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2022 08 01 Boland V Bonta - Handgun Roster : on hold for Duncan 3-2024

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  • #16
    SkyHawk
    I need a LIFE!!
    • Sep 2012
    • 23346

    Originally posted by taperxz
    I'm saying the state will use "free market" as ability to still obtain the firearm. I'm not saying its correct. I'm still pointing out that a plaintiff in the retail business would need to be added. The retailer is the entity that is enforcing the roster to the purchaser.
    The law prohibits importation for transfer of even used guns from private parties, and that affects private citizens. If I can't buy a gun on gunbroker and import it for transfer, then I am not allowed to buy in a "free market".

    One look at the prices and dearth of off roster guns in Ca will tell anyone all they need to know about the farce of a "free market" argument if DOJ tries to make it. That dog won't hunt.
    Last edited by SkyHawk; 08-02-2022, 12:37 PM.
    Click here for my iTrader Feedback thread: https://www.calguns.net/forum/market...r-feedback-100

    Comment

    • #17
      taperxz
      I need a LIFE!!
      • Feb 2010
      • 19392

      Originally posted by SkyHawk
      The law prohibits importation for transfer of even used guns from private parties, and that affects private citizens. If I can't buy a gun on gunbroker and import it for transfer, then I am not allowed to buy in a "free market".

      One look at the prices and dearth of off roster guns in Ca will tell anyone all they need to know about the farce of a "free market" argument if DOJ tries to make it. That dog won't hunt.
      You're missing the point. By not having a retailer they make that argument harder to deal with. A CFD holder can bring in these guns. A person can also purchase the firearm out of state. Its the dealer who can't transfer it to them. If you're going to use the commerce clause, it would be good to have all entities involved to smother the issue. After all, DOJ and the state are the ones who regulate CFD/FFL holders in this state. Its where the enforcement occurs.

      Comment

      • #18
        Oxnard_Montalvo
        Senior Member
        • Aug 2014
        • 1061

        Originally posted by taperxz
        I'm saying the state will use "free market" as ability to still obtain the firearm. I'm not saying its correct. I'm still pointing out that a plaintiff in the retail business would need to be added. The retailer is the entity that is enforcing the roster to the purchaser.
        But that 'free market' is in itself problematic in that to get a 'free market' [aka 49 ish state handgun] into california one has to purchase one from an 'exempt' [typically a leo of some type] owner which raises questions about that whole process.

        Since several/many leo's have run into issues regarding this it might be an issue that should be brought up in conjunction with this lawsuit don't ya think, that the 'free market' in california isn't as free as the pro roster people would like everyone [especially the court] to think?

        Comment

        • #19
          SkyHawk
          I need a LIFE!!
          • Sep 2012
          • 23346

          The plaintiffs should include women and elderly IMO, people who would benefit from newer semiauto handguns that are easier to hold and easier to rack. Although once you start adding qualifiers you might open the door to narrow exemptions rather than the 2A-for-everyone that we want.

          The dealer could be party or not IMO, I don't think it changes much. The people are the folks who suffer the most damages from this infringement.
          Last edited by SkyHawk; 08-03-2022, 9:22 AM.
          Click here for my iTrader Feedback thread: https://www.calguns.net/forum/market...r-feedback-100

          Comment

          • #20
            cz74
            Senior Member
            • May 2020
            • 911

            Originally posted by SkyHawk
            The plaintiffs should include women and elderly IMO, people who would benefit from newer semiauto handguns that are easier to hold and easier to rack.

            The dealer could be party or not IMO, I don't think it changes much. The people are the folks who suffer the most damages from this infringement.
            Exactly! Saw a family of three at Sportsman recently, the wife could not rack any of the semi auto pistols especially the Shields, she gave up and they left. There was bunch of colorful snub nose revolvers on display though.

            Comment

            • #21
              command_liner
              Senior Member
              • May 2009
              • 1171

              The color thing is a gift that just keeps giving. AFAIK, it was my very early argument with the CAL DOJ about the SA XD 45 Bitone that got this all started. For review, the state asserted it was ok for SA to sell the XD with different frame colors (different polymers), and the frame is the serialized part, so these are different models, but it is not OK to sell the XD 45 with different color slides. It was OK for me to buy a separate slide from SA, and assemble a bitone gun in CA: that would be "not unsafe". But if I wanted to buy one assembled from the factory it would not be "not unsafe" -- or whatever incoherent noises they were making. Except *perhaps* if I pulled my police ID out of my pocket, it might then be "not unsafe", except I was a volunteer, so it might also have have remained "not not unsafe".

