The firearm a 25-year-old man used this month to shoot and kill five of his colleagues at a bank in Kentucky is expected at some point to go up for auction – a practice set by a state law the shooter’s family and Louisville’s mayor say they want changed
. The statute, in place since 2016, states that certain confiscated guns not retained for official use “shall be sold at public auction,” with some proceeds going to public safety programs. The law governs the inevitable future of weapons that live on long after anyone they were used against might have perished.
We need short-term action to end this gun violence epidemic now so fewer people die on our streets and in our banks, in our schools,” the mayor said. “I don’t care about finger-pointing. I don’t care about blame. I don’t care about politics. I’m only interested in working together with our state legislators to take meaningful action to save lives to prevent more tragic injuries and more death.
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Family of Louisville bank shooter wants his rifle destroyedThe family of a man who opened fire at a Louisville bank is working to destroy the AR-15 rifle he used to kill five of his co-workers. A state law in Kentucky sends firearms confiscated by law enforcement to auction, and the proceeds are used to buy law enforcement equipment. Last week after the shooting, Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg said the “murder weapon will be back on the streets one day under Kentucky’s current law.”
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Louisville Bank Shooter Explains Motive in 13-Page Manifesto: ReportLouisville bank shooter Connor Sturgeon reportedly detailed his motive in a 13-page manifesto in which he wrote about a death wish, the mental health crisis in America, and his hope to show how easy it is to buy a gun in Kentucky.
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Louisville shooting: Killer wanted to show ease of purchasing guns, manifesto statesA 13-page manifesto written by the Old National Bank shooter in Louisville, described three key points: He wanted to prove how easy it was to buy a gun in Kentucky, he wanted to highlight the mental health crisis, and he wanted to die by suicide.
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Thoroughbred horse, born and raised in central Pa., is a Kentucky Derby contenderAngel of Empire of Schuylkill County won two graded stakes and has earned more than $1 million on his way to Churchill Downs.
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Gov. Beshear: Drug overdose deaths fell in Kentucky in 2022Drug overdose deaths in Kentucky fell by 5% in 2022, offering a sign of hope that treatment efforts are relieving an addiction epidemic that remains a public health crisis, Gov. Andy Beshear said Thursday.
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