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Cowboy Cops Shoot Rampaging Gunman’s Trigger Finger Off

Gun to temple, Piya Sukijkanond threatens suicide Tuesday after shooting six of his family members, one fatally, in the Phun Phin district of Surat Thani province.

SURAT THANI — Police in southern Thailand yesterday shot a gunman’s fingers off to stop him from pulling the trigger again after he shot six of his family members, killing one.

Police said it’s still unclear why Piya Sukijkanond, 44, went on a rampage and opened fire on his own family Tuesday – they suspect mental health issues were a factor – but the incident ended without further loss of life when officers chose not to use deadly force.

“He was pressing the handgun to his head, but then he turned the gun at police; he swept it toward the police, so we had to shoot his hand,” Somchai Suatortrakul, head of local police, said by telephone Wednesday.

Police commandos surround Piya’s body after shooting his fingers off Tuesday.
Police commandos surround Piya’s body after shooting his fingers off Tuesday.

Officers received reports at around 4pm that Piya had opened fire in his family home, killing one and wounding five others.

“Someone in his family told us that he previously sought treatment for a mental disorder,” Col. Somchai said. “But it’s still unclear. We are investigating.”

Police did not identify the slain family member.

When a team of police commandos surrounded Piya and told him to surrender, he responded by putting his gun to his head. When he threatened the officers, a police commando shot two of his fingers off, forcing Piya to drop the weapon. He was then taken into custody.

According to Somchai, the suspect is now in hospital, where police are waiting for him to recover so they can question and charge him.

Somchai added that Piya was already on trial for a 2008 murder.

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Dad Accused of Murdering Sleeping Children Shoots Self With Same Gun

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SKorea Military: NKorea Fires 2 Suspected Midrange Missiles

A man watches a TV news program reporting a missile launch of North Korea, at the Seoul Train Station in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, June 22, 2016. Photo: Lee Jin-man / Associated Press

SEOUL — In a remarkable show of persistence, North Korea on Wednesday fired two suspected powerful new Musudan midrange ballistic missiles, U.S. and South Korean military officials said, its fifth and sixth such attempts since April.

Five of those launches failed, many exploding in midair or crashing, and the sixth flew only about 400 kilometers, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said, an improvement but still well short of the missile’s potential 3,500-kilometer range and not long enough to be classified as intermediate.

Despite the repeated failures, the North’s determination in testing the Musudan worries Washington and its allies, Tokyo and Seoul, because the missile’s range puts much of Asia and the Pacific, including U.S. military bases there, within reach.

Each new test — apparently linked to a command from North Korean leader Kim Jong Un — also likely provides valuable insights to the North’s scientists and military officials as they push toward their goal of a nuclear and missile program that can threaten the U.S. mainland. Pyongyang earlier this year conducted a nuclear test, its fourth, and launched a long-range rocket that outsiders say was a cover for a test of banned missile technology.

A statement from South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said a suspected first Musudan launch from the east coast city of Wonsan failed early Wednesday morning. It didn’t elaborate. But Japan’s Defense Ministry said the missile fragmented and pieces fell into waters off the Korean Peninsula’s east coast.

Later Wednesday, the JCS said the North fired another suspected Musudan, which flew about 400 kilometers. Seoul didn’t immediately classify this launch as either a success or failure, but the reported distance is well short of past tests of other midrange missiles.

A U.S. official also said the first launch appeared to be another failure, adding that the U.S. was assessing exactly what had happened. The official wasn’t authorized to comment publicly and requested anonymity. Another American official said the first launch was a suspected Musudan but initial indications were that it failed in flight over the Sea of Japan, which the Koreas call the East Sea.

The U.S. Strategic Command in Hawaii said its systems detected and tracked two suspected North Korean Musudan missiles that fell into the Sea of Japan. It said in a statement that they didn’t pose a threat to North America.

In April, North Korea attempted unsuccessfully to launch three suspected Musudan missiles, but all exploded in midair or crashed, according to South Korean defense officials. Earlier this month, North Korea had another suspected Musudan failure, South Korean officials said.

