More bans in Cali
California expanding
                  ban on ‘assault weapons’ 
                  Register, sell, disable 
                  or remove guns from
                  state by Dec.31 
                  By Jon E. Dougherty
                  ? 2000 WorldNetDaily.com 
                  Unless the state’s Supreme Court says otherwise,
                  California is set to increase the number of firearms banned
                  as “assault weapons” at the end of the month. 
                                             Effective July 29,
                                             barring any official
                                             action from the courts,
                                             “copycat/clone ‘series’
                                             AK and AR-15 assault
                                             weapons cannot be
                                             offered for sale, sold,
                                             manufactured or
                                             imported into
                                             California,” said a state
                                             Department of Justice
                  information bulletin obtained by WorldNetDaily.
                  “Additionally, such assault weapons possessed prior to July
                  29, 2000, must be registered on or before December 31,
                  2000.” 
                  The July 17 bulletin said state Justice officials were
                  referring to a state Supreme Court case, Kasler v.
                  Lockyer, “regarding the Roberti-Roos Assault Weapons
                  Control Act,” or AWCA, which was passed in 1989. The
                  state’s high court on June 29 “issued the long awaited
                  decision” reversing an earlier appeals court ruling which
                  had determined that parts of the 1989 law were
                  unconstitutional. 
                  “In Kasler, the California Supreme Court” reversed the
                  lower court’s ruling, said the bulletin, and “upheld the
                  constitutionality of the AWCA in its entirety.” 
                  The law was passed after a Jan. 17, 1989, schoolyard
                  shooting in Stockton, Ca., during which a 26-year-old
                  drifter named Patrick Purdy opened fire on 450 students
                  with a Chinese-made semi-automatic AK-47 rifle loaded
                  with 75 rounds. He killed five children and wounded 30
                  others, plus a teacher. 
                  In the emotionally charged aftermath of the tragedy, and
                  the resulting frenzy to “do something” legislatively to
                  prevent a repeat of the incident, the label “assault weapon”
                  — a military term defined as a firearm capable of firing in
                  both semi- automatic and fully-automatic mode — was
                  co-opted by those favoring gun control. They succeeded,
                  with the help of the news media, in applying, albeit
                  inaccurately, the intimidating term “assault weapon” to
                  semi-automatic firearms, especially those with
                  large-capacity magazines, pistol grips and other such
                  options. California’s ban on so-called “assault weapons” set
                  the stage for the national legislation that followed. 
                  According to California state law, the attorney general
                  was given the authority under the AWCA to “add-on
                  additional weapons which are similar to those” already
                  listed as, and defined in, state statutes as “assault
                  weapons.” California Penal Codes state that “all AK series
                  and AR-15 series weapons are controlled assault weapons
                  even if they are ‘older models that are only variations, with
                  minor differences, regardless of manufacturer,’” the
                  bulletin said. 
                  During the Kasler case, which began in 1992, “Attorney
                  General Dan Lungren, and later Attorney General Bill
                  Lockyer, did not use the add-on provision to regulate other
                  weapons, nor did the Department of Justice identify the
                  ‘series’ weapons listed in the” state Penal Codes.
                  Consequently, the bulletin said, “series weapons continued
                  to be manufactured [and] imported” into the state, and
                  were then “sold, purchased or possessed within California
                  without regard to” the state statutes. 
                  Last year, the Department of Justice bulletin said, the state
                  legislature “expanded the assault weapons definition” by
                  adding additional penal codes, “which identify assault
                  weapons by characteristics.” The state’s high court
                  decision, the department said, “has reaffirmed the attorney
                  general’s authority to identify assault weapons with both
                  the add-on provisions” of law “and identify the ‘series’ AK
                  and AR-15 assault weapons” currently listed in state penal
                  codes. 
                  “Peace officers owning personal assault weapons are not
                  exempt from these requirements,” the statement said. 
                  According to the statement, individuals who currently own
                  lawful AK and AR-15 series weapons must do one of the
                  following: 
                       Lawfully possess the “series” “assault weapon” on
                       or before July 28, 2000, and register it on or before
                       Dec. 31, 2000; or 
                       Lawfully possess the “series” “assault weapon” on
                       or before July 28, 2000, and either sell or transfer
                       the firearm via the “Dealer Record of Sale process”
                       on or before the same date; or 
                       Render the weapon permanently inoperable, sell the
                       weapon to a licensed dealer or remove the weapon
                       from California. 
                  The Department of Justice published a list of affected
                  weapons that must be registered by the Dec. 31 deadline.
                  Included are firearms made by Kalishnikov USA,
                  American Arms, Colt’s, Armalite and Bushmaster, among
                  others. 
                  The Justice statement was issued to all state law
                  enforcement agencies, firearms dealers and
                  manufacturers, state Superior Court judges and state
                  district attorneys. 
                  In a meeting with California NRA members July 13,
                  Department of Justice Firearms Division representatives
                  explained the impact and implications of the new
                  provisions to gun owners. 
                  “A list of what is or is not an Assault Weapon under [the
                  California Penal Code] will not be compiled by the
                  Firearms Division,” Randy Rossi, Director of the California
                  Department of Justice Firearms Division, told the Ventura
                  County East NRA Members’ Council. 
                  “Because we can’t see what characteristics you may have
                  on your weapon, and because the law allows you to take
                  on and take off those characteristics, we won’t be able to
                  provide you with a listing of those weapons,” he said, as
                  quoted by the California NRA Organization. “We can’t tell
                  if you put on a conspicuously-protruding pistol-grip or
                  whether it’s a banana. We just can’t tell that from over the
                  telephone.” 
                  Rossi emphasized that the Firearms Division is available to
                  answer questions regarding implementation of the various
                  laws by the Firearms Division, CalNRA.org said.
                  However, “since they do not make the laws they cannot
                  answer questions regarding the formulation of firearms
                  law, which is the domain of the California Legislature,” the
                  report said. 
                  “The California Department of Justice Firearms Division is
                  following the same constitutional interpretation as the
                  Federal government regarding the Second Amendment,”
                  wrote CalNRA.org columnist Jay J. Hector. “A United
                  States Attorney at the Emerson appellate court hearing in
                  Louisiana stated the official position of the United States
                  Government is that the Second Amendment of the United
                  States Constitution only applies to militias, and not to the
                  people of the United States as individuals.” 
                  CalNRA.org said Deputy Attorney General Tim Rieger
                  made similar distinctions during the meeting. 
                  “Since 1937, the Second Amendment, as you all know, in
                  the United States Supreme Court case Miller, it’s been
                  interpreted to say, let’s be fair, that the right to keep and
                  bear arms, is not personal, but instead lies with the militias
                  of the states,” Rieger reportedly said. “The bottom line is,
                  Miller says that, and all cases except Emerson in the
                  Texas District Court, have basically followed suit.” 

 
        


