. There are no retail stores in town anymore, and people do their shopping elsewhere. While the town used to have an internally driven economy, just about everyone leaves town for work now, making it a bedroom community for Atlanta, Haviland said.

The mayor said he never dreamed his small city would be the focus of national and international media attention, but he understands it.

"It bumps up against the national issues on guns," he said.

Nelson resident Lawrence Cooper and his wife, Nanette, sat on their front porch Monday morning, enjoying a pleasant breeze and listening to the radio show of conservative Herman Cain, who unsuccessfully sought the 2012 Republican nomination for president. The Coopers support the ordinance.

"It's supporting gun rights flat out, and there is so much – not antipathy – but antagonism against gun ownership these days," Lawrence Cooper said. "And this is a very conservative small town, and they are fully in support of this."

The couple doesn't own any guns, but 52-year-old Lawrence Cooper said he grew up with them, and this ordinance might inspire him to go out and buy one. He chuckled as he pulled out a small black-and-white photo from his wallet. It shows him at 3 years of age, in front of a rack of hunting rifles and shotguns.

Police Chief Heath Mitchell noted that the city doesn't have police officers who work 24 hours a day and is far from the two sheriff's offices that might send deputies in case of trouble, so response times to emergency calls can be long. So having a gun would help residents take their protection into their own hands, he said.

But the chief – the town's sole police officer – acknowledged the crime rate is very low. He mostly sees minor property thefts and a burglary every few months. The most recent homicide was more than five years ago, he said.

The proposed ordinance is modeled after a similar one adopted in 1982 by Kennesaw, an Atlanta suburb. City officials there worried at the time that growth in nearby Atlanta might bring crime to the community, which now has about 30,000 residents. Kennesaw police have acknowledged that their ordinance is difficult to enforce, and they haven't made any attempt to do so.

Leroy Blackwell, 82, has lived in Nelson for about 50 years and owns a hunting rifle that he keeps in a closet. He'd support the ordinance even if it didn't have exemptions, but he prefers it to be voluntary, he said. He said before the council's decision that he'd rather see the measure put to a popular vote instead.

"Really, I think it would be more fair to put it to a vote" so everybody could have a say, he said.

The town has gotten an enormous amount of media attention since the council began discussing the ordinance last month. Councilman Jackie Jarrett said the response has been overwhelmingly positive. Most of the concerns have been raised by people worried about the mentally ill or convicted felons being required to own a gun, but he's quick to point to the proposed exemptions, he said.

Mostly, he's amazed that anyone outside of Nelson cares about the ordinance.

"It really has surprised me that we've gotten so much attention, especially since this isn't affecting the world," he said. "It's just a small town thing."

And, as it turns out, it may not affect Nelson all that much, even though the ordinance is set to go into effect in 10 days.

"Most everybody around here's got guns anyway," Jarrett said.
 
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