Before April’s launches, North Korea had never flight-tested a Musudan missile, although one was displayed during a military parade in 2010 in Pyongyang, its capital.

The launches appear to stem from Kim Jong Un’s order in March for more nuclear and ballistic missile tests. The order was an apparent response to springtime U.S.-South Korean military drills, which North Korea views as an invasion rehearsal.

Since the end of those military drills, Pyongyang has repeatedly called for the resumption of talks with Seoul, even as it pursues new missile development, but the South has rejected the overtures. Seoul wants the North to first take steps toward nuclear disarmament. Pyongyang says its rivals must negotiate with it as an established nuclear power, something Washington and Seoul refuse to do.

The string of recent launch attempts shows the North is pushing hard to upgrade its missile capability in defiance of U.S.-led international pressure. The North was slapped with the strongest U.N. sanctions in two decades after its nuclear test and long-range rocket launch earlier this year.

“These provocations only serve to increase the international community’s resolve to counter (North Korea’s) prohibited activities, including through implementing existing U.N. Security Council sanctions,” State Department spokesman John Kirby said in a statement. “We intend to raise our concerns at the U.N. to bolster international resolve in holding (North Korea) accountable for these provocative actions.”

South Korea’s Unification Ministry called the launches a “clear provocation” that violated U.N. Security Council resolutions banning any ballistic activities by North Korea. In Tokyo, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was also critical, saying “We find it utterly unforgivable.”

North Korea has recently claimed a series of breakthroughs in its push to build a long-range nuclear missile that can strike the American mainland. But South Korean officials have said the North doesn’t yet possess such a weapon.

The North, however, has already deployed a variety of missiles that can reach most targets in South Korea and Japan, including American military bases in the countries.

The Korean Peninsula remains in a technical state of war because the 1950-53 Korean War ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty. About 28,500 U.S. soldiers are stationed in South Korea to deter possible aggression from North Korea; tens of thousands more are stationed in Japan.

Story: Foster Klug and Hyung-Jin Kim

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Messi Leads Argentina Over US 4-0, Into Copa America Final

Argentina forward Ezequiel Lavezzi (22) celebrates his goal against the United States during a Copa America Centenario soccer semifinal Tuesday, June 21, 2016, in Houston. Photo: David J. Phillip / Associated Press

HOUSTON  — Lionel Messi was too much for the United States to contain.

The five-time world player of the year set up Ezequiel Lavezzi’s opening goal in the third minute, then scored on a free kick to break Argentina’s career scoring record and assisted on the final goal in a 4-0 rout of the U.S. on Tuesday night that put the La Albiceleste into the Copa America final.

After Messi doubled the lead in the 32nd minute with his 55th international goal, his tournament-leading fifth, Gonzalo Higuain quickly ended U.S. comeback hopes when he put the rebound of his initial shot past goalkeeper Brad Guzan in the 50th. Higuain scored off a Messi pass in the 86th.

Argentina will seek its first major title since the 1993 Copa — and its first since Messi’s debut in 2005 — when it plays Chile or Colombia on Sunday in East Rutherford, New Jersey. It might be missing Lavezzi, who fell backward over an advertising sign board and appeared to land hard on his left arm at about the 60th minute. Lavezzi was able to get up several minutes later and left on a cart.

Hosting a special, expanded 16-nation edition of South America’s championship to celebrate Copa America’s 100th anniversary, the U.S. won a difficult group that included third-ranked Colombia and then beat No. 13 Ecuador in the quarterfinals. But top-ranked Argentina and Messi, who turns 29 Friday and is at the top of his game, outclassed the U.S. from the opening whistle and stunned the sellout crowd of 70,858 at NRG Stadium.

Messi has helped Barcelona win eight titles in Spain’s La Liga and four in the Champions League, but his Argentina trophies have been limited to the 2005 FIFA World Youth Championship for players under 20 and the gold medal in the 2008 Olympics, mostly for players under 23. La Albiceleste lost to Germany in the 2014 World Cup final and to Chile in last year’s Copa America final.

