US Senator Warren targets US ammunition sales linked to Mexican cartels

US Senator Warren targets US ammunition sales linked to Mexican cartels

By Mike Stone

Reuters

WASHINGTON, March 5 (Reuters) - U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren will introduce legislation on Thursday to stop a U.S. Army-owned ammunition plant from ‌selling military-grade bullets to civilians, asserting that some are being diverted to ‌arm Mexican drug cartels and have been used in more than a dozen American mass shootings.

The Stop Militarizing ​Our Streets Act, co-sponsored by Senator Andy Kim and Representatives Robert Garcia and Jamie Raskin, would prohibit Pentagon contractors from selling military-grade assault weapons and ammunition to civilians.

It would also require that military contractors only sell firearms and ammunition to commercial dealers ‌that follow minimum safety practices, ⁠such as screening customers and having a low history of gun sales that are later linked to a crime.

The bill takes ⁠aim at the Lake City Army Ammunition Plant in Independence, Missouri, a facility built during World War Two to supply the U.S. military and the largest manufacturer of ​rifle ammunition ​for the U.S. armed forces.

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The facility is ​run by Olin Winchester, part of ‌Olin Corporation. The Army has a deal with Winchester that whatever ammunition is not purchased by the service can be sold commercially on the civilian market.

High-powered .50-caliber cartridges that Mexican authorities have seized from cartels were traced to the Lake City plant, Warren said.

Neither Olin nor its subsidiary immediately responded to a request for comment.

"Americans' ‌tax dollars should not be used to fuel ​gun violence," Warren said in a statement. "Congress must ​step in to keep Americans ​safe, and that means stopping the U.S. military and giant defense ‌contractors from selling weapons of war ​to cartels, criminal groups, ​and mass shooters that terrorize our communities."

A New York Times investigation in 2023 found that AR-15 ammunition produced at the Lake City plant had been ​used in at least ‌a dozen mass shootings since 2012, including the attacks in Aurora, San ​Bernardino, Las Vegas, Sutherland Springs, Parkland, Buffalo, and Uvalde.

(Reporting by Mike ​Stone in Washington; Editing by Nia Williams)

 

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