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The Federal Aviation Administration is warning pilots that it has created
a no-fly zone over the site of two explosions at the annual
Boston marathon.The agency said in a notice issued Monday about an hour
after the explosions that a no-fly zone with a 3.5-mile radius has
been created over 811 Boylston Street. The zone is limited to flights
under 3,000 feet in altitude, which is lower than most airliners would
fly except when taking off or landing.The notice says the no-fly zone
is effective immediately, and will remain in effect until further notice.
Pilots planning flights were urged to call their local flight service station.
As debate begins this week on sweeping firearms legislation, supporters
are running into renewed concern from conservatives that the bill could
lead to a gun "registry" despite adamant pledges to prohibit this.Fear of
a national registry has remained even after two influential senators last
week proposed a compromise on background checks. The proposal, which will
be voted on as an amendment, would expand background checks to gun
shows and Internet sales while exempting personal transactions like those
among family members.The provision, meant to ease concerns about the checks
becoming too pervasive, also included language to bar the creation of a
federal registry.But the language was not enough. Some gun-rights supporters
continue to worry about a slippery-slope scenario, where a background check
expansion sets the stage for a national registry -- which could then
be exploited to seize weapons from individuals. Despite the fact that licensed
dealers already keep records of their sales and a national registry has
not yet been created, the Second Amendment nightmare scenario has lived
on."Once you get these lists out there, once you have a gun
dealer keeping lists for lots of other people, the only way that
works, frankly I think, is if you keep the paper," Sen. Roy
Blunt, R-Mo., told Fox News on Monday. "And if you keep the
paper, eventually, somebody's going to ask for it."Concerns about gun seizures
were stoked most recently after a Ne
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As debate begins this week on sweeping firearms legislation, supporters
are running into renewed concern from conservatives that the bill could
lead to a gun "registry" despite adamant pledges to prohibit this.Fear of
a national registry has remained even after two influential senators last
week proposed a compromise on background checks. The proposal, which will
be voted on as an amendment, would expand background checks to gun
shows and Internet sales while exempting personal transactions like those
among family members.The provision, meant to ease concerns about the checks
becoming too pervasive, also included language to bar the creation of a
federal registry.But the language was not enough. Some gun-rights supporters
continue to worry about a slippery-slope scenario, where a background check
expansion sets the stage for a national registry -- which could then
be exploited to seize weapons from individuals. Despite the fact that licensed
dealers already keep records of their sales and a national registry has
not yet been created, the Second Amendment nightmare scenario has lived
on."Once you get these lists out there, once you have a gun
dealer keeping lists for lots of other people, the only way that
works, frankly I think, is if you keep the paper," Sen. Roy
Blunt, R-Mo., told Fox News on Monday. "And if you keep the
paper, eventually, somebody's going to ask for it."Concerns about gun seizures
were stoked most recently after a Ne
This photo provided by the Christiansburg Police Department shows Neil
Allan MacInnis, of Christiansburg, Va. MacInnis is charged with two counts
each of malicious wounding and using a firearm in the commission of
a felony stemming from the shooting at the satellite campus of New
River Community College at New River Valley Mall, Christiansburg Police
Chief Mark Sisson said at news conference on Friday, April 12,
2013. He was being held without bond at the Montgomery County Jail.
(AP Photo/Christiansburg Police Department)The Associated PressCHRISTIANSBURG,
Va. Court documents show police investigating a shooting at a Virginia
community college seized a shotgun and more than 20 rounds of ammunition
in connection with the arrest of the suspect.That revelation came Monday
as 18-year-old Neil Allan MacInnis made his first appearance in Montgomery
County District Court on four felony charges. The shootings Friday at a
satellite campus of New River Community College in a shopping mall left
two people hurt.MacInnis did not enter a plea but was asked by
a judge if he understood the charges against him. He responded in
the affirmative. MacInnis was assigned an attorney, Mark Hicks, who did
not immediately return messages left by The Associated Press.MacInnis, a
student at the college, is being held without bail.
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