Argentina midfielder Lionel Messi celebrates his goal against the United States during a Copa America Centenario semifinal soccer match Tuesday, June 21, 2016, in Houston. Photo: David J. Phillip / Associated Press
Argentina midfielder Lionel Messi celebrates his goal against the United States during a Copa America Centenario semifinal soccer match Tuesday, June 21, 2016, in Houston. Photo: David J. Phillip / Associated Press

The U.S. and coach Jurgen Klinsmann were trying to rebound after getting eliminated by Jamaica in the semifinals of last year’s CONCACAF Gold Cup, losing to Mexico in a playoff for a 2017 Confederations Cup berth and struggling in the semifinal round of 2018 World Cup qualifying. The Americans close the tournament Saturday in the third-place match at Glendale, Arizona.

Klinsmann inserted midfielders Kyle Beckerman and Graham Zusi into his lineup along with forward Chris Wondolowski because of suspensions assessed to midfielders Jermaine Jones and Alejandro Bedoya, and forward Bobby Wood. In an effort to spark offense, 17-year-old Christian Pulisic entered at the start of the second half, and Steve Birnbaum came on in the 60th for Beckerman, allowing Geoff Cameron to move up to midfield, and Darlington Nagbe replaced Clint Dempsey in the 78th.

Argentina went ahead when Lavezzi played a short corner kick to Ever Banega, who passed back to Lavezzi sprinting from the corner diagonally. Lavezzi beat Fabian Johnson to the ball and poked it to Messi about 25 yards out, in the center of the field. As the U.S. defense started to come out, Messi one-timed a flick with his left foot over the back line to Lavezzi, who got to the ball ahead of Kyle Beckerman about 7 yards from the goal. He headed the ball over Guzan, who had started to come off his line.

Messi doubled the lead after Beckerman slipped and Chris Wondolowski took down Messi, earning a yellow card. Klinsmann screamed at Paraguayan referee Eduardo Cardozo as Messi placed the ball about 26 yards out, a few yards closer to the goal than the foul. After the U.S. set up its wall, Messi bent a beautiful curving drive that went just over Guzan’s outstretched left palm and into the upper corner.

Messi moved one ahead Gabriel Batistuta’s career total, according to the Argentine Football Association. However, FIFA records Batistuta’s total as 56, including two goals in an exhibition against Slovakia in June 1995.

Higuain scored when he burst past John Brooks for Lavezzi’s pass and one-timed a shot that Guzan stopped with a diving save, then poked the rebound into an open net. Messi nearly added a goal in the 83rd with a 20-yard shot that Guzan palmed to safety.

Notes: The U.S. dropped to 2-9-1 against top-ranked teams. … A bare-chested male fan ran onto the field as the second half was about to start, and he was tackled by security.

Story: Ronald Blum

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Redshirts Take Grievance Over Voting Watchdog Campaign to UN

A policeman stands guard in front of the Redshirts’ referendum monitoring center during Sunday’s raid in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Furious Redshirt leaders told the United Nations yesterday the military government violated their rights by shutting down their referendum monitoring operation.

The recent crackdown in which soldiers shut down several monitoring offices was seen by junta critics as evidence the Aug. 7 vote on the charter draft will not be transparent, as authorities insisted the public cannot act as observers for potential fraud.

Constitutional Court Agrees to Review Repressive Referendum Law

Redshirt leader Nattawut Saikua said he delivered his petition Monday to the U.N. offices in Bangkok to draw international attention to the ongoing abuse of power in Thailand.

“The U.N. has been attentive in following the human rights situation in Thailand,” Nattawut said after meeting representatives of the agency at its headquarters on Ratchadamnoen Road.

UN Rights Chief Urges Thailand to Allow Debate of Draft Charter

Earlier this month the official Redshirt organization, the United Front of Democracy Against Dictatorship, announced it would open “fraud watchdog centers” across the country to field complaints and dispatch monitors to observe the polls. The public will vote Aug. 7 to accept or reject the new constitution, which was drafted by a junta-appointed body.

