Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Demings showcased the “Law Enforcement Protection Act” on Friday and pointed to her background in law enforcement. 

Florida Government & Politics

Val Demings Wants to Regulate Armor Piercing Rounds to Help Protect Law Enforcement

Demings showcased the “Law Enforcement Protection Act” on Friday and pointed to her background in law enforcement. 

Now in her second term in Congress, U.S. Rep. Val Demings, D-Fla., is proposing to make it tougher to buy armor piercing ammunition. Demings, who served in law enforcement and rose to become Orlando police chief, insisted her proposal will help protect law enforcement officials.

Demings showcased the “Law Enforcement Protection Act” on Friday and pointed to her background in law enforcement.

“As a 27-year law enforcement officer, my top priority in Congress is to keep our communities safe,” Demings said. “Americans and the law enforcement officers who protect us are at risk from armor-piercing, concealable firearms which were designed by gun manufacturers to escape existing rules. Law enforcement is a dangerous job. We make it more dangerous by allowing criminals easy access to concealable, high-powered weapons that leave officers outgunned.

“The Law Enforcement Protection Act will close this loophole and regulate armor-piercing, concealable weapons like similar dangerous weapons,” Demings added. “These weapons, which fire high-powered rounds that can pierce the body armor worn by law enforcement officers, pose a particular risk to every member of our communities. By keeping these weapons out of the wrong hands, we can reduce the chance they will be used in a crime and keep our communities safe.”

The congresswoman’s office weighed in on the details.

“The Law Enforcement Protection Act would add armor-piercing, concealable weapons as a category under the National Firearms Act (NFA),” the congresswoman’s office noted. “The NFA, enacted in 1934 and upheld by the Supreme Court in 1939, was the first federal regulation on the manufacture, transfer, and possession of firearms and destructive devices. Possession of NFA-regulated firearms requires a background check, submission of photo identification and fingerprints, and registration of the firearm with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF).  Transfers and sales of such firearms must be approved by the ATF.  Violations of the Act are punishable by up to 10 years in federal prison, $10,000 fine, forfeiture of regulated firearms, and a permanent ban on possessing firearms. This framework has proven to be extremely effective in preventing crimes by these weapons without infringing on responsible owners’ lawful possession of specialty and antique firearms.

“The NFA regulates particularly dangerous weapons like machineguns, silencers, and short-barreled rifles and shotguns,” her office added. “In recent years, however, the gun industry has begun to manufacture firearms to circumvent this regulation—including the armor-piercing, concealable weapons this legislation seeks to address. If the handguns addressed by LEPA were designed to be fired from the shoulder, they would be considered a short-barreled rifle, subjecting them to NFA regulation. They fire the same rifle rounds, but because they are designed to be fired from the hand, they escape NFA regulation. This concealability, accuracy, and ability to penetrate body armor make these handguns as dangerous as those currently under NFA regulation.”

Demings reeled in U.S. Rep. Ted Deutch, D-Fla., and U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly, D-Ill., as cosponsors. So far, there is no counterpart over in the Senate. Demings’ bill was sent to the House Ways and Means Committee at the end of last week.

First elected to Congress in 2016, Demings sits on the U.S. House Judiciary and Homeland Security Committees.

 

Kevin Derby can be reached at [email protected].

Author

  • Kevin Derby

    Originally from Jacksonville, Kevin Derby is a contributing writer for Florida Daily and covers politics across Florida.

    View all posts

Archives

Related Articles

Advertisement
Florida Daily
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

HOW WE COLLECT E-MAIL INFORMATION:

If you sign up to subscribe to Florida Daily’s e-mail newsletter, you will provide us your e-mail address and name, voluntarily, and we will never obtain any of your contact information that you don’t voluntarily provide.

HOW WE USE AN E-MAIL ADDRESS IF YOU VOLUNTARILY PROVIDE IT TO US:

If you voluntarily provide us with your name and email address, we will use it to send you one email update per weekday. Your email address will not be given to any third parties.

YOUR CONTROLS:

You will have the option to unsubscribe to our E-mail update at anytime by clicking an unsubscribe link that will be provided in each E-Mail we send.