Daily Breeze (Torrance)

State blocks gun sales to those at risk of breaking law

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO >> Gun makers and dealers in California will be required to block firearms sales to anyone they have “reasonable cause to believe is at substantia­l risk” of using a gun illegally or of harming themselves or others, under a new law that Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Tuesday that he had signed.

It's a subjective requiremen­t that goes farther than current background checks or prohibitio­ns on selling guns to people prohibited from owning them.

The regulation is part of the new law creating a good conduct code for gun makers and dealers that also allows anyone who suffers harm from violations to sue.

The bill was one of more than a dozen adding to California's already strict gun regulation­s that were sent to Newsom, a Democrat, by state lawmakers before they left for their monthlong summer recess.

The National Rifle Associatio­n said the requiremen­ts are vague and represent an attempt to hold gun dealers and makers liable for the actions of others. The new law, the group said, “seeks to frustrate law-abiding gun owners” with the goal of driving gun makers and dealers “out of business with frivolous litigation.”

The state's firearm industry standard of conduct, starting in July 2023, will require those making, importing or selling guns to “take reasonable precaution­s” to make sure the weapons don't fall into the wrong hands through sales or thefts.

That includes having “reasonable controls” to prevent sales to arms trafficker­s, straw buyers, those prohibited from owning guns, and anyone deemed to be at “substantia­l risk” of using the gun improperly.

The law is patterned after a New York measure that took effect last year to skirt a 2005 federal law blocking most liability lawsuits against gun-makers or dealers.

The New York measure declared such violations a “public nuisance,” taking advantage of a federal exemption that allows lawsuits when gun makers break state or local laws regulating the sale and marketing of firearms.

Delaware and New Jersey just enacted similar laws, and all contain provisions requiring firearms dealers to act responsibl­y, said Tanya Schardt, senior counsel and director of state and federal policy at the Brady gun control advocacy organizati­on that sought the laws.

“There may be indicators or things that you see beyond just passing the background check that indicate to the dealer that they shouldn't sell the gun,” she said.

“I would say the California law is more specific,” Schardt said. “But substantiv­ely I think it creates the same set of requiremen­ts, the same standards with regards to engaging in safe business practices.”

“It's not asking someone to be psychic,” she added, but to take reasonable precaution­s in the same way that an automobile dealer could be liable for selling to a customer who is clearly drunk, for instance.

“It's not creating liability, it's not expanding liability beyond what's reasonable ... which is really the same standard that every other industry is measured against,” she said.

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