The security force responded Sunday by raiding and closing down the centers, including one in Bangkok’s Imperial World shopping mall and others in Korat, Nakhon Phanom and Lampang provinces.

Soldiers raid a Redshirts’ referendum monitoring center on Sunday in Khon Kaen province.
Soldiers raid a Redshirts’ referendum monitoring center on Sunday in Khon Kaen province.

Government officials said there are already state agencies looking out for fraud, such as the Election Commission.

“We are not prohibiting them from inspecting [the referendum]. But don’t organize that kind of center, because there’s already the Election Commission to do that,” deputy junta chairman Prawit Wongsuwan said. “I want them to cooperate with the Election Commission, instead.”

The Election Commission is a nominally independent agency, but Redshirts have long accused it of harboring a bias. Since the 2014 coup, commissioner Somchai Srisutthiyakorn has actively pursued legal action against activists opposed to the military government.

Apart from shutting down the Redshirt monitoring centers, junta critics say the referendum is fraught with excessive restrictions such as a ban on campaigning for or against the charter, or staging debates without official sanction.

Redshirt leader Jatuporn Prompan said he suspects that the military government is creating so many restrictions because it fears the charter will be defeated.

“The powers that be see our Anti-Fraud Centers as a problem because they already know the result,” Jatuporn said Sunday. “They know what’s going to happen if they let the referendum go on. People who think they will win wouldn’t be acting like this. This is the behavior of people afraid they will lose.”

Related stories:

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No Thais Can Monitor Vote Because Law Didn’t Say They Can, Commission Reasons

Critics: Keeping Public in Dark About Draft Charter Rejection Unfair

Redshirts Alarmed by Vague Restrictions on Charter Campaigns

Campaign Guideline Bans Campaigning Before Charter Vote

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Millions Across India Take Part in International Yoga Day (Photos)

Bollywood actress Bipasha Basu, third left, laughs as yoga guru Sri Vachananand Swamiji, second right, performs yoga at an event to celebrate International Yoga Day in Bangalore, India, Tuesday, June 21, 2016. Photo: Aijaz Rahi / Associated Press

 

CHANDIGARH, India  — Millions of people across India twisted themselves into complex yoga positions Tuesday as the country celebrated International Yoga Day.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi joined a crowd of 30,000 schoolchildren and other residents of the northern city of Chandigarh for a mass yoga session.

Before beginning the exercises, Modi urged people to make yoga a part of their lives, saying the practice — which began in ancient India — doesn’t differentiate between the rich and poor, and is accessible to all.

“With zero budget yoga provides health assurance and it does not discriminate between rich and poor,” Modi told participants at the event.

Similar yoga events were held in villages, towns and cities all over India. Last year, the United Nations proclaimed June 21 as International Day of Yoga.

At the United Nations in New York, various yoga poses were projected on a side wall of the U.N. headquarters building to highlight the role yoga can play in helping the U.N. achieve its sustainable development goals.

On Tuesday, International Yoga Day will be celebrated outside the U.N. building with a demonstration by Jaggi Vasudev, also known as Sadhguru, and a musical incantation.

Many believe that practicing yoga is the best way to calm the mind and the best form of exercise for the body.

In New Delhi, hundreds of thousands gathered at several venues where mass yoga exercises were organized by the government in parks and in a central plaza.

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Man Filmed Beating Girlfriend Arrested

BANGKOK — A man seen physically abusing his partner aboard a Bangkok bus in a viral video was arrested yesterday and charged with physical assault.

Police identified Winai Saeng-ngam, 29, as the man who beat his girlfriend aboard a Route 107 bus on Wednesday night. Although no one on the bus intervened, a passenger filmed the incident and later posted it online, where it drew shock and condemnation.

Speaking at today’s police news conference, Winai said he regretted his actions.

“It wasn’t an appropriate thing to do,” Winai said. “I’m sorry.”

