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Wednesday, November 14, 2018

CALIFORNIA- laws - firearms related updates

OFF THE WIRE
CALIFORNIA- law, updates

AB1968 [law]: Mental health: firearms.

Status:
09/28/18: Approved by the Governor. Chaptered by Secretary of State. Chapter 894, Statutes of 2018.

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AB2526 [law]: Temporary emergency gun violence restraining orders

Status:
09/28/18: Approved by the Governor. Chaptered by Secretary of State - Chapter 873, Statutes of 2018.

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AB3129 [law]: Firearms: prohibited persons.

Status:
09/28/18: Approved by the Governor. Chaptered by Secretary of State - Chapter 883, Statutes of 2018.

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SB1100 [law]: Firearms: transfers

Status:
09/28/18: Approved by the Governor. Chaptered by Secretary of State. Chapter 894, Statutes of 2018.

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SB1200 [law]: Firearms: gun violence restraining orders

Status:
09/28/18: Approved by the Governor. Chaptered by Secretary of State. Chapter 898, Statutes of 2018.

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AB1903 [update]: Firearms: buyback programs: gift cards

Status:
09/28/18: Vetoed by Governor.

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SB1177 [update]: Firearms: transfers

Status:
09/28/18: Vetoed by the Governor. In Senate. Consideration of Governor's veto pending.

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PENNSYLVANIA- new, update

HB2682 [new]: An Act amending Title 18 (Crimes and Offenses) of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes, in firearms and other dangerous articles, providing for identification required for purchase of firearm ammunition.

Status:
Oct. 1, 2018: Referred to Judiciary

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HB2060 [update]: An Act amending Titles 18 (Crimes and Offenses) and 23 (Domestic Relations) of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes, in firearms and other dangerous articles, further providing for persons not to possess, use, manufacture, control, sell or transfer firearms and providing for relinquishment of firearms and firearm licenses by convicted persons and for abandonment of firearms, weapons or ammunition; and, in protection from abuse, further providing for definitions, for commencement of proceedings, for hearings, for relief, for return of relinquished firearms, other weapons and ammunition and additional relief, for relinquishment for consignment sale, lawful transfer or safekeeping and for relinquishment to third party for safekeeping, imposing a penalty and providing for order to seal record from public view.

Status:
Oct. 3, 2018: Senate- Third consideration and final passage. Vote: 43-5
Oct. 2, 2018: Senate- second consideration, re-referred to Appropriations. Re-reported as committed.
Oct. 1, 2018: Senate- Reported as committed, first consideration
Sept. 28, 2018: Senate- Referred to Judiciary

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WASHINGTON- article


Push for gun-storage laws continues as King County approves ordinance and voters weigh in on I-1639

Originally published October 1, 2018 at 6:12 pm Updated October 3, 2018 at 2:36 pm
By Joseph O’Sullivan

For more than two decades, some Washington officials have pushed for laws intended to reduce gun deaths by making firearms more secure at home.
Those efforts — from an unsuccessful ballot initiative in 1997, to legislation sponsored year after year at the state Legislature — never came anywhere near to becoming law.

But 2018 has become a consequential year for so-called safe-storage laws.

This summer, the cities of Seattle and Edmonds each passed local laws allowing civil penalties to be levied against people who have not secured their guns.
Those actions promptly drew lawsuits by the National Rifle Association and Bellevue-based Second Amendment foundation, which point to a state law that bans local jurisdictions from enacting firearms regulations.

On Monday, the Metropolitan King County Council approved its own safe-storage law with civil fines of up to $1,000. It too, is likely to draw a lawsuit.

The new statute overcame the opposition of a handful of council members concerned about potential legal fees and worries that it could prevent gun owners from fending off a home invasion.

“When firearms are stored securely, it means that these tragedies are less likely to happen,” Councilmember Joe McDermott, one of the measure’s sponsors, said before the vote.

Before those lawsuits are resolved, Washingtonians will weigh in on safe storage.

Frustrated after proposals again stalled this year at the Legislature, advocates of tighter gun restrictions have put a safe-storage component into the sweeping gun-regulations proposal known as Initiative 1639.

Voters on Nov. 6 will have a chance to approve or deny the 30-page initiative.

With the continuing string of high-profile mass shootings, the part of  I-1639 that has gotten the most attention is the provision raising the legal purchase age of semi-automatic rifles to 21, from 18.

