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Orlando shooting rifle 'gold standard for mass murder'.

When Omar Mateen entered an Orlando nightclub to carry out the deadliest mass shooting in US history, he wielded a weapon that has been used in massacres from California to Connecticut: a military-inspired semi-automatic rifle.

Though so-called assault rifles account for a small fraction of the US’s 30,000 annual gun deaths, they have been used in at least 10 mass shootings since 2011, according to a database compiled by Mother Jones magazine.

The prevalence of these firearms has made them a focal point in the debate over US gun laws, as opponents say civilians should not own what they describe as “weapons of war”.

Backers say they are simply modern rifles enjoyed by millions of law-abiding Americans.

Law enforcement officials say Mateen carried an AR-15 style assault rifle and a handgun when he killed 49 people and wounded 53. He also had an unidentified device, Orlando Police Chief John Mina said.

The AR-15 was developed from the US military’s M-16 rifle, used in the Vietnam War in the 1960s.

Unlike the military version, the AR-15 is not fully automatic, meaning users must pull the trigger each time they want to fire a shot. Like the military version, many AR-15s combine light weight with a relatively modest recoil.

Prominent manufacturers include Smith & Wesson, Sturm Ruger and Remington Arms Co, which faces a lawsuit from some families of Sandy Hook school shooting victims who say the rifle should not be sold to civilians.

“It is the gold standard for killing the enemy in battle, just as it has become the gold standard for mass murder of innocent civilians,” Josh Koskoff, a lawyer involved in the case, said.

Gun used for target shooting, home defence

The National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF), which represents gun manufacturers, said it would not comment on the Orlando shooting until more facts are known.

The NSSF estimates there are roughly 5 million to 10 million AR-15 rifles owned in the US — a fraction of the 300 million firearms owned by Americans.

Most owners say they use the rifle for target shooting and home defence, although they can be used for hunting as well.

Despite their controversial reputation, assault rifles do not often turn up at murder scenes. Handguns accounted for at least 48 percent of all murders between 2010 and 2014, according to FBI data, while rifles — a category that includes more traditional types of long guns — accounted for 2.4 per cent.

Roughly four times as many people were killed by knives in that period.

In December 2012, Adam Lanza used a Bushmaster XM15 to kill 28 children and adults at the Sandy Hook elementary school in Connecticut before taking his own life with a Glock pistol.

Tashfeen Malik and Syed Farook used two assault rifles and two pistols to kill 14 people in San Bernardino, California, in December last year.

James Holmes carried an assault rifle, a shotgun and two pistols when he killed 12 people in a Colorado movie theatre in 2012.

This post originally appeared on ABC News.

© 2016 Australian Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved. Read the ABC Disclaimer here

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Top Comments

FLYINGDALE FLYER 8 years ago

How America reacts to a gun massacre. 1 Pray, 2 Blame someone else, 3 Say that if the whole population was armed then this would never happen.


guest 8 years ago

I knew gun ownership was rife, but those figures astound me... have they gone up per capita in the past 20-30 years? Is the US and its citizens that much worse and more paranoid than ever? It seems like a very, very sick country to me.
-- "roughly 5 million to 10 million AR-15 rifles owned in the US"
-- "300 million firearms owned by Americans"

The US has a 323.77 million population. That is close to 1 gun per person. Faaaaarrrrk!
93 guns per 100 people it works out to.

Just found more info (from 2016):

'According to the Congressional Research Service, there are roughly twice as many guns per capita in the United States as there were in 1968: more than 300 million guns in all.'

'Gun sales have increased in recent years. According to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, U.S. gun-makers produced nearly 11 million guns in 2013, the year after the Sandy Hook elementary school massacre. That's twice as many as they made in 2010.' Source: http://www.npr.org/2016/01/...

random dude 8 years ago

From what I have heard, every time there is a mass shooting and the inevitable cries for guns to be banned, gun sales actually increase as gun owners or potential gun owners buy more just in case the law changes.

It's really a no win situation.