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Gun victims, academics join Senate firearms clash

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Also testifying was Daniel W. Webster, director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research, which favors tighter gun control laws. Webster said in his prepared statement that 2004 data on prisoners who had committed gun-related crimes showed that nearly 8 in 10 had obtained their firearms from unlicensed private sellers, whose transactions do not require background checks.

"Laws such as background check requirements for all gun sales will help law enforcement combat illegal gun trafficking and keep guns from prohibited individuals," he said.

Highlighting the political appeal of the gun fight, numerous Democrats were inviting people affected by firearms violence to sit in the visitors' galleries during Obama's address. One GOP lawmaker invited Ted Nugent, the aging rock-and-roller and vocal gun-rights supporter.

Former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, the Arizona Democrat shot in the head two years ago, and her husband, Mark Kelly, will attend the address. Earlier in the evening, they scheduled a fundraiser for their new political action committee, Americans for Responsible Solutions, which favors firearms curbs.

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