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The Virginia bill to ban "assault weapons", HB 961, is highly controversial. It is one of the items credited with
bringing over 22,000 Second Amendment supporters to the Virginia Capitol
to lobby their legislators. 91 of 95 counties in Virginia have passed
Second Amendment sanctuary resolutions, saying they will not comply with
such legislation.
The Virginia legislature, with a new Democrat party majority in the House of Representatives (55-45) and the Senate (21-19) and a Democrat Governor, has been energized to pass bills long considered to be outside acceptable limits.
The Democrats passed their revised "assault weapons" ban on 11 February, 2020, by a narrow majority, (51-48) in the House. Several Democrats joined all Republicans in voting against the bill.
Prohibiting sale, transport, etc., of assault firearms, certain firearm magazines, silencers, and trigger activators; penalties. Expands the definition of "assault firearm" and prohibits any person from importing, selling, transferring, manufacturing, purchasing, or transporting an assault firearm. A violation is a Class 6 felony. The bill prohibits a dealer from selling, renting, trading, or transferring from his inventory an assault firearm to any person. The bill makes it a Class 6 felony to import, sell, transfer, manufacture, purchase, possess, or transport silencers, and trigger activators, all defined in the bill. The bill makes it a Class 6 felony to import, sell, transfer, manufacture, purchase, or transport a large-capacity firearm magazine, as defined in the bill, and a Class 1 misdemeanor to possess such large-capacity firearm magazine. Any person who legally owns a large-capacity firearm magazine, silencer, or trigger activator on July 1, 2020, may retain possession until January 1, 2021. During that time, such person shall (i) render the large-capacity firearm magazine, silencer, or trigger activator inoperable; (ii) remove the large-capacity firearm magazine, silencer, or trigger activator from the Commonwealth; (iii) transfer the large-capacity firearm magazine, silencer, or trigger activator to a person outside the Commonwealth who is not prohibited from possessing it; or (iv) surrender the large-capacity firearm magazine, silencer, or trigger activator to a state or local law-enforcement agency.
Last minute wrangling likely grandfathered in silencers which are in legal possession when (and if) the bill becomes law. The summary says possession of silencers is banned. That was changed. Here are the relevant paragraphs from the engrossed bill as it passed the House:
§ 18.2-308.11. Import, sale, transfer, etc., of silencers; penalty.Notice possession is not banned, but any further acquisition is.
A. For purposes of this section, "silencer" means any device for silencing, muffling, or diminishing the report of a firearm, including any part or combination of parts designed or intended for use in assembling or fabricating such a device.
B. It is unlawful for any person to import, sell, transfer, manufacture, or purchase a silencer, provided that a person may transfer a silencer in accordance with the provisions of the National Firearms Act (26 U.S.C. § 5801 et seq.). A violation of this section is punishable as a Class 6 felony.
The bill, if passed unchanged, has numerous legal difficulties. It appears to be unconstitutional on its face, given the Supreme Court decisions in Heller, McDonald, and Caetano.
The Supreme Court has been reluctant to take any new Second Amendment cases for a decade. Some appellate courts have ruled the Second Amendment does not protect semi-automatic rifles or magazines over 10 rounds. Others have ruled the Second Amendment has no effect outside the home.
The Supreme Court has two new justices in Gorsuch and Kavanagh. It is currently working on a case involving the Second Amendment. It should publish a decision by the end of June. No one knows how the Supreme Court will rule on the issue.
HB 961 may be defeated in the Virginia Senate, which holds a slim majority of Democrats 21-19. Most politicians want to keep their seats. This bill is incredibly toxic in Virginia.
©2020 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.
Gun Watch
This is from December and it will surely go higher until these laws take effect.
ReplyDeleteVA started pushing crazy gun laws, so residents just bought 74,000 more firearms - in one month
RICHMOND, VA- It’s not surprising to see that the residents within Virginia purchased nearly 74,000 firearms in December of 2019.
Gun control bills and measures have been a hot topic in the state of Virginia, and with good reason.
Democrats within Richmond have been adamant in bringing forth legislation that can be contorted to strip citizens of their second amendment rights. As a result, citizens of the state thought it a good idea to purchase their weapons while they still could.
According to the Associated Press, December of 2019 saw an increase of 47% over the number of firearm sales when compared to December of 2018.
https://www.lawenforcementtoday.com/va-started-pushing-crazy-gun-laws-so-residents-just-bought-74000-more/
Europeans think we're crazy for outlawing silencers, or as they call them 'mufflers'. In Europe it's considered good manners to use a muffler. Here in the USA too many people who don't know anything about guns want to make laws concerning them, they believe TV and movies are real. FYI a silencer DOES NOT make a gun silent or even reduce it to the "whoosh" sound of James Bond movies, they just reduce the BANG!!! to a bang!
ReplyDeleteThe United States Constitution forbids government to confiscate anything without paying fair market value.
ReplyDeleteScience ABC You have never seen a silencer that works well. Mufflers reduce the bang, silencers can almost eliminate the bang to a fine/low db whistle. Maybe I should show you how that is accomplished.
ReplyDelete