The Signal

Gun safety act passes the Senate

- By Signal Staff

The state Senate unanimousl­y approved Senate Bill 1281, the Juvenile Gun Safety Act by Sen. Henry Stern, D-Canoga Park, on Thursday.

The bill, supported by law enforcemen­t and student activist groups, looks at the enforcemen­t of firearms prohibitio­ns for individual­s who committed serious or violent offenses as juveniles.

Under current law, juveniles who have committed such offenses are prohibited from owning firearms until they are 30 years old. However, under a different law that calls for juvenile records to be sealed and destroyed, prosecutor­s and law enforcemen­t are unable to access the orders creating the prohibitio­n.

This allows individual­s to acquire guns on the legal market and carry them without risk of prosecutio­n, even though they are legally prohibited from owning them because of past violent acts, according to a news release from Stern’s office.

“People with violent criminal records should not be able to own or possess guns,” Stern said. “We need to close the gaps in our background check systems so that, at a bare minimum, minors who commit serious crimes cannot turn around and possess guns once they successful­ly complete probation.”

The intent of the new law is to preserve the effectiven­ess of the records-sealing law, which gives juvenile offenders a second chance at a law-abiding and productive life.

S.B. 1281 also aims to make sure any person who commits a serious crime as a juvenile cannot possess a gun when they successful­ly complete probation, even if, due to rehabilita­tion and good behavior, their records have been sealed and cannot be used against them in a court of law, or in applying for college, a job, a credit card or an apartment.

“We, as prosecutor­s, need access to sealed juvenile records,” Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey said, “so we can enforce existing laws aimed at keeping guns out of the hands of individual­s found to have committed violent crimes as minors.”

The bill now moves to the state Assembly, where it will be heard in the Committee on Public Safety in June.

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