mayors against illegal guns
- For 60 years, a Lansdowne sporting goods shop has weathered debate and a changing climate over gun sales.
- If even a Republican presidential candidate with an A-plus rating from the NRA can see that stricter gun laws are needed, there is a chance the U.S. could close its deadly loopholes.
- Maryland state Sen. Brian Frosh picked up the endorsement of outgoing New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg Wednesday in his 2014 campaign for attorney general
- On the one year anniversary of the Newtown schoolhouse massacre, dozens of people stood in a Baltimore church and solemnly shook bells, an audible symbol of their desire to make noise about the issue of gun violence in America.
- A bus tour that began in Newtown on the sixth-month anniversary of the school shooting came to Baltimore Saturday where a small group of ministers, legislators and activists gathered to call on Congress to pass legislation to reduce gun violence.
- Gun owners can anonymously turn in a weapon and, in return, receive a Visa gift card up to $200 at the city's Gift Cards for Guns program, Saturday, June 29 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Laurel Armory/Anderson and Murphy Community Center.
- National Rifle Association president David Keene said Wednesday the organization will pursue lawsuits in the two states where Democratic governors have presidential aspirations - though it may not challenge new state gun laws elsewhere.
- In the gun debate, no one seems to have accurate data on where guns used in crimes come from. That's for a reason.