              The law is also very clear on this point, using "shall" to instruct the DOJ to consider pistols with the same frames the same per "not unsafe" regulations. The XD 45 Black model and the XD 45 Bitone use the same black frame. Even today the DOJ continues to ignore the plain meaning of the law -- while making incoherent noises.

              FGG liked to make light of the absurdity of this argument, but in a way that was friendly to the corrupt deep state that is the Cal DOJ. The whole argument is absurd, and we all know it. The position of the state is indefensible. This will change.


              The Dormant Commerce Clause bit is partly a feint and partly an introduction to the real discussion. This is a reflection/reflex/challenge to the 2022 gun control act passed by the congress, which specifically mentions interstate commerce. The real, eventual discussion is the Superseding Second argument, which will be coming in the next round of litigation. The crux of the argument is this: the 2nd was passed after the Commerce Clause, so to the extent that there is any conflict, the 2nd always wins because the 2nd is superseding law. Flipped around, the Commerce Clause can never be used to impinge, infringe or control rights protected by the 2nd.

              Since much of the federal gun control scheme is based on Commerce Clause reasoning, this is the real battle.
              What about the 19th? Can the Commerce Clause be used to make it illegal for voting women to buy shoes from another state?

              Comment

              • #22
                BAJ475
                Calguns Addict
                • Jul 2014
                • 5011

                Originally posted by cz74
                Exactly! Saw a family of three at Sportsman recently, the wife could not rack any of the semi auto pistols especially the Shields, she gave up and they left. There was bunch of colorful snub nose revolvers on display though.

                Comment

                • #23
                  DrewN
                  Senior Member
                  • Sep 2012
                  • 1885

                  My favorite part of the roster is when Judge i-forget-his-name said with a straight face "Just because it's impossible to comply with the law (because the technology doesn't exist) doesn't mean it can't be enforced".

                  Comment

                  • #24
                    BAJ475
                    Calguns Addict
                    • Jul 2014
                    • 5011

                    Originally posted by DrewN
                    My favorite part of the roster is when Judge i-forget-his-name said with a straight face "Just because it's impossible to comply with the law (because the technology doesn't exist) doesn't mean it can't be enforced".
                    Justice Goodwin Liu in National Shooting Sports Foundation, Inc. v. California (2018) 5 Cal.5th 428.

                    Comment

                    • #25
                      Oxnard_Montalvo
                      Senior Member
                      • Aug 2014
                      • 1061

                      Originally posted by DrewN
                      My favorite part of the roster is when Judge i-forget-his-name said with a straight face "Just because it's impossible to comply with the law (because the technology doesn't exist) doesn't mean it can't be enforced".
                      Sorry to be the Debbie Downer but I remain skeptical that the roster will go away in any meaningful time frame and I'll tell you why

                      1) the anti firearm activists in california government have put too much time and effort to let it go ESPECIALLY when their plan is so close to it's end goal so they are going to act just as rabid about the roster as they are about the Dobbs case.

                      2) they know that they can keep dragging this lawsuit out in court for a LONG time, perhaps decades which by then the judicial landscape will likely be VERY different [Justice Thomas being replaced at a bare minimum] which could work in their favor

                      3) Suppose the suit proceeds for years making progress every step of the way [as it should, especially given the Bruen test] and, just before the case gets sent up to the supremes it gets sent back to the beginning or dismissed outright for the most obscure reasons [ala california's prop 6 where a sole judge declared that the will of the voters {who elected Obama btw} is unconstitutional and subsequently retired before he got impeached]

                      4) say it does get overturned, whats to say that the activists in and out of california government who put so much work into the roster just go with 'we're just NOT going to drop the roster, what are you going to do about it?' It's not like there isn't precedent for this either as there are MANY articles about how some [mostly california, ny, illinois] states continue their unconstitutional practices even after they lose in court

                      5) and say it DOES go away, as we have seen from the aftermath of the Bruen decision there can and will be 'retribution' and given how 'near and dear' the roster is to them you can bet this retribution will be something big for example by following canada and banning ALL handguns and dragging it out in court for decades...

                      All I'm saying is lets stay in the real world, it's a great start but there's a LOT that has to happen for us [the average firearm owner/collector] before we spend several years of 30 day waits before we catch up to where we might have been had the roster not impeded us...
                      Last edited by Oxnard_Montalvo; 08-07-2022, 5:55 AM.

