NEWTOWN, Conn. — Some residents of the Connecticut
community devastated by December's school shooting said they're
outraged over robocalls they've received from the National Rifle
Association only three months after a gunman killed 20 first-graders and
six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
Newtown residents said the automated calls from the NRA began last
week and urge people to tell their state legislators to oppose gun
control proposals. Some also said they received postcards from the NRA
supporting gun owners' rights.
"It's ridiculous and insensitive," Newtown resident Dan O'Donnell
told Hartford-area NBC affiliate WVIT-TV, one of several media
organizations to report about the robocalls. "I can't believe an
organization would be so focused on the rights of gun owners with no
consideration for the losses this town suffered."
A message seeking comment was left Monday at the NRA's headquarters in Fairfax, Va.
Like Congress and other state legislatures, Connecticut's General
Assembly has been considering gun control measures in the wake of the
school shootings, including banning assault weapons and high-capacity
ammunition magazines.
The NRA strongly opposes many gun control proposals including an
assault weapons ban, saying government officials should better enforce
existing gun laws and not impede on people's Second Amendment rights.
Wayne LaPierre, executive vice president of the NRA, has said his
organization supports getting the records of those adjudicated mentally
incompetent and dangerous into the background check system for gun
dealers and beefed up penalties for illegal third-party purchases and
gun trafficking.
Shortly after the Newtown shooting, LaPierre also called for armed security guards in schools.
A 20-year-old gunman killed 26 students and educators and himself at
Sandy Hook on Dec. 14, after having shot his mother to death at their
Newtown home.
Another Newtown resident, Christopher Wenis, told The Huffington Post that he received three of the NRA's robocalls last week.
"I've got a 5-year-old son who
went to preschool on the Sandy Hook Elementary School campus," Wenis
said. "And this was a really hard week for me on a lot of levels. These
calls were the very last thing I needed."
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