Bills/H.R. 3398

Aaron Salter, Jr., Responsible Body Armor Possession Act

Aaron Salter, Jr., Responsible Body Armor Possession Act

In CommitteeJudiciaryHouseHouse Bill · 119th Congress
Bill Progress · House
Introduced
Committee
Passed House
Passed Senate
Passed Both
Signed

Plain Language Summary

# Aaron Salter, Jr., Responsible Body Armor Possession Act Summary **What the Bill Would Do** This bill would restrict who can legally possess body armor in the United States. While the specific provisions aren't detailed in the available information, the bill is named after Aaron Salter Jr., a Buffalo police officer killed in 2022 during a mass shooting where the perpetrator wore body armor. The legislation appears designed to regulate body armor access, likely by limiting possession to military personnel, law enforcement, and security professionals while restricting civilian access. **Who It Affects and Current Status** The bill would primarily affect civilians seeking to purchase or own body armor, while likely exempting military and law enforcement personnel.

It's currently in committee in the House of Representatives, meaning it hasn't yet advanced to a full floor vote. Without detailed legislative language available, the exact scope of restrictions—such as whether all body armor would be banned or only certain types—remains unclear. **Note:** For comprehensive details on specific provisions, penalties, and exemptions, you would need to review the full bill text on Congress.gov.

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Latest Action

May 14, 2025

Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.

Sponsor

27 cosponsors

Key Dates

Introduced
May 14, 2025
Last Updated
May 14, 2025
Read Full Text on Congress.gov →
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