New California Law Requires Background Check Before Ammo Purchase

Swordsmyth

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If you live in California, you’d better run out and buy all the ammunition you can afford (after you finish reading this article, of course).
Beginning July 1, a new state law will require everyone attempting to purchase ammunition to pass a background check and show a government-issued ID.
And, in case anyone was looking for some economic insult to go with the constitutional injury, the new California statute charges prospective buyers the cost of running the background check.
“From San Bernardino to Ventura to Poway, too many Californians have already died from gun violence,” California Governor Gavin Newsom declared last week. “I championed Prop. 63 because it is beyond time that we take common sense actions such as these to keep deadly ammo out of the wrong hands and protect our communities.”

In 2016 while “serving” as lieutenant governor, Newsom was an outspoken proponent of the proposition that garnered the support of over 63 percent of voters in the Golden State.
The text of the new law makes it very clear that a large majority of Californians could not possibly care less about the right to keep and bear arms. The new law:
Requires background check and Department of Justice authorization to purchase ammunition. Prohibits possession of large capacity ammunition magazines. Establishes procedures for enforcing laws prohibiting firearm possession by specified persons. Requires Department of Justice's participation in federal National Instant Criminal Background Check System.
Unless that’s not clear enough, the state Attorney General published the following guide to understanding the proposition’s purposes and penalties:
Proposition 63 required individuals who wish to purchase ammunition to first obtain a permit. The measure mandated dealers to check this permit before selling ammunition. The measure also eliminated several exemptions to the large-capacity magazines ban and increased the penalty for possessing them. Proposition 63 enacted a court process that attempts to ensure prohibited individuals do not continue to have firearms.
It’s irrefutably intellectually dishonest to claim a cause-and-effect relationship between guns and armed violence, so there must be something else that motivated millions of Californians to approve such severe restrictions on the purchase of ammunition.
One of the likely impulses propelling such prohibitions was the intent to make bullets too expensive for people to purchase in bulk.
An article published at townhall.com provided the following cost analysis as evidence of the effect of the new “law:”
A $14 box of 50 rounds of .9mm will now cost $34 ($1 for the background check, $19 for the basic ammunition eligibility check if they aren't in the Dealer Record of Sale system). That means that the price per round jumps from .35 to .68. That's just about double the current price. And that's just what they're proposing fee wise. It hasn't been finalized yet. Most Federal Firearms Licensees (FFLs) generally charge $25-$30 every time they run a background check and we have no idea if they'll have to tack on that fee. Remember, they have to be paid for their time as well.
Predictably, gun owners in California have started stockpiling ammunition while it’s still affordable and before they have to consent to having their personal data collected and added to a federal database of gun/ammo owners.
As reported by the Los Angeles Times:
Even with a possible delay, gun owners have been stockpiling ammunition. OC Guns store owner Scott Bodkin said sales of ammunition have doubled at his Lake Forest store in recent weeks.
“People are gearing up for it,” he said of the new law.
“They are buying a lot. They don’t like it. It’s just another typical California deterrent to make things tougher for gun owners.”
The Sacramento-area firm Ammo Depot has leased a freeway billboard warning of the new law and urging “Get your ammo now!”
Mike Hein of Ade’s Gun Shop in Orange said ammunition sales in recent months have jumped by more than 10%, including an increase of customers making bulk buys of as many as 1,000 rounds.
“People are starting to stock up. We stocked up on ammunition,” he said. “Most people know about the deadline. They are running scared. They are pissed off.”
As Americans, these ammo-amassing Californians come by that anger honestly.
Savvy readers should remember that the “shot heard ‘round the world” on Lexington Green was fired because King George III sent British troops to seize the patriots’ ammunition stockpile stored outside of that small Massachusetts village.
Guns without ammunition are just clubs and clubs aren’t a good match for the war-fighting weapons possessed by the government.

More at: https://www.thenewamerican.com/usne...equires-background-check-before-ammo-purchase
 
Bold move by CA, safety first. At least part of credit, if not all, also goes to Washington.


Washington: Trump-appointed judge upheld his bumpfire stock ban
A federal judge in Washington ruled late Monday that the Trump administration’s ban on rapid-fire rifle attachments known as bump stocks can move forward, stymieing efforts by gun-rights groups that sought to block the new policy.

Trump has been inspirational in his anti 2nd Amendment stances and ramblings, for sure.

[MENTION=19002]danno[/MENTION], the hell is wrong with your state?
 
Trump has been inspirational in his anti 2nd Amendment stances and ramblings, for sure.

@danno, the hell is wrong with your state?

I hate to say it, but because of all of the other shit our state does and how shitty places near LA and Oakland are, this might actually help curb gun violence in those areas, statistically.. I don't support it at all, I'm at 0% support, I'm just saying this might actually help as compared to laws curtailing law abiding citizens from owning or carrying certain types of guns - which we all know has the opposite effect.

We all know it's entirely problematic not to allow somebody who sold a bag of weed to be able to purchase a firearm or ammunition, and we all know what the government likes to do with people on certain types of lists when things get really bad and they want to start taking the guns.. but in the inner cities where most of the gun violence occurs, this could be a little bit of a game changer in the short term. It doesn't prevent most law abiding citizens from arming themselves or buying ammo, but it might make it a bit more difficult for street gangs. Or maybe it won't help much or have the opposite effect..

But there is something to be said about Chris Rock's bit on bullets. Maybe. Or at least it's kinda entertaining.

 
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I hate to say it, but because of all of the other shit our state does and how shitty places near LA and Oakland are, this might actually help curb gun violence in those areas, statistically.. I don't support it at all, I'm at 0% support, I'm just saying this might actually help as compared to laws curtailing law abiding citizens from owning or carrying certain types of guns - which we all know has the opposite effect.

We all know it's entirely problematic not to allow somebody who sold a bag of weed to be able to purchase a firearm or ammunition, and we all know what the government likes to do with people on certain types of lists when things get really bad and they want to start taking the guns.. but in the inner cities where most of the gun violence occurs, this could be a little bit of a game changer in the short term. It doesn't prevent most law abiding citizens from arming themselves or buying ammo, but it might make it a bit more difficult for street gangs. Or maybe it won't help much or have the opposite effect..

But there is something to be said about Chris Rock's bit on bullets. Maybe. Or at least it's kinda entertaining.


It will affect law abiding people within those inner city neighborhoods as well. Especially those living in apartments where if a prohibited person ever lived in your apartment you will get delayed in purchasing the ammo.

Wonder if the retards included reloading supplies.

This will also cause a black market in ammunition with agents of the state trying to sting people etc. It is arguably the most egregious law of this century. At least in California.
 
Ca. is the worst place to live. More under the table sales won't stop criminals.
 
So 34.00 plus sales tax for a box of 50 9MM . People would just start reloading them and sell them 150 for 100.00 cash more than doubling their investment ,no tax ,no background check so the law serves no purpose except money going to a third party , the state losing sales tax collection , the feds losing 11 percent tax collection from Pittman - Robertson . Sounds like they put a lot of thought in this and since the budgets are balanced they no longer need the revenue .
 
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