California shooting follows election of
gun control advocate as governor
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[November 10, 2018]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - This week's
fatal shooting of 12 people in a California bar by a Marine combat
veteran came the day after the election of a new Democratic governor who
has pushed for tighter gun control in the state, which already has some
of the strictest firearms laws in the country.
Ian David Long, 28, used a .45 caliber Glock handgun equipped with a
high-capacity magazine to mow down patrons late on Wednesday in the bar
and dance hall filled with college students, authorities said.
The shooting raised questions about the efficacy of existing gun safety
laws as Gavin Newsom, a two-term lieutenant governor closely aligned
with gun control advocates, prepares to take the helm in the most
populous U.S. state following his election victory on Tuesday.
"He’s been such a champion on this issue so we expect to see more
innovation from the legislators and approved by Gavin Newsom," said
Laura Cutilletta, legal director of the Giffords Law Center to Prevent
Gun Violence.
By "champion" she was referring to the former San Francisco mayor's avid
support of gun safety regulations,
Two years ago, Newsom co-authored a gun control ballot initiative that
sought to extend the state's ban on the sale and transfer of
high-capacity magazines to include those owned before the original
legislation, passed in 1999, went into effect. Those magazines were
"grandfathered" into the law.
Newsom's measure was challenged in a lawsuit supported by the National
Rifle Association, and the courts put on hold the provision relating to
high-capacity magazines.
Newsom on Thursday vowed to push for even stricter laws. Though he
provided no specifics, he signaled a shift from outgoing Governor Jerry
Brown, also a Democrat, who vetoed numerous gun control measures,
including a bill to tighten the state's law against assault weapons.
"The response is not just prayers," the governor-elect said at a news
conference on Thursday, referring to the shooting at the Borderline Bar
and Grill in Thousand Oaks, 40 miles (64 km) northwest of Los Angeles.
"The response cannot just be excuses. The response sure as hell cannot
be more guns."
High-capacity magazines allow shooters to unleash prolonged torrents of
bullets and reduce the need to re-load. Gun rights advocates have argued
that such magazines help people defend their homes from intruders. But
gun safety supporters say banning them would force perpetrators of mass
shootings to pause and reload, creating an opening for law enforcement
to respond.
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California Democratic gubernatorial candidate Gavin Newsom speaks
after being elected governor of the state during an election night
party in Los Angeles, California, U.S. November 6, 2018.
REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
It was not immediately clear how or when Long obtained his gun and
magazine. He was a small child when California banned the sale of
high-capacity magazines and would not have been able to legally own
a gun or ammunition, said Chuck Michel, a lawyer representing gun
owners challenging California's ban.
Long, he said, could have easily gone to another state to purchase a
high-capacity magazine for his Glock. He also could have stolen one.
Numerous other states, including Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii,
Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Vermont, and
Washington, D.C., ban the sale of high-capacity magazines, according
to the Giffords website.
California requires background checks for gun purchasers, keeps
records of transactions, and in January is set to begin background
checks for purchasers of ammunition.
Earlier this year, officers went to Long’s home to answer a
disturbance call and found him agitated, Ventura County Sheriff
Geoff Dean said. Mental health specialists talked with Long and
determined that no further action was necessary.
Still, Dean told reporters on Thursday that Long, who apparently
killed himself in the bar, may have suffered from PTSD.
While Newsom on Thursday did not say what additional gun control
measures he wanted to pursue, many gun rights advocates are bracing
for an onslaught of new regulations under the incoming governor.
"Gavin Newsom has never met a gun ban he didn't like," Michel said.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento, California; additional
reporting by Barbara Goldberg in New York; editing by Frank McGurty
and Tom Brown)
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