Trump assassination attempt tied to lax Pa. gun laws, advocates say

As elected officials and community leaders condemned the assassination attempt against former President Trump on Saturday, as well as political violence generally, some also bemoaned the shooter’s easy access to the powerful firearm used in the attack.

They noted that Thomas Matthew Crooks, the gunman at the Trump rally in Butler, Pa., used an AR-15-style semi-automatic rifle, similar to weapons that have been used in numerous mass shootings around the country.

Those include a shooting in Philadelphia last year in which an apparently disturbed man is charged with killing five people and injuring several othersand the 2018 massacre at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue in which 11 worshipers were murdered.

Pennsylvania law allows anyone 18 or older to purchase an AR-style rifle or other long gun from a shop after passing a quick background check, or from an individual without a background check. In the case of Saturday’s shooting, the weapon had reportedly been purchased by Crooks’ father.