Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Gun control moves hit by two setbacks

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SACRAMENTO (AP) – California politician­s’ attempts to strengthen some of the nation’s strictest gun laws suffered two setbacks this week – the latest when a federal judge blocked a law set to take effect Saturday barring gun owners from possessing ammunition magazines holding more than 10 bullets.

They present new challenges for freshman state Attorney General Xavier Becerra, who took office in January. He’s running his first statewide campaign as he seeks re-election next year to the post he now holds by appointmen­t after his predecesso­r was elected to the U.S. Senate.

The stalled laws were also championed by Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, who is campaignin­g for governor, and Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de Leon, who may seek higher office when he is termed out of the Senate next year.

The rival Democrats engaged in a public feud last year over ownership of the gun control issue as California voters also approved the magazine ban last fall.

The new developmen­ts do little to change the political landscape or voters’ strongly held opinions, and they may help all three Democrats campaignin­g in a state where gun restrictio­ns are popular, Stanford Law School professor David Sklansky said.

“But it’s also not an issue that will wind up dividing them much from other Democrats who are running for office,” Sklansky said.

The setbacks come as another mass shooting unfolded at a New York City hospital on Friday, with the slain assailant concealing a rifle beneath a white lab coat.

San Diego-based U.S. District Judge Roger Benitez ruled Thursday that the high-capacity magazine ban takes away gun owners’ Second Amendment rights and amounts to the government seizing people’s private property without compensati­on.

California law has prohibited buying or selling the magazines since 2000, but until now allowed those who already owned them to keep them.

The judge was harshly critical of the reasoning behind banning magazines, and particular­ly of legal arguments by Becerra’s office that the ban would help thwart mass shooters because they would have to stop shooting to reload more frequently.

“It appears on this record to be a haphazard solution likely to have no effect on an exceedingl­y rare problem,” wrote Benitez, an appointee of Republican President George W. Bush.

But on the same day, Sacramento-based U.S. District Court Judge William Shubb, an appointee of Republican George H.W. Bush, backed the ban and rejected arguments by different gun owners’ rights groups.

Shubb, like Becerra, listed as examples recent mass shootings in Orlando, Fla.; San Bernardino; at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.; and the Arizona attack that killed six while wounding former U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords.

Earlier this week, California regulators also temporaril­y blocked Becerra’s proposed new rules on assault weapons, saying he went too far in trying to impose the new regulation­s without allowing for public comment.

Becerra’s office is developing regulation­s on how current California owners of soon-to-be-illegal assault-style weapons can keep them if they’re registered starting in July 2018.

Both the magazine ban and new assault weapon restrictio­ns were included in legislatio­n last year.

Voters strengthen­ed penalties for the magazine ban with their approval in November of Newsom’s Propositio­n 63, which also included other gun control measures.

Owners could have faced fines or jail time if they didn’t get rid of their magazines or alter them to hold no more than 10 bullets. Owners can now keep the magazines until a final ruling by Benitez or if an appeals court overturns his injunction.

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