No to new gun sale ban
Los Angeles – California’s ban on the sale of semi-automatic weapons to adults under the age of 21 violates the country’s constitution, a US federal appeals court ruled on Wednesday.
California has in recent years passed several laws tightening the regulation of firearms, which, according to recently released federal data, were linked to more than 45 000 deaths nationwide in 2020.
Buyers under 21 years old are already prohibited from purchasing handguns in California, but a new law that went into effect on 1 July last year added a prohibition on the sale of semiautomatic weapons.
That new law was challenged by several individuals and groups lobbying for gun ownership rights and the case has been working its way through the courts.
By a two-to-one vote, judges on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals found that the law violated the Second Amendment to the US Constitution, which says that Americans have a right to “keep and bear arms”.
The appellate court’s decision does not impact California’s ban on the sale of handguns to those under 21.
According to Small Arms Survey, there were approximately 393 million firearms in civilian possession in the US as of 2017, or more than one per person.
Despite recurring mass-casualty shootings and a nationwide wave of gun violence, several initiatives to reform gun regulations have failed in the US Congress.
This has left states and local councils to enact their own restrictions on the sale of firearms.