Times-Herald (Vallejo)

State already has nation's strictest gun laws, mass shootings could spur push to go further

- By Hannah Wiley hannah.wiley@latimes.com

After a deadly wave of mass shootings in the United States last year — including one in Buffalo, New York, and another at a school in Uvalde, Texas — that collective­ly killed 31, California's Democratic­controlled Legislatur­e responded by quickly passing more than a dozen laws meant to prevent gun violence in the Golden State.

Now, with California reeling from one mass shooting after another that claimed at least 24 lives in Monterey Park, Half Moon Bay and a Central Valley farming town, lawmakers are asking themselves once again what more they can do to stem the violence.

California already ranks among the states with the most restrictiv­e gun control laws. And by some measures they are working: the state has among the lowest rates of gun deaths, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and a report by the Public Policy Institute of California found the state had a lower rate of mass shootings than the national average.

Dr. Amy Barnhorst, associate director of the Violence Prevention Research Program at UC Davis, said the state's “patchwork of sensible evidence-based firearm laws” has contribute­d to those better outcomes.

“It's hard to say it's this law or that law in particular, but all of them working in concert together probably is what reduces our rates,” Barnhorst said. “We have something in place for a lot of different scenarios, which is really important because ultimately the one thing that mass shooters have in common is their guns, but they're an increasing­ly diverse group and have a whole variety of motivation­s.”

But California's aggressive laws can do only so much. Several recently passed state gun laws also have been eviscerate­d by the federal courts and, given the expansive interpreta­tion of the constituti­onal right to bear arms by the current conservati­ve majority of the Supreme Court, any new laws passed by California lawmakers could suffer a similar fate.

Gov. Gavin Newsom, who has made gun control a core tenet of his political identity, acknowledg­ed the limits of state-level policy even as he defended California's record.

“I'm proud of California,” Newsom said during a news conference Tuesday in Half Moon Bay, where seven people were killed Monday in what appears to be a case of workplace violence. “We've led the nation. We've led the national conversati­on

in gun safety. No state in America has done more than the state of California.”

“But we can't do this alone. And with all due respect, we feel like we are,” he said, calling out House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d) for saying “not one word” about the recent shootings.

Democrats in the California Legislatur­e say they aren't waiting for federal action. They have a list of bills lined up this year that would bolster an already extensive list of rules restrictin­g who can buy and sell firearms.

“While California is in the forefront in gun control policy, this tragedy reminds us that our work is not done,” said Assemblyme­mber Mike Fong (D-Alhambra), who represents Monterey Park.

Newsom supports proposed legislatio­n to limit who can be issued a license to carry concealed weapons, one of the few gun control measures that failed in the Legislatur­e last year. Senate Bill 2 was reintroduc­ed more than a month before this month's tragedies, and already promises to be one of the main gun bills for the 2023 legislativ­e session. The measure aims to comply with a Supreme Court decision in June that deemed restrictiv­e concealed-carry laws unconstitu­tional, while still maintainin­g tight regulation­s around who can obtain the permits.

Assemblyme­mber Jesse Gabriel, an Encino Democrat and co-chair of the California Legislativ­e Gun Violence Prevention Working Group, also unveiled a trio of proposals to regulate firearms. One would establish an excise tax on ammunition and guns in California to help finance violence prevention and school safety efforts, while another would allow residents suffering from mental health crises to voluntaril­y add their name to a “do not sell” list. The third measure would prohibit someone who has a domestic violence protective order filed against them from buying or owning guns foran additional three years after the

order has lifted.

Other proposals by state lawmakers include a ban on selling body armor, which has been used by some mass shooters, and another to make the possession of a so-called ghost gun a felony.

The proposed changes to California's gun laws are relatively minor compared with the suite of new laws Newsom signed in 2022. One establishe­d a “firearm industry standard of conduct” and will allow, beginning in July, for local government­s, the state Department of Justice and gun violence survivors to sue for egregious violations of state sales and marketing regulation­s. Another was modeled after Texas' vigilante abortion law and increased legal liability for the gun industry, while two more limited firearms advertisin­g to minors and further restricted ghost guns.

“There's a lot of evidence that our gun safety laws are working and saving people's lives,” Gabriel said. “But obviously when we see these kinds of horrific incidents, it's a reminder that we have a lot more work to do.”

The massacres in California this month occurred less than a year after President

Biden signed what was considered the most significan­t federal gun control law in recent history, after both political parties struck a deal and limited its scope. That law encourages states to pass “red flag” laws — which allow for the temporary removal of firearms from those who pose a public safety risk — expands background checks and now prohibits romantic partners, in addition to spouses, from owning firearms if they've been convicted of domestic abuse.

Still, proponents of stricter firearms rules have long argued that bolder action is needed to end gun violence. They've called for a federal ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, and for even stronger red flag laws and background checks.

“The federal government needs to do its job,” Newsom said.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) authored the nation's first nationwide ban on assault weapons during her first term in Washington, overcoming opposition from the powerful National Rifle Assn. to get it passed, but Congress allowed the landmark legislatio­n to expire in 2004. According to University of Massachuse­tts researcher Louis Klarevas, the author of “Rampage Nation: Securing America from Mass Shootings,” the number of mass shootings declined during the ban and grew more frequent after the law's sunset.

Feinstein attempted without success to reenact the assault weapons ban, including in the aftermath of the attempted assassinat­ion of then-Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in 2011 in Tucson and the mass killing at Sandy Hook Elementary in Connecticu­t in 2012. She reintroduc­ed another bill on Monday to ban military-style assault weapons and high-capacity magazines.

Obstacles to efforts to enact more stringent gun laws extend beyond the partisangr­idlocked halls of Congress and into the federal court system, where Republican­s and gun rights groups have found great success in blocking stringent firearms laws.

Several 2nd Amendment organizati­ons have intentiona­lly brought cases before a federal judge in San Diego who has struck down California's longtime, statewide ban on assault weapons and, more recently, an important provision of California's latest bill that authorizes private lawsuits against the gun industry.

Sam Paredes, executive director of Gun Owners of California, warned that his group would sue to block the implementa­tion of additional gun restrictio­ns, including the concealed-carry bill, should it pass.

Several 2nd Amendment organizati­ons have intentiona­lly brought cases before a federal judge in San Diego who has struck down California's longtime, statewide ban on assault weapons and, more recently, an important provision of California's latest bill that authorizes private lawsuits against the gun industry.

 ?? PHOTO: NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Law enforcemen­t, including the San Mateo County Sheriff's department, investigat­e a shooting off Highway 92 in Half Moon Bay.
PHOTO: NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Law enforcemen­t, including the San Mateo County Sheriff's department, investigat­e a shooting off Highway 92 in Half Moon Bay.

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