Bill Sponsor
House Bill 3284
116th Congress(2019-2020)
To require the Attorney General to study whether an individual's history of domestic violence can be used to determine the likelihood of such individual committing a mass shooting.
Introduced
Introduced
Introduced in House on Jun 13, 2019
Overview
Text
Introduced in House 
Jun 13, 2019
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Introduced in House(Jun 13, 2019)
Jun 13, 2019
Not Scanned for Linkage
About Linkage
Multiple bills can contain the same text. This could be an identical bill in the opposite chamber or a smaller bill with a section embedded in a larger bill.
Bill Sponsor regularly scans bill texts to find sections that are contained in other bill texts. When a matching section is found, the bills containing that section can be viewed by clicking "View Bills" within the bill text section.
Bill Sponsor is currently only finding exact word-for-word section matches. In a future release, partial matches will be included.
H. R. 3284 (Introduced-in-House)


116th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. R. 3284


To require the Attorney General to study whether an individual’s history of domestic violence can be used to determine the likelihood of such individual committing a mass shooting.


IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

June 13, 2019

Mr. Quigley (for himself, Ms. Moore, Ms. Norton, Ms. Jayapal, Mr. Cohen, Mr. Krishnamoorthi, Ms. Wild, Mr. Espaillat, Mr. Meeks, Mr. Beyer, Mr. Hastings, Mr. Lynch, Mr. Raskin, Ms. Lee of California, Ms. Schakowsky, Mrs. Dingell, Ms. Dean, Mr. Grijalva, Mr. Engel, Mr. Swalwell of California, Mr. Carson of Indiana, Ms. Roybal-Allard, Mr. Deutch, Ms. Houlahan, Mr. Smith of Washington, Ms. Jackson Lee, and Mrs. Napolitano) introduced the following bill; which was referred to the Committee on the Judiciary


A BILL

To require the Attorney General to study whether an individual’s history of domestic violence can be used to determine the likelihood of such individual committing a mass shooting.

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. Study on whether an individual’s history of domestic violence can be used to determine the likelihood of such individual committing a mass shooting.

Not later than 12 months after the date of enactment of this Act, the Attorney General of the United States shall complete a study and submit a report to the Congress on whether an individual’s history of domestic violence can be used to determine the likelihood of such individual committing a mass shooting.