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		Hawaii becomes first U.S. state to place 
		gun owners on FBI database 
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		 [June 25, 2016] 
		By Alex Dobuzinskis 
 LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Hawaii's governor 
		signed a bill making it the first state to place its residents who own 
		firearms in a federal criminal record database and monitor them for 
		possible wrongdoing anywhere in the country, his office said.
 The move by gun control proponents in the liberal state represents 
			an effort to institute some limits on firearms in the face of a 
			bitter national debate over guns that this week saw Democratic 
			lawmakers stage a sit-in at the U.S. House of Representatives.
 Hawaii Governor David Ige, a Democrat, on Thursday signed into law a 
			bill to have police in the state enroll people into an FBI criminal 
			monitoring service after they register their firearms as already 
			required, his office said in a statement.
 
 The Federal Bureau of Investigation database called "Rap Back" will 
			allow Hawaii police to be notified when a firearm owner from the 
			state is arrested anywhere in the United States.
 
 Hawaii has become the first U.S. state to place firearm owners on 
			the FBI's Rap Back, which until now was used to monitor criminal 
			activities by individuals under investigation or people in positions 
			of trust such as school teachers and daycare workers
 
		
		 "As you can imagine, the NRA finds this one of the most extreme 
			bills we've ever seen," said Amy Hunter, a spokeswoman for the 
			National Rifle Association's institute for legislative action.
 The law could affect gun owners outside Hawaii, because the state 
			requires visitors carrying guns to register, Hunter said.
 
 As a result, they could be added to "Rap Back" because they arrived 
			in the state with a gun, she said. The Hawaii attorney general's 
			office said a weapon-carrying visitor should be able to petition for 
			removal from the national database after leaving the state.
 
 Hawaii state Senator Will Espero, a Democrat who co-authored the law 
			and owns a gun, called it "common sense legislation that does not 
			hurt anyone."
 
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			Attendees visit the trade booths during the National Rifle 
			Association's annual meeting in Louisville, Kentucky, May 21, 2016. 
			REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein 
            
             
			The law, which takes effect immediately, allows police in Hawaii to 
			evaluate whether a firearm owner should continue to possess a gun 
			after being arrested.
 "It just means local police will be notified," Espero said in a 
			phone interview.
 
 Ige's office said he also signed into law two other firearms bills. 
			One makes convictions for stalking and sexual assault among the 
			criminal offenses disqualifying a person from gun ownership. The 
			other requires firearm owners to surrender their weapons if 
			diagnosed with a mental, behavioral or emotional disorder.
 
 (Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by David Gregorio and Ed 
			Davies)
 
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