* At least seven of 18 committee members own guns                
* Senator Leahy was champion marksman in college                
* Senator Sessions has about a dozen firearms                
By Susan Cornwell                
WASHINGTON, Jan 30 (Reuters) - Republican Senator Lindsey  Graham keeps an AR-15 at home, a  semi-automatic rifle similar  to the weapon used recently in the mass shooting at a Newtown,  Connecticut, school. But he is far from the only U.S. lawmaker  who has a gun.                
At least seven of the 18 members of the Senate Judiciary  Committee, which is considering gun-control legislation, own  firearms, according to senators and their staffs.                
Among bills before the committee is a proposal to ban the  manufacture of firearms like the AR-15. Four members of the  panel do not own firearms, while spokesmen for the other seven  declined to comment or did not respond to queries.                
Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat, was a  champion marksman in college and has a sizeable collection of  long guns and handguns. The panel's senior Republican, Chuck  Grassley, was given an old 22-caliber rifle by his father that  he keeps on his farm in Iowa, aides said.                
Graham, a member of the U.S. Air Force Reserves, is the only  member of the panel who has acknowledged having an AR-15, a  lightweight civilian version of the military M-16 rifle.                
Most of the weapons characterized as "assault weapons" are  variants of the AR-15, said Adam Winkler, a law professor at  University of California-Los Angeles and author of "Gunfight:  The Battle over the Right to Bear Arms in America."                
"I have an AR-15 at home and I haven't hurt anybody and I  don't intend to do it," Graham declared on Wednesday at a  Judiciary Committee hearing. It was the first to deal with gun  violence since a gunman last month killed 26 people at a Newtown  elementary school, including 20 children. Graham opposes  reinstating a ban on assault weapons.                
The conservative South Carolina Republican did not explain  why he had the weapon, but said such a gun could be useful for  protection if lawlessness or rioting broke out in his  neighborhood.                
"I think I would be better off protecting my business or my  family if there was law-and-order breakdown in my community,  people roaming around my neighborhood, to have the AR-15, and I  don't think that makes me an unreasonable person," Graham said.                
The Bushmaster rifle, which police have said was the weapon  used in the Newtown shootings, is often referred to as an AR-15,  although it is not manufactured by ArmaLite, the original maker  of the AR-15, Winkler said.                
"AR-15 has become shorthand for this style of rifle. Gun  enthusiasts don't like the term 'assault weapon,' so AR-15 has  become the shorthand," Winkler said.                
Some AR-15-type weapons were barred by the assault weapons  ban that was U.S. law for a decade until it expired in 2004, but  others were not, Winkler said.                
Legislation proposed by Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein  would ban the manufacture of AR-15s along with other  semi-automatic rifles that can accept a detachable magazine and  have at least one military feature like a pistol grip.                
It excludes weapons that are already legally owned, so if it  passed, Graham could keep his gun.                
That is not the only gun Graham owns. As a hunter and  outdoorsman, he owns about a dozen firearms, his spokesman said.  Another Southern Republican on the Judiciary Committee, Jeff  Sessions of Alabama, has a similar number.                
"I haven't hunted in years, but I have through inheritance  and other things, probably a dozen shotguns and stuff," Sessions  told Reuters in a Capitol hallway earlier this month.                
CLAY-PIGEON SHOOTING                
"I've got an old lever-action rifle my grandfather had, and  the shotguns that my father had and my uncles had for some  reason have fallen to me," Sessions said.                
Republican Senators John Cornyn of Texas and Orrin Hatch of  Utah are also gun owners, and a Democrat on the Judiciary  Committee, Sheldon Whitehouse, said he had some shotguns.                
"I've been taking my kids clay-pigeon shooting since they  were very little. And I'm proud to say that my daughter actually  shot for her college skeet and trap team," Whitehouse, who is  from Rhode Island, told Reuters outside the Senate last week.                
He said he did not think that would affect his  decision-making on gun legislation in the Judiciary Committee.                
"I think our focus is going to be in particular ... these  high-capacity magazines, which have really no legitimate  sporting or target practice, recreational use," Whitehouse said.                
As for Feinstein, she said used to have a gun in the 1970s,  when she was a target of a militant group called the New World  Liberation Front.                
"They shot out windows at my beach house, and they put a  bomb at my home in San Francisco," Feinstein told Reuters.  "That's when I carried a permitted concealed weapon for a period  of time."                
But Feinstein said it was in a holster in her purse and she  thought she would probably not be able to get to it in time if  she needed it. "And then I began to see really how little these  guns are used for self-defense," she said. "I haven't had one  for decades."                
Even if lawmakers own guns legally at home, it is apparently  not so easy to bring them into the Capitol complex. Graham said  he had wanted to bring various unloaded firearms to the hearing  in a Senate office building on Wednesday for "education"  purposes.                
But he  was told he had to follow protocol. "The  requirements to secure the weapons at the hearing are so  impractical as to be unworkable," Graham said in a statement.  Back in 2007, an aide to former Virginia Senator Jim Webb was  arrested for trying to take a loaded pistol into a Senate office  building.     (Reporting By Susan Cornwell; Editing by Marilyn W. Thompson  and Peter Cooney)
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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/30/senate-judiciary-committee_n_2585319.html
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