Plain English Summary
This bill would prohibit the manufacture, transfer, and possession of semiautomatic assault weapons and large-capacity ammunition feeding devices (magazines holding more than 10 rounds) in North Carolina, effective December 1, 2025. The law would allow people to keep weapons they already owned before the effective date and includes exceptions for law enforcement, military, and certain other purposes. Violations would be classified as Class E felonies.
Arguments in Favor
Supporters argue this bill would reduce gun violence by limiting access to weapons and high-capacity magazines commonly used in mass shootings. They point to similar laws in other states and contend that restricting these specific firearms helps protect public safety while still allowing citizens to possess other firearms for self-defense and hunting. Advocates emphasize that the law includes a grandfather clause allowing existing owners to keep their weapons.
Arguments Against
Opponents argue the bill infringes on Second Amendment rights and that the definition of 'assault weapon' is based on cosmetic features rather than functional differences from legal firearms. They contend that law-abiding gun owners would be penalized while criminals ignore gun laws, and question whether the bill would meaningfully reduce crime. Critics also raise concerns about enforcement challenges and note that most gun deaths involve handguns, not the weapons targeted by this legislation.
AI-generated analysis based on bill text. Always verify with official sources at ncleg.gov. This is not legal or political advice.
Sponsors

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 38

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 50
Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 40

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 100
Cosponsors (12)
Representative · District 45
Representative · District 102
Representative · District 72
Representative · District 49
Representative · District 41
Representative · District 61
Representative · District 18
Representative · District 36
Representative · District 88
Representative · District 57
Representative · District 101
Representative · District 107