But state data has shown handguns cause more firearm deaths than long guns, and far more people die by suicide than by homicide. Of the 686 firearm-related deaths in 2016 in Washington, 515 were attributed to suicide, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“I think the impact of safe storage will primarily be preventing teen suicides,” said Rep. Ruth Kagi, a Democrat from Seattle who for years sponsored safe-storage proposals in the Legislature.

The provision in I-1639 is more strict than those enacted this year by local governments. It requires owners to keep guns secured with a lockbox, safe, trigger lock or similar device if kept in a place where a prohibited person — such as a child — could get them.

But instead of a civil penalty, it creates gross misdemeanor and felony charges of “community endangerment.” Owners could be charged under those if a prohibited person gets access to a firearm and displays it in public, causes it to discharge or uses it to commit a crime.

“That liability, the accountability model is actually one of the most effective ways” to prevent gun violence, said Rebecca Johnson, lead policy advocate for the I-1639 campaign.

The initiative campaign is spearheaded by the Alliance for Gun Responsibility, which has been able to rely on top-dollar donors like venture capitalist Nick Hanauer, Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Paul Allen and former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer.

That trio, or their family members, account for about $3.6 million of the about $4.5 million raised so far by the campaign.

A host of groups, from the NRA and Second Amendment Foundation to smaller campaigns such as Save Our Security, are opposing the initiative.

The NRA campaign has so far raised about $184,000, with most of that donated by the group itself. Save Our Security has raised nearly $26,000.

Gun-rights supporters balk at every part of I-1639 — and the safe-storage provision is no different.

From the NRA and Second Amendment Foundation down to opponents on the King County Council, they worry that such laws would hinder gun owners’ ability to defend themselves.
“The strict mandated requirement of this initiative will force individuals to lock up their firearms and render them useless in a self-defense situation, or face criminal prosecution,” Alan Gottlieb of the Second Amendment Foundation wrote in an email.

King County Councilmember Kathy Lambert, who voted against Monday’s proposal, said longer response times for law enforcement in rural areas means homeowners must be able to defend themselves.

“I think it’s another example of not understanding how people in a rural area use their guns as a tool,” Lambert said of the county proposal.

At least 16 states impose some kind of criminal liability on a firearms owner if a gun is improperly stored and a child carries or uses it, according to a 2016 report by the Boston University School of Public Health.

And 11 states have laws that either require or encourage the use of trigger-lock devices, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

In Washington, some lawmakers have long sought safe-storage laws.

In 1997, the year after a child named Whitney Graves died by the hand of another child in an accidental shooting, lawmakers in Olympia discussed a proposal.

Also in 1997, Washingtonians overwhelmingly voted down Initiative 676, a ballot measure that, among other things, would have required handguns to have trigger locks.

This year could be different. The Alliance for Gun Responsibility successfully pushed through gun-regulation ballot measures in 2014 and 2016.

King County Councilmember Reagan Dunn even cited I-1639 as one of the reasons he voted against Monday’s ordinance.
Said Dunn: “Doesn’t it make sense just to wait on this, to see what exactly the voters of the entire state decide before we go charging forward?”

NOTE:
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FEDERAL- new, update

HR6629 [new]: No Guns for Abusers Act of 2018. To authorize the Attorney General to make grants to States and units of local government to implement statutes, rules, policies, or procedures to authorize courts to issue relinquishment orders with respect to individuals charged with or convicted of a crime of domestic violence, or subject to a domestic violence protective order, and for other purposes

Status:
10/01/2018: Introduced in House, referred to the Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, Homeland Security, and Investigations. 

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HR7016 [new]: To establish a task force to address the national security and safety issues presented by the manufacturing of prohibited firearms, munitions, and related materials through the use of 3-D printing technology, to prohibit the use of 3-D printing technology to make a firearm, ammunition, or a component of a firearm or ammunition, and to prohibit the possession or transfer of a firearm, ammunition, or component so made, and for other purposes.

Status:
10/02/2018: Introduced in the House, referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.

Bill text: NA
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HR7027 [new]: To improve the procedures of the national instant criminal background check system in the case of firearm transfers by federally licensed firearms importers, manufacturers, and dealers before the completion of the related criminal background check, and to provide for annual reports on default firearm transfers.

Status:
10/02/2018: Introduced in the House, referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.

Bill text: NA
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HR6624 [update]: Firearms Interstate Commerce Reform Act.

Status:
10/01/2018: Referred to the Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, Homeland Security, and Investigations.