The Mercury News

Some gun stores will be able to stay open

Governor says it’s up to county sheriffs to decide if they are essential

- By Thomas Peele, Robert Salonga and Joseph Geha Staff writers

Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday wouldn’t say whether his unpreceden­ted, statewide, shelter-inplace order means gun stores in California have to close as nonessenti­al businesses, instead leaving that decision to each of the state’s 58 counties.

“I believe in people’s right to bear arms but I’ll defer to the sheriff in this instance, the sheriffs in their respective jurisdicti­ons,” said Newsom during a news conference.

That’s sure to muddle what some local leaders say is a growing public safety issue: panicked buying of firearms and some stores defying tougher restrictio­ns in Bay Area counties that don’t define them as essential businesses during the unpreceden­ted lockdown to stop the spread of the coronaviru­s.

“We don’t want a run on guns,” Contra Costa County Supervisor John Gioia said Wednesday. “It’s a public safety issue. Law enforcemen­t is well prepared to handle any

issues. People don’t need to stock up on guns.”

Gioia said the joint shelter-in-place order issued March 16 by Alameda, Contra Costa, Santa Clara, San Mateo, San Francisco, Marin and Santa Cruz counties clearly deemed gun stores nonessenti­al.

A check on the status of 75 gun stores in 17 Northern California counties by this news organizati­on found at least 32 were either fully open for business or allowing customers to come in and pick up weapons that already had been ordered. At least 12 were closed. The status of the others was unclear.

Stores were open in Pleasant Hill, Antioch, Brentwood and El Cerrito in Contra Costa County, Fremont in Alameda County, and Pacifica in San Mateo County. Gioia said the Contra Costa stores would be closed.

In Marin County, the owner of Marin Firearms recorded a phone answering machine message saying the store was ordered to close: “We were forced to shut down the store. We tried to stay open.”

Early last week, San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo quickly deemed gun stores in that city to be nonessenti­al

after Bullseye Bishop stayed open after the Santa Clara County had ordered all to shelter in place. The police visited the shop and ordered it to close.

The issue began getting more attention Tuesday when Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva called gun stores nonessenti­al and ordered his deputies to make sure they closed, citing safety concerns. Shelter-in-place orders were not permission “for everyone to be panic

gun-buying or rushing to stores,” The Associated Press reported.

But late Tuesday, the Los Angeles County Counsel, Mary Wickham, issued a written opinion that gun stores are essential.

Villanueva then reversed his order to enforce closures, the Los Angeles Daily News reported. But later Wednesday, after Newsom’s news conference, the sheriff appeared to leave the door open on enforcemen­t, tweeting

that the governor had confirmed that “the sheriff has the authority to enforce his executive order and keep the public safe during this pandemic.”

Kris Brown, president of the gun control group Brady, said the pandemic calls for extraordin­ary measures.

“They are temporary orders to address an emergency situation. There is no constituti­onal right to purchase a firearm immediatel­y and, during this time

where there are legitimate public safety concerns, all rights are balanced against competing interest in public safety and security,” Brown said.

At the Antioch Armory, a small gun store across the street from City Hall, a sign taped to a window Wednesday morning said 10 customers were allowed in at time.

Staff members were wearing masks and gloves. One showed a handgun to a man and woman, racking its slide several times, the gun making a distinct, loud click each time.

Asked if the store was flouting the county’s shelter-in-place order by being open, the owner, Mike Yow, declined to answer.

At the Black Dog Armory in Fremont, owner Chuck Cunningham said he has stayed open because he believes the business is essential, saying, “It was my choice to.”

People are buying weapons because they want to “protect the family,” he said, because of fears of looting. “Some people who don’t have heart, or a good soul, tend to do bad things.”

Cunningham said he would close the store if ordered but that he had not heard from city or county officials.

“We just do not have the capacity to go door to door and check on every business. We have thousands

of businesses in the city,” said Geneva Bosques, Fremont police spokespers­on. Black Dog Armory was “not on our radar.” She said the city now will investigat­e.

Last week, the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office closed down a Castro Valley gun store that stayed open after the shelter-in-place order was issued. Sgt. Ray Kelly, a spokespers­on for the office, said Wednesday that it’s up to individual cities like Fremont to enforce the county order.

A Second Amendment advocate called for the stores to stay open.

“There is no doubt that gun shops are an essential business. The right to keep and bear arms is not one relegated for sunny days; it is a hedge against the unthinkabl­e,” said Matthew Larosiere, director of legal policy for the Sacramento­based Firearms Policy Coalition.

Kelly disagreed. “Our interpreta­tion is that they are nonessenti­al,” he said. “Does a food store or a pharmacy or a laundry vital to fighting the coronaviru­s? I think they are. I don’t think you can say that about a gun store.”

 ?? DOUG DURAN — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Customers wait to be let inside the Elite Armory Plus gun store in Tracy on Wednesday. Some firearms dealers continue to open their stores despite the state’s shelter-in-place order.
DOUG DURAN — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Customers wait to be let inside the Elite Armory Plus gun store in Tracy on Wednesday. Some firearms dealers continue to open their stores despite the state’s shelter-in-place order.

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