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Ill. Senate splits gun vote, seeks ammo limit

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SPRINGFIELD – An Illinois Senate committee, in a party-line vote, has approved restrictions on semiautomatic assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition clips.

One measure would ban the sale of semiautomatic handguns and rifles. People who currently own such weapons could keep them, but would have to register them. Sen. Antonio "Tony" Munoz, D-Chicago, is the sponsor.

The second proposal would limit ammunition magazines to 10 or fewer rounds. Sen. Dan Kotowski, the bill's sponsor, says he wants to concentrate on the high-capacity magazines because they make assault weapons more deadly.

"The reason why I'm focusing on that is because [high] magazine capacity has led to the increased lethality and the dangers associated with automatic weapons," Kotowski, a Park Ridge Democrat, said.

The bills now go to the full Senate.

The proposed curbs on assault weapons after a school massacre last month in Connecticut left 20 children dead took center stage Wednesday night after an expected vote on landmark same-sex marriage legislation hit a snag.

Marriage-equality supporters said the failure to get Senate approval for a procedural measure that would have allowed a committee hearing was a blip and will delay consideration only until Thursday. But it was anticlimactic after a day of pressure on both sides featuring a gay TV star campaigning in favor and more than 1,000 religious leaders, from Catholics to Muslims, signing a letter opposing it.

Gov. Pat Quinn supports plans and has said he wants a same-sex marriage bill sent to him from the legislative session scheduled through Jan. 9, the final days of the 97th General Assembly. It includes dozens of lame-duck lawmakers who won't be sworn into the next assembly and thus have more freedom to back contentious issues.

Quinn, a Democrat, called for an assault-weapons ban in August after a mass shooting at a Colorado movie theater. But he took the approach – highly unpopular with legislators – of rewriting a fairly innocuous bill covering ammunition purchases, substituting language on semiautomatic weapons.

That failed when the General Assembly voted to override his amendatory veto, but mostly because lawmakers thought Quinn had overstepped his authority.

With the Connecticut shooting, assault weapons – banned nationally for a decade but not renewed when the U.S. law expired in 2004 – jumped back to the surface of legislative consideration.

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