Analysis: The specifics of bipartisan U.S. gun legislation remain murky, as are its chances of passing into law, but here's what we know based on what the negotiators are saying.
That is, of course, a purely hypothetical exercise. The so-called assault-weapons ban isn't happening, at least not in this Congress.
North Carolina Republican Sen. Thom Tillis said the current system won't include, for example, the 44,000 juvenile arrests for violent crime in 2019. The Rand Corporation survey predicted the impact of universal background checks would range from nothing to a five per cent homicide reduction per year.
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