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NewsJanuary 5, 2016

WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama moved Monday to expand background checks to cover more firearms sold at gun shows, online and anywhere else, aiming to curb a scourge of gun violence despite unyielding opposition to new laws in Congress. Obama's plan to broaden background checks forms the centerpiece of a broader package of gun-control measures the president plans to take on his own in his final year in office...

By JOSH LEDERMAN ~ Associated Press
Kayla Brown, left, wears her gun on her hip while working at the Spring Guns and Amo store Monday in Spring, Texas. (David J. Phillip ~ Associated pRess)
Kayla Brown, left, wears her gun on her hip while working at the Spring Guns and Amo store Monday in Spring, Texas. (David J. Phillip ~ Associated pRess)

WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama moved Monday to expand background checks to cover more firearms sold at gun shows, online and anywhere else, aiming to curb a scourge of gun violence despite unyielding opposition to new laws in Congress.

Obama's plan to broaden background checks forms the centerpiece of a broader package of gun-control measures the president plans to take on his own in his final year in office.

Although Obama can't unilaterally change gun laws, the president hopes beefing up enforcement of existing laws can prevent at least some gun deaths in a country rife with them.

"This is not going to solve every violent crime in this country," Obama said.

Still, he added, "It will potentially save lives and spare families the pain of these extraordinary losses."

Barack Obama
Barack Obama

Under current law, only federally licensed gun dealers must conduct background checks on buyers, but many who sell guns at flea markets, on websites or in other informal settings don't register as dealers. Gun-control advocates said that loophole is exploited to skirt the background-check requirement.

Now, the Justice Department's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives will issue updated guidance that said the government should deem anyone "in the business" of selling guns to be a dealer, regardless of where he or she sells the guns.

To that end, the government will consider other factors, including how many guns a person sells, how frequently and whether those guns are sold for a profit.

The executive actions on gun control fall far short of what Obama and likeminded lawmakers attempted to accomplish with legislation in 2013, after a massacre at a Connecticut elementary school.

Even so, the more modest measures were sure to spark legal challenges from those who oppose any new impediments to buying guns.

"We're very comfortable that the president can legally take these actions now," Attorney General Loretta Lynch said.

Obama's announcement was hailed by gun-control advocates and Democratic lawmakers who praised the president for refusing to cow to the National Rifle Association and similar groups.

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Dan Gross of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence said Obama was making history with "bold and meaningful action" that would make all Americans safer.

Even before Obama's steps were unveiled, Republicans launched a pre-emptive campaign to try to thwart them.

"The president is at minimum subverting the legislative branch and potentially overturning its will," said House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis.

Far from mandating background checks for all gun sales, the new guidance exempts collectors and gun hobbyists, and the exact definition of who must register as a dealer and conduct background checks remains vague.

The administration did not issue a number for how many guns someone must sell to be considered a dealer, instead saying it planned to remind people courts have deemed people to be dealers in some cases even if they sell only a handful of guns.

And the background check provision rests in the murky realm of agency guidelines, which have less force than full-fledged federal regulations and can easily be rescinded. Many of the Republican presidential candidates running to succeed Obama have vowed to rip up his new gun restrictions upon taking office.

In an attempt to prevent gun purchases from falling through the cracks, the FBI will hire 230 more examiners to process background checks, the White House said, an increase of about 50 percent. Many of the roughly 63,000 background check requests each day are processed within seconds. But if the system kicks back a request for further review, the government only has three days before federal law says the buyer can return and buy the gun without being cleared.

That weak spot in the system came under scrutiny last summer when the FBI revealed that Dylann Roof, the accused gunman in the Charleston, S.C., church massacre, was improperly allowed to buy a gun because incomplete record-keeping and miscommunication among authorities delayed processing of his background check beyond the three-day limit.

The White House also said it planned to ask Congress for $500 million to improve mental health care, and Obama issued a memorandum directing federal agencies to conduct or sponsor research into smart gun technology that reduces the risk of accidental gun discharges. The Obama administration also plans to complete a rule, already in the works, to close another loophole that allows trusts or corporations to purchase sawed-off shotguns, machine guns and similar weapons without background checks.

Obama planned to announce the new measures at an event at the White House on Tuesday as he continued a weeklong push to promote the gun effort and push back on its critics.

He met at the White House on Monday with Democratic lawmakers who have supported stricter gun control, and planned to take his argument to prime time Thursday with a televised town hall discussion. The initiative also promised to be prominent in Obama's final State of the Union address next week.

Whether the new steps will effectively prevent future gun deaths remained unclear. Philip Cook, a Duke University professor who researches gun violence and policy, said surveys of prisoners don't show gun shows to be a major direct source of weapons used in violent crime. The attorney general, asked how many dealers would be newly forced to register, declined to give a number.

"It's just impossible to predict," Lynch said.

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