Winai Saeng-ngam, center, sits at police news conference Tuesday announcing his arrest in Bangkok.
Winai Saeng-ngam, center, sits at police news conference Tuesday announcing his arrest in Bangkok.

Interim Bangkok police chief Sanit Mahatavorn said an officer at Bang Khen Police Station saw the video and recognized Winai as a football gambling suspect from an arrest earlier this month.

Winai is now charged with physical assault for his behavior in the video. Maj.Gen. Sanit said Winai confessed to the offense.

According to Sanit, Winai said he was drunk when he began arguing with his girlfriend, which escalated into him punching, slapping and throttling her.

Because they live together, Winai’s girlfriend can file an additional charge of domestic violence if she wishes to in the future, Sanit said, as the law covers not only married couples but also couples living together.

“I’d like to warn the public that if they do this, they may be charged under the Domestic Violence Victim Protection Act,” Sanit said. “It carries a heavier punishment, and you will stand trial in the family court.”

While physical assault carries a maximum sentence of one month in jail, those found guilty of domestic violence charges can face up to six months in prison.

Although Winai wore a camouflage army shirt in the video, he is no longer a soldier, having served as a conscript from 2009 to 2011, Sanit said. Winai now works as a security guard.

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In the Zine Zone: Another Episodic Adventure in Self-Publishing

‘Don’t steal the zines’ requests the sign at December’s Make A Zine fest held at The Jam Factory. Photo: A Day Magazine / Facebook

BANGKOK — What’s old is new again at an event next month mixing retro and pop culture with personal expression and the intoxicating scent of drying ink.

Following its first issue at The Jam Factory in December, Make A Zine is back in circulation again for paper-and-ink people to get busy in the Bangkok self-publishing-mosphere, this time in the historic Phra Nakhon neighborhood.

Visitors at a 2000 zine fair in Santi Chai Prakan Park on Phra Athit Road in Bangkok. Photo: A Day Magazine / Facebook
Visitors at a 2000 zine fair in Santi Chai Prakan Park on Phra Athit Road in Bangkok. Photo: A Day Magazine / Facebook

Hosted by A Day Magazine, the highlights of the free event include a zine workshop for 50 registered participants and a Zine Swap for indie publishers to exchange their mini-mags and experiences with others.

Read: Zines Reborn: Inky Fingers Keep DIY Publishing Alive in Bangkok

In the Zine Library, check out handmade books of all genres from around Thailand and the world, from punk rock politics to whatever.

Building on last year’s event, find controversial and/or adult content in the new 18+ Exhibition. Meanwhile artists, illustrators, writers and photographers will sell their pubs in the Zine Shop.

Food, drinks and desserts will be sold from stalls located near the zine scene.

The all-day fest runs 2pm to 10pm on July 2 at Museum Siam. Located on Sanamchai Road, it can be reached by walking from Yodpiman River Walk or the Tha Tien pier.

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HBDBKK: Capital Makeover Planned For 250th

The Kadeejeen-Khlong San communities highlighted in a promotional image for the Bangkok250 project. Photo: Bangkok250.org

BANGKOK — Imagine riverside areas friendly to pedestrians and cyclists, or sidewalks wide enough to actually walk on in some favorite neighborhoods.

As Bangkok moves toward 250, these are the kind of suggestions a group of planners and community members have spent six months and 40 workshops developing as part of Bangkok 250, a City Hall-backed project to plan the future of the capital city’s most legendary locations over the next 16 years.

The project, led by the Urban Design and Development Center, was announced last year to develop a model to connect existing historic sites with the contemporary urban context of Bangkok as a gift for the city’s 250th birthday in 2032.

The three major zones identified in the plan are Yothi-Ratchawithi Road near the Victory Monument, the cosmopolitan nightlife area of Thonglor-Ekkamai, and the Old Bangkok stretch around the Chang, Phrachan and Tha Tien piers.

The urban design plan will also cover five smaller areas, such as the transit areas of BTS Siam, Phaya Thai and Ari. It also includes a walkway across the Chao Phraya River, which will be built on an unfinished Skytrain structure that has sat unused for two decades near the Phra Pok Klao Bridge, and space along the canal close to the bridge.

