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Trump Administration is released to ban powerful weapons accessories

The Trump administration has given up a legal fight to ban a device that makes semi -automatic weapons more powerful.

The Ministry of Justice announced on Friday that it had reached a comparative dispute submitted by the bid administration to block the sale of the device, which must be described as a trigger for forced entry figures.

“This Ministry of Justice believes that the second change is not a second class,” said Attorney General Pam Bondi in a statement. “And we are pleased to end an unnecessary legal disputes with an agreement that will improve public security.”

Forced triggers enable gun owners to fire their semi -automatic weapons at a high speed. With the device, a shooter can fire hundreds of rounds with an extensive bruises in a minute, said officials from the bidges.

The accessory resembles a bump inventory that President Trump banned in his first term after a shooter used a dozens of concert visitors in Las Vegas. Bump stocks enable triggers for forced reset semi -automatic rifles at speeds that approach those of machine guns.

Last year, the Supreme Court put down the Bump stock ban. However, the bidet government had tried to maintain a ban on trigger with forced reset.

A federal judge in Texas was forced to ban the trigger, but the bidet management made an appeal against the case.

The Ministry of Justice said that the new settlement included weapons protection regulations and would prevent the sale of trigger for forced reset in pistols.

Nevertheless, the safety of weapons introduced the settlement and said that gun owners transform their firearms into virtual machine guns and make life more dangerous.

“Machine rifles have no place on our streets, and this change of the Trump government will only lead to a tragedy,” said John Feinblatt, President of Everyterown for Weapons Security.

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