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Some give up their guns as others rally against tighter laws

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“It’s not about the money — it’s about getting it off the street,” he said.

For others, it was more about the money.

They showed up to sell .22 rifles, .40- and .45-caliber handguns, a Ruger M-77 rifle, a Chinese SKS rifle, some for $400. One 19-year-old showed up trying to sell his customized AR-15, worth about $1,000, knowing gun prices spiked after the Newtown shootings.

James Brown, 41, of Dallas initially went to the church buyback but got tired of waiting in the long line with his 13-year-old son.

When they crossed the street, they were applauded and led to the back of a pickup truck, where Brown’s Rossi Ranch Hand .45 was auctioned for $300 and his .25 handgun for $200.

“I prefer to keep it in the family. If it’s a good gun, and people can use it, why not sell it?” he said.

Brown said he doesn’t blame guns for the tragedy at Newtown.

“A gun can be your best friend. You get thugs on the street and you can protect your family,” he said.

The church, a long-established landmark with a congregation of 1,600 that includes the mayor, has staged buybacks in the past, but it had never faced a counter-buyback. Some organizers were irritated to see people drawn to the other lot. The pastor’s wife, Carol Adams, started toting a sign of her own and alerting police when she thought those across the street were becoming too aggressive.

Inside the garage, church volunteer Mike Haney, 65, an attorney, gun owner and hunter who supports new gun control legislation, handled the buys as the pace picked up.

“We have to stop the gun violence, the unspeakable tragedy in Connecticut,” Haney said, calling it “startling” and “surprising” that “we as a country can’t agree that something can be done.”

“I don’t know that anything we do here today will address that,” Haney said as he filled out a receipt for a handgun someone had brought in a Baby Gap bag.

Across the street, organizer Collin Baker said he doesn’t oppose all new gun laws.

Baker, 30, of Fort Worth, who works at a car dealership and also as a firearms instructor, said he wouldn’t oppose expanding federal background checks to close the “gun show loophole.” However, Baker also owns an AR-15 automatic-style rifle, whose strength and refinement he likens to a fast sports car, and he opposes a federal assault-rifle ban.

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