Firearm confiscation
moves forward in California
By Los Angeles Times May
2, 2013 12:28 pm
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SACRAMENTO --
The state will send dozens of new agents into California neighborhoods this
summer to confiscate nearly 40,000 handguns and assault rifles from people
barred by law from owning firearms, officials said Wednesday.
The
plan received the green light Wednesday, when Gov. Jerry Brown signed
legislation providing $24 million to clear the backlog of weapons known to be
in the hands of about 20,000 people who acquired them legally. They were later
disqualified because of criminal convictions, restraining orders or serious
mental illness.
The
bill is the first of more than a dozen gun measures introduced by California
lawmakers after the December massacre of 20 children and six adults at Sandy
Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.
"This
bipartisan bill makes our communities safer by giving law enforcement the
resources they need to get guns out of the hands of potentially dangerous
individuals," said Evan Westrup, a spokesman for the governor.
California
is the only state in the nation to operate a database that cross-references gun
owners with those who are subsequently disqualified from owning firearms. But
budget cuts have prevented the state Department of Justice from keeping up with
the list, which grows by 15 to 20 names every day, officials said.
The
new funds will allow the department to hire 36 additional special agents and
support staff, with the first officers expected to hit the streets in July,
said Lynda Gledhill, a spokeswoman for Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris. The money
comes from a surplus in fees paid for background checks by people purchasing
guns.
The
new agents will work primarily in cities including Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Sacramento, Fresno and Riverside, which have requested additional help,
Gledhill said. The effort is expected to take three years.
"Our
reinvestment in this tracking program gives us the opportunity to
confiscate" guns from those who should not have them, said state Sen. Mark
Leno (D-San Francisco), author of the legislation.
Opponents
of the measure include the National Rifle Assn. of America and Sam Paredes,
executive director of Gun Owners of California, who said any confiscation
campaign should be paid for by the state general fund.
"Going
after criminals is a good thing, but the way they are paying for it is grossly
unfair," Paredes said. "They are putting the entire burden on the
back of law-abiding gun purchasers."
Paredes
said some gun owners may not know that they are disqualified from possessing
guns for reasons that include, for example, a restraining order in a domestic
violence case. He said an education campaign urging people to turn in weapons
would be less costly and safer than sending out armed agents.
Some
Republican lawmakers voted against the bill, SB 140, because they too objected
to tapping money not intended for the new purpose. Other Republican legislators
supported the allocation, helping to give it two-thirds approval in both
houses.
Of
the gun owners on the prohibition list, 32% were disqualified by conviction on
a felony or a violent misdemeanor, Gledhill said. About 30% were disqualified
for mental health reasons, including court determinations that they are
dangerous; 20% are the subject of an active restraining order for cases
including domestic violence; 18% are wanted by authorities for violent crimes.
The
existing squad of 33 special agents investigated nearly 4,000 people and seized
about that same number of weapons, including 300 assault weapons, during the
last two years, officials said.
"California
is leading the nation in a common-sense effort to protect public safety by
taking guns away from dangerous, violent individuals who are prohibited by law
from owning them," Harris said in a prepared statement.
The
California Legislature is still considering measures that would require
ammunition purchasers to pay for a permit, close loopholes on the existing
assault rifle ban and impose a nickel-per-bullet tax to pay for mental health
programs.
The
Democratic governor, who has said he owns guns, has not taken a public position
on the remaining bills.
3 comments:
How would you like to be one of those dozens of new agents knocking on 20,000 doors trying to take guns away from people who say you can't have my gun ? I hope that $24 Million not only pays their salaries but also for insurance policies.
I think they need to take Jerry Brown's guns away he is a mental case as well as all that voted for the idiot. Sadly California is a lost cause.
Why should we worry about those officers who will knock our doors and take away our Second Amendment. They will never be cops forever. One day they will get old and retired. Their guns will be taking away by the new generation like they did to his/her country at the mean time. Whatever they do will return all back to them. They are human being, too. They are not going to live like God, folks. Think about those retired FBI and CIA, they couldn't do any things at all but complaining. They are hurting more than we do.
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