Retailers are removing listings for the device that the Las Vegas shooter used to fire hundreds of rounds a minute

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Retailers are removing listings for the device that the Las Vegas shooter used to fire hundreds of rounds a minute

Bump stock

AP/Allen G. Breed

Bump stocks, like the one above, allow guns to fire much more rapidly than normal.

As America reels from the horror of the mass shooting in Las Vegas, retailers are taking proactive steps.

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An area of focus in the investigation is how Stephen Paddock was able to shoot so fast without the use of an automatic weapon. The answer is something called a bump stock, or a bump fire stock, according to the Associated Press.

Bump stocks replace the stock of a weapon and use the gun's recoil to move the gun back and forth, shooting faster than trigger-depressing usually allows.

Congress is considering action that would ban the use of a bump stock, but bump stocks have already become a hot-button issue for many - and retailers are now staying away.

Hunting outfitter Cabela's previously offered the Slide Fire bump stock for sale on its website, but that listing has been taken down. Google's cache of the product is broken, and clicking on the product page that shows up in Google's search results now redirects to the general firearms page. Previously, it showed a "page not found" error.

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A similar search at Cabela's subsidiary Bass Pro Shops yielded the same result. Cabela's did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment.

Federal law enforcement officials told USA Today that Paddock purchased "a number of weapons" at a Cabela's location in Verdi, Nevada.

Bump stocks are a relatively new device, as they've only been around for a decade or so. In 2010, they were found not to be in violation of a federal law that banned automatic weapons, according to NBC. They were considered a novelty, as the rapid firing also greatly decreased accuracy.

Slide Fire, the company that makes the industry-leading version, according to the AP, sells the device for about $200, depending on what gun it is designed to be affixed to.

Google's shopping platform, however, will not allow searches for "bump stock" to yield results, similar to how it will not allow search results to populate for "gun" or other banned words.

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A version of the bump stock was previously available for sale by a third-party seller on Walmart's website for an unknown period of time, but the retailer has pulled the listing.

In a statement, Walmart said: "These items, which were sold by third party sellers on our online marketplace, violate our prohibited items policy and never should have been sold on our site. They were immediately removed."