Washington (AFP) - Oregon, the location of the latest deadly US mass shooting, had recently strengthened its gun sale laws, like many Democrat-leaning states frustrated over political inaction at the federal level.
The US state is above average in terms of gun regulation, according to Laura Cutilletta, a senior attorney at the Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, a leading advocacy group in California.
Local elected officials this year made universal background checks mandatory before the sale of any firearm in Oregon, one of 18 out of 50 states to do so. Elsewhere in the United States, sales at gun shows or on the Internet are not subject to such controls, a known loophole.
Still, Oregon does not prohibit the transfer or possession of assault weapons, nor does it have a gun-purchase waiting period.
More than ever, the United States is a patchwork of laws, with the ghastly murder rampage at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012 failing to produce the national reform that gun control activists had hoped from a divided Congress.
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