The House on Monday passed a bill to extend a law banning plastic weapons and undetectable firearms in the United States for another decade.
The Undetectable Firearms Act of 1988, passed amid growing concern that gun makers produced the weapons to bypass security measures in public buildings, would have expired by Dec. 9 if Congress failed to act.
The bill bans weapons that are not detectable by metal detectors after removal of grips, stocks, and magazines. It also prohibits weapons that do not generate accurate X-ray images.
The Senate’s eventual vote could extend the 25-year ban on manufacturing, importing, selling, shipping, and receiving the firearms in this country.
New York Sen. Chuck Schumer belongs to a group of senators who will attempt to add language to close a so-called loophole that would bar gun makers from adding a removable piece of metal to the weapon.









