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		 Virginia 
		governor seeks to reinstate restrictions on handgun sales 
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		[December 16, 2014] 
		By Gary Robertson
 RICHMOND, Va. (Reuters) - Virginia 
		Governor Terry McAuliffe, a Democrat, on Monday called to reinstate 
		restrictions on the purchase of handguns, in a move that opponents 
		described as unlikely to succeed with a Republican-dominated 
		legislature.
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			 McAuliffe asked lawmakers to reinstate a law allowing buyers to 
			purchase only one handgun a month, which had been repealed during 
			his Republican predecessor's administration. He also wants to 
			require private vendors at gun shows to run background checks on all 
			prospective buyers. 
 "At gun shows, private vendors are not required to conduct criminal 
			background checks, creating an easy avenue for criminals to 
			illegally gain access to guns," McAuliffe said. His call came the 
			day after the second anniversary of a gunman's rampage in Newtown, 
			Connecticut, that killed 26 elementary school students and 
			educators.
 
 McAuliffe also aims to revoke concealed weapons permits for parents 
			who are delinquent on child support payments and prohibit the 
			possession of firearms for misdemeanor domestic violence offenders.
 
			
			 The head of a Virginia gun-rights group called the move political 
			payback to former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, an ardent 
			gun-control activist who was a major donor to McAuliffe's 2013 
			gubernatorial campaign.
 "I think this is all politically motivated," said Philip Van Cleave, 
			president of the Virginia Citizens Defense League, a gun rights 
			group. "If anything, Virginia is more pro-gun than it was last 
			year."
 
 The National Rifle Association, meanwhile, has said it financed 
			$500,000 in ads on television and online striking out at McAuliffe’s 
			views on firearms.
 
 In 2013, gun sales in Virginia set a new high with nearly 480,000 
			transactions, according to state police statistics on the number of 
			mandatory criminal background checks of gun purchasers.
 
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			Gun sales grew 10.8 percent over the previous record set just a year 
			earlier.
 Overall sales could be even higher, because state police don't track 
			private firearm transactions. Final sales numbers for 2014 aren't in 
			yet.
 
 Thomas Baker, a criminologist and an assistant professor at Virginia 
			Commonwealth University’s L. Douglas Wilder School of Government and 
			Public Affairs, said McAuliffe’s gun control proposals could spur 
			even more gun sales.
 
 “Usually, when new policies restricting firearm purchases are 
			proposed, we see a rise in firearm sales,” Baker said
 
 (Editing by Scott Malone and Leslie Adler)
 
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