Politics & Government
Bill to Prohibit Sale, Possession of 'Bump Stocks' Now Law
The bump stock, the device the Las Vegas Shooter used is now illegal to sell and possess in New Jersey.

(TRENTON) – Legislation sponsored by Eric Houghtaling and Joann Downey to prohibit the sale and possession of a firearm accessory used in the massacre in Las Vegas was signed into law today.
The law amends state law regarding destructive devices - a list that already includes sawed-off shotguns and silencers - to make the sale or possession of "bump stocks" a third-degree criminal offense in New Jersey. It also clarifies that a firearm affixed with a bump stock constitutes an assault weapon and a firearm affixed with a trigger crank constitutes a machine gun.
Under the law, individuals will be able to voluntarily surrender any bump stock or trigger crank in their possession to a law enforcement agency within 90 days of the bill’s effective date. Licensed manufacturers and retailers will have 30 days to voluntarily surrender these items.
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"Bump stocks essentially turn a legal firearm into an illegal firearm," said Houghtaling (D-Monmouth). "Amending the law to ban them simply closes a loophole that endangers the people of New Jersey."
"When fully automatic weapons have been banned for decades, it follows that a device used to inflict the same degree of bloodshed also should be off the market," said Downey (D-Monmouth). "This is sensible action that will rectify an oversight in the law and save lives."