Nevada Sen. Ruben Kihuen, left, congratulates Sen. Justin Jones, both
D-Las Vegas, after the Assembly voted 23-19 to approve Jones' bill
mandating universal background checks for all gun sales in Nevada. The
bill drew a large crowd in the gallery of the Assembly as lawmakers
work through the final hours of the 77th Legislative session at the
Legislative Building in Carson City, Nev., on Monday, June 3, 2013.
Photo: Cathleen Allison
Beaumont Enterprise reports
A
bill mandating universal background checks on all gun sales in Nevada
is on its way to the governor's desk Monday after clearing the state
Legislature on the last day it's in session.
The Assembly voted 23-19 to give SB221 the final stamp of legislative approval.
"This was the right thing to do," Sen. Justin Jones,
D-Las Vegas, the bill's primary sponsor, said minutes after the vote,
adding he was "proud and humbled" by the support of his colleagues in
the Assembly.
Jones said he hoped Republican Gov. Brian Sandoval
will consider the bill which includes sections mandating faster and
better reporting of court-findings of mental illness and requiring a
doctor to report a patient who makes a specific threat toward themselves
or someone else.
Shortly after the vote, Sandoval's spokeswoman Mary-Sarah Kinner said the governor will veto the bill.