Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Judge throws out background check to buy ammo

- DON THOMPSON

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — A federal judge Thursday blocked a California law requiring background checks for people buying ammuni- tion, issuing a sharply worded rebuke of “onerous and convoluted” regulation­s that violate the constituti­onal right to bear arms.

U.S. District Judge Roger Benitez in San Diego ruled in favor of the California Rifle & Pistol Associatio­n, which asked him to stop the checks and related restrictio­ns on ammo sales.

“The experiment has been tried. The casualties have been counted. California’s new ammunition background check law misfires and the Second Amendment rights of California citizens have been gravely injured,” Benitez wrote in a 120-page opinion granting the group’s motion for a preliminar­y injunction.

Voters approved toughening California’s already strict firearms laws in 2016, and the restrictio­ns took effect last July.

New York was the first state to require a comprehens­ive ammunition background check system for each sale, but it never took effect. That left California as the first to extend firearm background checks to each ammunition sale. Four other states — Connecticu­t, Illinois, Massachuse­tts and New Jersey — require buyers to undergo background checks to obtain firearms or ammunition licenses that they must show when buying bullets, according to the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence.

Hannah Shearer, the center’s litigation director, called the ruling “a dangerous step in the wrong direction” at a time when gun stores are seeing increased sales to those worried about the effect of coronaviru­s on society or their safety.

“The law’s red tape and state database errors made it impossible for hundreds of thousands of law-abiding California­ns to purchase ammunition for sport or self-defense,” said Chuck Michel, the associatio­n’s general counsel. “The court found that the flimsy reasons offered by the government to justify these constituti­onal infringeme­nts were inadequate.”

He expected the state to appeal the ruling. But in the meantime, “California­ns can sleep a little easier tonight knowing their constituti­onal rights were restored and strengthen­ed by this decision,” he said.

Gov. Gavin Newsom championed the law before he became governor, and spokeswoma­n Vicky Waters said his administra­tion is disappoint­ed by the decision and considerin­g its next steps. “California’s strong gun safety laws help keep our schools and communitie­s safe,” she said.

The state attorney general’s office said only that it is reviewing the decision. It did not immediatel­y say if it will appeal or seek to stay the order, which takes effect immediatel­y at a time when some California gun stores have been ordered shut because of the coronaviru­s. Among the places where the shops were not deemed essential businesses are Los Angeles and San Jose.

The same judge’s decision last year striking down the state’s ban on high-capacity ammunition magazines sparked a weeklong buying frenzy before he halted sales while the state appeals his ruling. Gun owners similarly rushed to stockpile ammunition before the new restrictio­ns took effect last summer.

Benitez called the ammunition background check law “onerous and convoluted” and “constituti­onally defective.”

“Criminals, tyrants, and terrorists don’t do background checks,” he wrote. “The background check experiment defies common sense while unduly and severely burdening the Second Amendment rights of every responsibl­e, gun-owning citizen desiring to lawfully buy ammunition.”

While it is intended to keep ammunition from criminals, it blocked sales to legitimate, law-abiding buyers about 16% of the time, he wrote. Moreover, he ruled that the state’s ban on importing ammunition from outside

California violates federal interstate commerce laws.

Attorney General Xavier Becerra said in a court filing this month that the background checks stopped more than 750 people from buying bullets illegally from July 2019 through January 2020, not including those who didn’t even try because they knew they weren’t eligible.

The law requires buyers who already are in the state’s firearm background check database to pay a $1 fee each time they buy ammunition, while others can buy longer-term licenses if they do not have certain criminal conviction­s or mental health commitment­s.

Benitez ruled that the ammunition law illegally locks out-of-state vendors out of California’s market, and that it conflicts with a federal law allowing gun owners to bring their firearms and ammunition through California.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States