Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Judge affirms most of Virginia gun law
LYNCHBURG, Va. — A Virginia judge on Tuesday upheld much of a new state law that expands background checks for gun buyers but issued an injunction preventing it from being enforced on buyers between 18 and 20 years old.
Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring intends to appeal the injunction, his office said in a statement.
The law was one of seven gun-control measures passed by the new Democratic majority at the General Assembly this year. It requires a background check for any gun sale, even among private individuals.
The judge wrote that the act was “facially valid,” “valid based on historical justifications” and “facially constitutional.” But he wrote that the state is currently unprepared to administer it in a way that does not infringe on the right of adults under 21 to buy a handgun.
That’s because federal law does not allow a federally licensed firearm dealer to sell a handgun to anyone under 21, or to run a background check on a person attempting to make such a purchase, Herring’s office said.