US church criticised for raffling AR-15 semi-automatic rifles, days after Las Vegas massacre
Children touted tickets for the Oasis Church of All Nations gun raffle outside a Walmart in Mississippi
Matt Sessums was stopping at his local Walmart Supercentrer in Oxford, Mississippi, on Saturday afternoon when he did a double take.
Outside both entrances of the store were tables set up to promote a raffle for a nearby church. The prizes? Two AR-15 semi-automatic rifles.
Tickets were US$10 each or three for US$20. Manning the tables, Sessums said, were two adults and three children, who looked to be around the same age as his 10-year-old daughter.
“I see this one little girl in particular, you know, pointing to the thing about the AR-15 raffle and getting people to buy tickets,” Sessums said. “It just kind of blew my mind that little kids were participating in something like that.”