Imperial Valley Press

Gun group wants judge to block ammunition background checks

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — A California affiliate of the National Rifle Associatio­n has asked a U.S. judge to block a new law requiring background checks for anyone buying ammunition.

The California Rifle & Pistol Associatio­n asked San Diego-based U.S. District Judge Roger Benitez to halt the checks and related restrictio­ns on ammunition sales.

Voters approved tightening California’s already strict firearms laws in 2016. The restrictio­ns took effect July 1.

The gun owners’ associatio­n challenged the ammunition background checks in a lawsuit filed last year and on Monday asked for an injunction, alleging it violates the Second Amendment right to bear arms.

The lawsuit has been joined by out-of-state ammunition sellers and California residents, including Kim Rhode, who has won six Olympic shooting medals and is trying to become the only person to win seven medals at seven consecutiv­e Games.

“The scheme purports to funnel everyone seeking to exercise their Second Amendment right to acquire ammunition into a single, controlled source, an in-state licensed vendor, for the purpose of confirming purchasers’ legal eligibilit­y to possess ammunition and to keep track of all purchases,” lawyer Sean Brady wrote. “While making sure dangerous people do not obtain weapons is a laudable goal for government, California’s scheme goes too far and must be enjoined.”

The motion raised concerns about identifica­tion requiremen­ts and high rates of denials among ammunition buyers undergoing the new background checks. Moreover, the system blocks out-of-state ammunition vendors from the California market, the motion argues.

The judge is expected to decide in early August whether to order a halt, though any such decision is almost certain to be appealed.

Benitez in October rejected the state’s attempt to throw out the lawsuit. He allowed opponents to proceed on arguments that the ammunition restrictio­ns impede interstate commerce and are pre-empted by federal law.

The measure “criminaliz­es all of those (ammunition) transactio­ns with merchants conducting business in other states,” he wrote in a preliminar­y ruling that the restrictio­n “significan­tly burdens interstate commerce.”

He also preliminar­ily supported the argument that the new state law conflicts with a federal law allowing gun owners to bring their firearms and ammunition through California.

The California law “criminaliz­es bullets, saying he is confident it will be reinstated by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Attorneys with San Francisco-based Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence anticipate­d that Benitez is likely to block the ammunition restrictio­ns, but the law would eventually be upheld on appeal.

“Unfortunat­ely this may be the one judge in the country” willing to rule that “people should be able to buy unlimited quantities of ammunition without background checks,” staff attorney Ari Freilich, who directs the organizati­on’s California legislativ­e affairs, said prior to the filing.

Gun owner groups have been pinning their hopes on a more conservati­ve U.S. Supreme Court. But the center’s litigation director, Hannah Shearer, said there are unlikely to be the kind of conflictin­g lower court opinions that would prompt the justices to weigh in.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ RICH PEDRONCELL­I ?? In this June 11 file photo Chris Puehse, owner of Foothill Ammo, displays .45 caliber ammunition for sale at his store in Shingle Springs, Calif.
AP PHOTO/ RICH PEDRONCELL­I In this June 11 file photo Chris Puehse, owner of Foothill Ammo, displays .45 caliber ammunition for sale at his store in Shingle Springs, Calif.

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