Donald Trump, who is facing two separate federal indictments and dozens of criminal charges in four states, posed with a handgun with his face engraved on the grip during a tour of a gun store in South Carolina.
A social media post from a spokesperson for the former president said he bought the weapon, then clarified that he only wanted to, then deleted the post with a video of the exchange, in which Mr Trump can be heard telling the seller “I want to buy one” as he points to a bronze-coloured Glock pistol.
The clip was preserved by a social media account for the National Rifle Association, with a post stating that the leading candidate for the 2024 Republican nomination for president “falls in love with a Trump edition gun”.
Mr Trump posed with the gun alongside South Carolina’s Republican Attorney General Alan Wilson before a campaign rally.
Federal statutes prohibit firearm sales to any person who is under felony indictment, and lying on a transaction form to determine eligibility could also include additional criminal charges.
Related Trump demands MSNBC owner be investigated for ‘treason’ – live Biden launches White House office committed to gun violence prevention. Advocates say ‘finally’ US gun laws are failing to protect elections as political violence spreads, report finds
Mr Trump, who faces 91 criminal charges, and who famously told supporters in 2016 that he could “stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody” without losing voters, has vowed to protect and expand Second Amendment protections if elected, joining Republican candidates for the GOP’s nomination who have rejected the role of high-powered weapons and proliferation of firearms in the gun violence crisis.
The former president also has welcomed charges against President Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden stemming from a gun purchase in 2018 – charges that involve lying on a federal firearm transaction form.
Last year, Trump-appointed federal judge David Counts argued that federal law prohibiting people under felony indictments from purchasing firearms is unconstitutional, a decision citing the US Supreme Court’s 2022 opinion that gun reform advocates have warned could radically reshape or upend protections against gun violence.
Related Trump threatens trans healthcare in NRA speech baselessly blaming gender-affirming care for violence
The decision in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v Bruen argues that any firearms restriction must “demonstrate that the regulation is consistent with the Nation’s historical tradition,” a decision hailed as a major achievement among gun lobbyists but one that raises the bar for state and federal laws to be able to respond to a modern gun violence crisis.
A wave of legal challenges supported by group groups followed the Bruen decision to challenge the constitutionality of such restrictions, including those taking aim at transaction forms.
Last week, the Biden administration launched the first-ever White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention to implement the president’s executive actions on gun reform alongside state and local governments, and to deploy a FEMA-like response in the wake of mass acts of violence and to communities acutely impacted by gun violence.
More about Donald Trump South Carolina Second Amendment US election 2024 Alan Wilson
Join our commenting forum Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments
1/ 1Trump ‘wants’ Glock pistol he can’t legally purchase
Trump ‘wants’ Glock pistol he can’t legally purchase
Donald Trump poses with South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson, right, at a gun store in South Carolina on 25 September.
Steven Cheung/Donald Trump campaign
Promoted stories
株式会社ファーマフーズ
【アマゾンで爆売れ】明治薬品が开発した简単に歯を白くする方法【初回约52%OFF】明治薬品监修の歯磨き粉がアマゾン爆売れで大反响株式会社ファーマフーズ| Sponsored Sponsored
详细
Undo
ポムジン
东大医学部医师推奨の「体重减らす里技」で50代でも成功する人続出ポムジン| Sponsored Sponsored
Undo
Roofing Services | Search Ads
Suitable Roofing Services in KotoRoofing Services | Search Ads| Sponsored Sponsored
Undo
? Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this article
Want to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today.
Subscribe
Already subscribed? Log in