The presentation is the second phase of the project and follows a development plan for the Kadeejeen-Khlong San riverside communities introduced last year. Under that plan, accessible riverside areas would be created including a promenade area with a bike lane and tourist information center.

The latest brainstorming sessions included looking at the Thonglor-Ekkamai areas for possibilities such as turning some unused areas into green space as well as expanding the sidewalks.

The whole plan will be unveiled between 1pm to 4:30pm on Thursday at the Siam Pavalai Royal Grand Theatre in Siam Paragon.

Speakers will be urban development wonks such as the two architects behind The Great Outdoor Market at the Bangkok Docklands and the founder of Ma:D Club for Better Society, Bangkok’s leading space for discussion of social issues.

English translation of the event will be provided via headphones.

Reservations can be made at 094-190-2128 or [email protected].

 

 

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‘Overhead Bin’ Thief Suspected of 460,000 Baht In-Flight Theft

Sheng Wanjun, seated second from the left, at Monday’s police news conference at a Tourist Police station in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — A Chinese national was arrested Monday for allegedly stealing 460,000 baht from a Thai woman aboard a Bangkok-bound flight, and then trying to bribe the police who caught him.

Police said Sheng Wanjun, 44, is one of a number of professional thieves who disguise themselves as passengers to prey on fellow air travelers, a problem that has become increasingly common. Sheng denied the allegation.

“We believe he has done this many times before,” Col. Nitithorn Jintanakanon, deputy commander of Tourist Police, said Tuesday.

According to Nitithorn, Sheng searched through the Thai traveler’s bag in the overhead bin during an Emirates flight from Dubai to Bangkok on Monday, and stole a total of 460,000 baht in cash. Nitithorn said the victim reported the loss after the flight landed and identified Sheng as the suspect because he was seen near her bag.

When police stopped and questioned Sheng, he tried to bribe them with 50,000 baht, but officers arrested him and found the cash on him, Nitithorn said.

“The suspect refused to confess,” Nitithorn said. “But we have witnesses and footage of the moment he tried to bribe the police officers.”

Sheng, a native of Henan province, is now under custody at Suvarnabhumi Airport Police Station. He’s been charged with attempted bribery and theft aboard an aircraft. Each charge carries a maximum penalty of five years in jail.

According to the police colonel, theft of passengers by Chinese perpetrators on Bangkok-bound flights is becoming more frequent. In January, another man, also from Henan, was arrested for the same crime aboard a Turkish Airlines flight.

“We have been working with airlines and passing along information,” Nitithorn said. “Some airlines even placed some crew members among the passengers to look out for these gangs of criminals.”

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Divided U.S. Senate Answers Orlando Massacre With Inaction on Guns

From left, Democratic Party Senator Richard Durbin of Illinois listens to US Senate minority leader Harry Reid of Navada along with senators Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, Chris Murphy of Connecticut and Charles Schumer of New York. Photo: Alex Brandon / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — A divided Senate blocked rival election-year plans to curb guns Monday, eight days after the horror of Orlando’s mass shooting intensified pressure on lawmakers to act but knotted them in gridlock anyway — even over restricting firearms for terrorists.

In largely party-line votes, senators rejected one proposal from each side to keep extremists from acquiring guns and a second shoring up the government’s system of required background checks for many firearms purchases.

With the chamber’s visitors’ galleries unusually crowded for a Monday evening — including relatives of victims of past mass shootings and people wearing orange T-shirts saying #ENOUGH gun violence — each measure fell short of the 60 votes needed to progress. Democrats called the GOP proposals unacceptably weak while Republicans said the Democratic plans were too restrictive.

The stalemate underscored the pressure on each party to stand firm on the emotional gun issue going into November’s presidential and congressional elections. It also highlighted the potency of the National Rifle Association, which urged its huge and fiercely loyal membership to lobby senators to oppose the Democratic bills.

