Sarah Brady, the wife of the late former White House press secretary James Brady and a prominent gun control advocate, died Friday after a battle with pneumonia, her family said. She was 73.
Brady began campaigning for stricter gun control laws after her husband was shot by a would-be assassin aiming for then-President Ronald Reagan in 1981.
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“Sarah courageously stepped up after Jim was shot to prevent others from enduring what our family has gone through, and her work has saved countless lives,” her family said in a statement.
James Brady was shot in the head during the attack and was confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life. The gunman, John Hinckley Jr., was found not guilty by reason of insanity and he was committed to a mental hospital where he remains today. James Brady died in August at the age of 73.
James and Sarah Brady became leading voices for gun control after the assassination attempt. In 1993, President Bill Clinton signed the Brady Handgun Violence Protection Act into law. The law requires background checks for gun buyers.
The law has stopped the sale of more than 2.4 million guns to criminals or other people barred from owning them, said Dan Gross, president of the Brady Campaign and Center to Prevent Gun Violence.
“Together with her husband Jim ‘Bear’ Brady, Sarah was the heart and soul of this organization and the successful movement it has become today,” Gross said. “In the history of our nation, there are few people, if any, who are directly responsible for saving as many lives as Sarah and Jim.”









