JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- While there's consensus in some other Republican-dominated states to ramp-up laws to keep firearms out of the hands of domestic abusers, a Missouri proposal to do that appears to have little chance in the GOP Legislature.
Democratic St. Louis Rep. Stacey Newman said her bill to ban those convicted of domestic violence from having firearms would give police tools to prevent gun deaths.
But she said it probably won't make it across the finish line, and the GOP leader of the House said it's "very unlikely" such a measure will pass.
GOP House Speaker Todd Richardson said he hasn't reviewed Newman's bill, but expects such a proposal will get a hearing at some point this session. He said its chances beyond that are slim.
"We've got a caucus in the Legislature that's going to fiercely defend the Second Amendment," Richardson said.
More than 200 people were killed with guns by spouses, ex-spouses or dating partners in Missouri between 2006 and 2014, according to an Associated Press analysis of FBI data. Eighteen died in 2014.
Nationally, an average of 760 Americans were killed each year in that period. That number also includes data from Florida, which were not included in the FBI's report but were analyzed separately by AP. The national total is an undercount because not all law enforcement agencies report such information, and it doesn't include children and other bystanders who were killed. More than 80 percent of those killed were women.
Newman's bill would also ban gun possession for those convicted of sexual offenses and those with protective or restraining orders against them. Another provision would create a process for courts to issue gun restraining orders, which ban possession and use of firearms, for up to one year if there's a demonstrated risk of gun violence. Those with restraining orders against them could request a hearing.
Police could remove firearms with a gun seizure warrant if there's probable cause to believe a gun restraining order has been violated. That would be followed by a hearing.
More than a dozen states have strengthened laws over the past two years to strip gun rights from those convicted of domestic violence crimes and those with protective orders against them.
Federal law has long prohibited felons, those convicted of misdemeanor domestic abuse and individuals subject to permanent protective orders from buying or owning guns.
Some states, including Wisconsin and South Carolina, have been passing their own laws to match or exceed the federal prohibitions. Both are controlled by Republican legislatures and have GOP governors.
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