A court-martialled former US Air Force airman armed with a powerful assault rifle opened fire on worshippers at a Sunday service at a rural church in Sutherland Springs, Texas on Sunday, killing at least 26 people and injuring 20 others, once again triggering a heated national debate on the need for stricter gun control laws.
Trump's latest comments came during a joint press conference in Seoul alongside South Korean President Moon Jae-in when a reporter asked the US president if he would consider "extreme vetting" not only for people entering the US but as well as "for people trying to buy a gun."
But he went on to say that extreme vetting would have made no difference in Sunday's mass shooting, and would have prevented the "brave person who happened to have a gun in his truck and shoot him, and hit him and neutralise him."
Trump was referring to Stephen Willeford, a plumber, who managed to shoot the gunman Devin Kelley before jumping in another man's vehicle to chase him down.
"I can only say this, if he didn't have a gun, instead of having 26 dead you would've hundreds more dead," the US president added.
About 40 per cent of Americans say they own a gun or live in a household with one, according to a 2017 survey, and the rate of murder or manslaughter by firearm in the US is the highest in the developed world.
There were more than 11,000 deaths as a result of murder or manslaughter involving a firearm in 2016.
Since the Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando in June 2016, there have been 555 mass shootings as the FBI defines them: four or more people shot at once. Approximately 689 people have been killed, and nearly 2,700 wounded, CBS News reported.
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