                      Comment

                      • #26
                        DrewN
                        Senior Member
                        • Sep 2012
                        • 1885

                        Oh, I 100% believe I'll be dead and in the ground long before the roster goes away. But, at this point just getting rid of the fictional microstamp would be something. And not only is it fictional, no one can provide any numbers on how ****ing useful it would be in the first place. We like to call the gun grabbers stupid, but the microstamp requirement was stupid like a fox, even if they got lucky in court.

                        Comment

                        • #27
                          Oxnard_Montalvo
                          Senior Member
                          • Aug 2014
                          • 1061

                          Originally posted by DrewN
                          Oh, I 100% believe I'll be dead and in the ground long before the roster goes away. But, at this point just getting rid of the fictional microstamp would be something. And not only is it fictional, no one can provide any numbers on how ****ing useful it would be in the first place. We like to call the gun grabbers stupid, but the microstamp requirement was stupid like a fox, even if they got lucky in court.
                          As told so often before microstamping wouldn't be useful in any way. Criminals would quickly go to shooting ranges and grab dozens of casings to drop at crime scenes and cops would eventually figure this out and stop bothering with checking them. But even now that's becoming irrelevant since only the worst of the worst crimes get any significant interest from prosecutors so even if they did catch someone using the technology it's unlikely they'd face any serious time

                          The workaround for microstamping is similar to what one coke dealer hypothesized regarding the drug sniffing dogs, one would only have to use one of those garden sprayers with a mix of coke and water and spray virtually every person and vehicle going from mexico to the u.s. and soon those dogs would be gone.

                          Comment

                          • #28
                            DrewN
                            Senior Member
                            • Sep 2012
                            • 1885

                            Originally posted by Oxnard_Montalvo
                            As told so often before microstamping wouldn't be useful in any way. Criminals would quickly go to shooting ranges and grab dozens of casings to drop at crime scenes and cops would eventually figure this out and stop bothering with checking them. But even now that's becoming irrelevant since only the worst of the worst crimes get any significant interest from prosecutors so even if they did catch someone using the technology it's unlikely they'd face any serious time

                            The workaround for microstamping is similar to what one coke dealer hypothesized regarding the drug sniffing dogs, one would only have to use one of those garden sprayers with a mix of coke and water and spray virtually every person and vehicle going from mexico to the u.s. and soon those dogs would be gone.
                            I wrote a (bad. SO bad.) thriller once, where my bad guy would contaminate his crime scenes by spraying animal blood and reversing a shop vac full of barbershop trimmings and fibers, plant material etc. Just basically overloading forensics.

                            Comment

                            • #29
                              redhead
                              Senior Member
                              • Oct 2005
                              • 564

                              Originally posted by Oxnard_Montalvo
                              Sorry to be the Debbie Downer but I remain skeptical that the roster will go away in any meaningful time frame and I'll tell you why

                              1) the anti firearm activists in california government have put too much time and effort to let it go ESPECIALLY when their plan is so close to it's end goal.

                              2) they know that they can keep dragging this lawsuit out in court for a LONG time, perhaps decades which by then the judicial landscape may be VERY different [Justice Thomas being replaced at a bare minimum] which would work in their favor

                              3) Suppose the suit proceeds for years making progress every step of the way [as it should, especially given the Bruen test] and, just before the case gets sent up to the supremes it gets sent back to the beginning or dismissed outright for the most obscure reasons ala california's prop 6 [where the sole judge declared it unconstitutional and subsequently retired before he got impeached]

                              4) say it gets overturned at some level, whats to say that those who put so much into the roster just go with 'we're just NOT going to drop the roster, what are you going to do about it?' It's not like there isnt residence for this either as there are MANY articles about how some states continue their unconstitutional practices even after the lose in court

                              5) and say it DOES go away, as we can see from the aftermath of the Bruen decision there can and will be 'retribution' and given how 'near and dear' the roster is to them you can bet this retribution will be something big...

                              All I'm saying is lets stay in the real world, it's a great start but there's a LOT that has to happen for us [the average firearm owner/collector] before we spend years of 30 day waits before we catch up to where we might have been had the roster not impeded us...

                              Comment

                              • #30
                                19K
                                Veteran Member
                                • Aug 2013
                                • 3598

                                Originally posted by SkyHawk
                                The plaintiffs should include women and elderly IMO, people who would benefit from newer semiauto handguns that are easier to hold and easier to rack. Although once you start adding qualifiers you might open the door to narrow exemptions rather than the 2A-for-everyone that we want.
                                This is California, I now identify as an elderly disabled womanbirthing person. I am exempt from the roster.

                                Comment

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