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Riverview East Academy was put under lockdown after someone reported a person with a gun in the building.
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Whitney Austin, a mass shooting survivor who was hit 12 times during a rampage in Cincinnati, appeared in front of an Ohio Senate committee to share her story and testify for a bill that would create more gun purchasing regulations.
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National gun control group Moms Demand Action and Cincinnati's Women Helping Women say the two issues are deeply linked.
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With the Ohio General Assembly having a veto-proof super-majority and funding from the gun lobby, national gun control advocacy groups like Moms Demand Action find it hard to deal with the state's legislature, even with their success in other state capitols.
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The move will likely provoke the ire of gun rights advocates and lobbyists, who have argued that categorizing gun sales would unfairly flag an industry when most sales do not lead to mass shootings.
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Some teachers are choosing to arm themselves, but does it make the classroom safer?
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A group of local gun shop owners is partnering with the Ohio Suicide Prevention Foundation to launch a unique suicide prevention program in the state.
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State Sen. Cecil Thomas has introduced legislation that would tighten gun restrictions. But can it pass? And have its proposals been effective elsewhere?
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Members of law enforcement say Ohio's new concealed carry law makes officers and the community less safe. Plus, survivor of the Fifth Third shooting Whitney Austin meets with senators on the bipartisan deal on gun reforms.
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Gov. Mike DeWine's GOP base is mostly OK with his approach to gun issues, but the question for DeWine as a candidate for re-election is whether or not he is alienating voters who are fed up with gun violence and mass shootings.