“Republicans say, ‘Hey look, we tried,'” said Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. “And all the time, their cheerleaders, the bosses at the NRA, are cheering them.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said the Orlando shootings — in which the FBI says the American-born gunman swore allegiance to a Islamic State group leader — show the best way to prevent extremists’ attacks here is to defeat them overseas.

“No one wants terrorists to be able to buy guns,” McConnell said. He suggested that Democrats used the day’s votes “to push a partisan agenda or craft the next 30-second campaign ad.”

That Monday’s four roll-call votes occurred at all was testament to the political currents buffeting lawmakers after gunman Omar Mateen’s June 12 attack on a gay nightclub. The 49 victims who died made it the largest mass shooting in recent U.S. history, topping a string of such incidents that have punctuated recent years.

The FBI said Mateen — a focus of two terror investigations that were dropped — described himself as an Islamic soldier in a 911 call during the shootings. That let gun control advocates add national security and the specter of terrorism to their arguments for firearms curbs.

After the votes, presumptive Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton issued a one-word statement, “Enough,” followed by the names and ages of Orlando’s victims.

On Fox News Channel’s “The O’Reilly Factor,” expected GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump said he “absolutely” agrees that people on the government’s terror watch list should be barred from owning guns. He did not say if he supported the Republican or Democratic versions of bills rejected Monday.

Only a handful of lawmakers changed positions from votes cast last December on similar proposals, highlighting each party’s enduring stances on guns. And there’s little sign that the House’s GOP leaders will allow votes.

Even so, GOP senators facing re-election this fall in swing states were under extraordinary pressure.

One vulnerable Republican, New Hampshire’s Sen. Kelly Ayotte, backed both bills blocking gun sales to terrorists, a switch from when she joined most Republicans in killing a similar Democratic plan last December. She expressed support for a narrower bipartisan plan, like one being crafted by Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine.

Collins was trying to fashion a bipartisan bill preventing people on the government’s no-fly list from getting guns. She expressed optimism the Senate would vote on her plan, and Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said that according to McConnell, if Collins wants a vote on her proposal, “She’ll get one.”

Monday’s votes came after Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., led a near 15-hour filibuster last week demanding a Senate response to the Orlando killings. Murphy entered the Senate shortly after the December 2012 massacre of 20 first-graders and six educators in Newtown, Connecticut, but that slaughter and others have failed to spur Congress to tighten gun curbs. The last were enacted in 2007, when the background check system was strengthened after that year’s mass shooting at Virginia Tech.

With Mateen’s professed loyalty to extremist groups and his 10-month inclusion on a federal terrorism watch list, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., proposed letting the government block many gun sales to known or suspected terrorists. People buying firearms from federally licensed gun dealers can currently be denied for several reasons, chiefly for serious crimes or mental problems, but there is no specific prohibition for those on the terrorist watch list.

That list currently contains around 1 million people — including fewer than 5,000 Americans or legal permanent residents, according to the latest government figures. The narrower no-fly list has just 81,000 names.

No background checks are required for anyone buying guns privately online or at gun shows.

The GOP response to Feinstein was an NRA-backed plan by Cornyn. It would let the government deny a sale to a known or suspected terrorist — but only if prosecutors could convince a judge within three days that the would-be buyer was involved in terrorism.

The Feinstein and Cornyn amendments would require notification of law enforcement officials if people, like Mateen, who’d been under a terrorism investigation within the past five years were seeking to buy firearms.

Republicans said Feinstein’s proposal gave the government too much power to deny people’s constitutional right to own a gun and noted that the terrorist watch list has mistakenly included some people. Democrats said the three-day window Cornyn’s measure gave prosecutors to prove their case made his plan ineffective.

Murphy’s rejected proposal would widely expand the requirement for background checks, even to many private guntransactions, leaving few loopholes.

The defeated plan by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, increased money for the background check system. It also revamped language prohibiting some people with mental health issues from buying a gun, which Democrats claimed would reduce current protections.

Story: Alan Fram, Mary Clare Jalonick

 

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