By Greg Milam, US Correspondent
The US state of Colorado - the scene of two of the worst shooting massacres in the country's history - has passed historic new laws which could prove a model for gun control measures across the country.
Politicians were prompted into action by the shooting spree at a cinema in Aurora near Denver last summer which claimed 12 lives. The killings at Newtown in Connecticut in December added renewed impetus.
So while the national effort at new restrictions appears to be stalling, Colorado's legislature has passed a ban on high capacity ammunition magazines and tightened requirements for background checks on people buying a gun.
It is seen as a remarkable success for the gun control movement in a 'frontier' state famous for its love of hunting and liberty.
Even though there is no ban on military-style assault weapons, the new restrictions are enough to anger gun enthusiasts in the state.
George Horne, owner of The Gun Room in DenverGeorge Horne, who owns Denver's oldest gun shop The Gun Room, told Sky News that gun owners were being unfairly targeted.
He said: "There's plenty of ways to create violence and inflict harm on other people other than firearms, so I think the emotion of firearms is being used. They're not addressing the problem which is the person, but the firearm which is just the tool.
"I always tell people it is not the arrow, it is the Indian."
One of his customers put it more bluntly. Mike Rosenthal said: "I think they are violating our constitution and I think they're all traitors."
He said that if authorities try to remove guns from owners the result "won't be pretty".
Daniel Mauser, a victim of the Columbine High School massacre in 1999He said the Second Amendment to the US constitution, guaranteeing the right to bear arms, should allow people to own a bomb "if they could afford it".
Colorado has followed New York in being the first to put in place new restrictions as politicians and lobbyists in Washington continue to lock horns on a national framework.
Tom Mauser, whose son Daniel was killed in the shooting spree at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado, in 1999, has long campaigned for tighter controls.
He says he is proud of what the state has done and hopes others will follow.
Tom Mauser wears his son Daniel's trainers to gun control events"Two weeks before he died my son said to me 'Dad, do you know there are loopholes in the Brady law', the law that requires background checks, and then he was killed with a gun that was purchased through one of those loopholes.
"That is what has driven me. I have wanted to close those loopholes for him and for the sake of others."
Mr Mauser wears his son's trainers when attending gun control events. "I literally walk in his shoes," he said.
The scale of the task facing him is perhaps illustrated by the popularity of a website called gunsforeveryone.com
Its founder Edgar Antillon said it started out as a joke but had now taken on an activist role.
He said: "We don't think any new restrictions are the answer. Law abiding gun owners don't carry out massacres. If they put new laws in place, we will simply not follow them."
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