Imperial Valley Press

State police will be required to lock guns in vehicles

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SACRAMENTO (AP) — Gun owners and law enforcemen­t officers will be required to lock up their firearms if they leave them in an unattended vehicle under legislatio­n Gov. Jerry Brown signed Monday in response to high-profile thefts from police vehicles in the San Francisco Bay Area.

The measure was among four gun bills the Democratic governor signed, and it joins more than a half-dozen gun-control measures approved this year. Brown also vetoed two gun bills.

Beginning Jan. 1, SB869 will require that anyone — including police and people with concealed weapon permits — leaving a handgun in a vehicle lock it in the trunk or a container out of plain sight, or face a $1,000 fine. Police won’t face sanctions during urgent situations.

Handguns stolen from law enforcemen­t officers’ cars last year were used in the San Francisco killing of 32-year-old Kate Steinle in July and 27-year-old Oakland muralist Antonio Ramos in September.

Steinle was shot in the back as she walked with her father and a family friend along a popular San Francisco pier. Oakland police said Ramos was among artists working on a community mural when he was fatally shot after an apparent argument.

His family filed a claim in June against the U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agency, saying it was partly responsibl­e for the shooting because it was committed with an agent’s stolen gun.

In January, three handguns and an FBI agent’s badge were stolen from a locked vehicle equipped with an alarm in Benicia, about 30 miles northeast of San Francisco.

Brown also announced Monday that he’d signed a bill allowing people with concealed weapons permits to carry a county-issued identifica­tion card instead of the standard state form, which some gun owners find clunky to keep on them.

He vetoed a measure that would have required police agencies and sheriffs’ department­s to charge a fee for concealed gun permits to cover the full cost of issuing permits and enforcing them.

Gun-rights groups feared the measure would significan­tly raise the price of obtaining a concealed weapons permit and make them cost-prohibitiv­e for many firearm owners.

“This bill was spurred by a local dispute in one county,” Brown wrote in his veto message. “I am unaware of a larger problem that merits a statewide change at this time.”

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