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Gun owners, opponents clash at Conn. hearing in wake of Newtown

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Detective Barbara Mattson of the Connecticut State Police Department displays a Bushmaster semi-automatic weapon during a hearing at the Legislative Office building in Hartford, Connecticut, Monday, January 28, 2013. (Photo by Cloe Poisson/Hartford Courant/MCT)

(MCT) — HARTFORD, Conn. — More than 1,000 Connecticut residents descended upon the state Capitol on Monday to voice their often-emotional views on gun control in the wake of the shooting massacre last month at a Newtown elementary school.

Some speakers called for a ban on military-style assault weapons and high-caliber magazines that allowed killer Adam Lanza of Newtown to shoot 20 children and six educators in a span of about six minutes.

Multiple speakers countered that any gun control laws would infringe on the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding citizens who have not broken the law. They said that criminals, like Lanza, have always disregarded the law and would continue to do so. They said that the Virginia Tech shooter did not use an assault weapon, and the Columbine High School killers committed their crimes during the federal assault weapons ban.

Overall, an estimated 1,400 citizens packed into the Capitol complex, spilling into overflow rooms where they watched the actual testimony from Room 2C — the largest hearing room in the building.

Some witnesses blamed Lanza and his mother, who owned the guns that he stole before heading to Sandy Hook Elementary School on the morning of Dec. 14, 2012.

“The parents have to know their child and their behavior,” said Gregory J. Droniak, a 58-year-old lifetime member of the NRA from Derby. “I’m opposed to gun-free zones. Sandy Hook was a gun-free zone.”

Tim Rockefeller of North Branford, an ex-Marine, said, “I don’t believe any law would stop a madman from killing his own mother.”

Rockefeller said he was concerned that many of those testifying had been using the wrong terms, in his view.

“The term ‘assault weapon’ is a political term, not a gun term,” Rockefeller told lawmakers. “An assault weapon is a made-up term.”

Like other speakers, Rockefeller received polite applause at the end of his testimony.

The two co-founders of the March for Change mentioned that their group will be holding a large rally outside the state Capitol on Valentine’s Day — Feb. 14.

Nancy Lefkowitz of Fairfield, one of the co-founders of the March for Change, said that there has been a “gross misinterpretation of the Second Amendment” that has allowed citizens to purchase “killing machines” that can allow shooters to mow down citizens in massacres in schools, movie theatres and shopping malls.

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