Unconfigured Ad Widget
Collapse
|
|
|
|
|
|
Peņa v. Cid (Handgun Roster) **CERT DENIED 6-15-2020**
Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
-
The requirement isn't just for the firing pin stamp. I believe as written the casing needs to be stamped as well. -
Besides, they know just like we do that every time they jump through a hoop the politicians will add another because the goal of The Roster is to eliminate affordable pistols for civilian sale in California. They'll demand that hair-brained battery-powered electronic ID scheme within 5 years watch and see. It is not nor never was about public safety. Per capita pistol deaths are no higher in states that do not require LCI, MD, and MS so there is no supporting evidence the scheme works to promote public safety. In fact, the per capita murder rate is 20% higher in CA than Texas and most murders occur with pistols.
It does't matter, the next governor after Brown will be fervently and zealously anti-gun. You ain't seen nothing yet.Leave a comment:
-
I think most gun buyers DGAF if there is microstamping or not. It's mostly the vocal minority (us) that really don't want microstamping, but that is mostly because we have thought about the potential worst case scenarios (aka we are all slightly paranoid)
And yes, I would think that the manufacturers WILL argue that MS is impossible to implement in the current form that the CA .gov prescribed.
Doing the firing pin thing, that is pretty easy and truly would only cost a couple bucks per gun, and would work well'ish until it wears out or is filed off.Leave a comment:
-
What if...gun manufacturers simply put magazine disconnects and loaded chamber indicators on their "latest and greatest" models (the plaintiffs in Pena helpfully submitted all the evidence and studies to justify these safety regulations when they filed their first MSJ) and just got on board with microstamping (notice that their evidence stops more than a little short of saying it's not possible to do it), then they could sell those models to their heart's content! Even if the number of approved handguns keeps on dwindling, the DOJ has a good argument that it's the gun manufacturer's intransigence not the law that's responsible for that.Leave a comment:
-
Microstamping, much like magazine disconnect and LCI, primarily limits availability.
Sure it wouldn't matter *much* if ANY gun could be purchased as-is, then have the local FFL install different firing pin. It would add cost, but at least wouldn't limit availability.
As it stands, most modern handguns do NOT have the magazine disconnect and only a few have natural LCI (which is often insufficient for CA.) None have microstamping, though. That's the REAL problem.Leave a comment:
-
I think most gun buyers DGAF if there is microstamping or not. It's mostly the vocal minority (us) that really don't want microstamping, but that is mostly because we have thought about the potential worst case scenarios (aka we are all slightly paranoid)
And yes, I would think that the manufacturers WILL argue that MS is impossible to implement in the current form that the CA .gov prescribed.
Doing the firing pin thing, that is pretty easy and truly would only cost a couple bucks per gun, and would work well'ish until it wears out or is filed off.
The "Second Location" is where the whole law falls apart. There is no second location in the chamber of a gun that would work. If you put it on the bolt or breech face, you will be imprinting onto the area that will already have head stamps on them, it will be harder material, and there will be less force on those areas to imprint with. If you try and put it on the case wall, you will be weakening the chamber wall by drilling out and press fitting a stamp into the chamber wall. This stamp will always have to be protruding, so you will have brass constantly scraping over the stamp on the way in and out. The stamping will likely not imprint, which is necessary for it to be legal, per the law, and the protruding stamp has a high likelyhood of causing feed and extraction malfunctions.
The second location will either not work, invalidating the legality of it. Or it will reduce the safety of the firearm, so a company can not sell it. So yeah, a company would spend some amount of money developing the stamps, and never recuperate a cent, because it will never be sold.
This is simply a pipe dream idea, created by people who are not engineers.Leave a comment:
-
I doubt that the manufacturers would only argue that some kind of microstamping is impossible under any and all circumstances. I assume they've done their market research and would argue that gun buyers don't want it, and the cost of doing the research and requisite manufacturing modifications couldn't be be recouped by sales to the few states that are likely to require it. Ruger and S&W are publicly traded companies after all, and have obligations to their shareholders.)
And yes, I would think that the manufacturers WILL argue that MS is impossible to implement in the current form that the CA .gov prescribed.
Doing the firing pin thing, that is pretty easy and truly would only cost a couple bucks per gun, and would work well'ish until it wears out or is filed off.
The "Second Location" is where the whole law falls apart. There is no second location in the chamber of a gun that would work. If you put it on the bolt or breech face, you will be imprinting onto the area that will already have head stamps on them, it will be harder material, and there will be less force on those areas to imprint with. If you try and put it on the case wall, you will be weakening the chamber wall by drilling out and press fitting a stamp into the chamber wall. This stamp will always have to be protruding, so you will have brass constantly scraping over the stamp on the way in and out. The stamping will likely not imprint, which is necessary for it to be legal, per the law, and the protruding stamp has a high likelyhood of causing feed and extraction malfunctions.
The second location will either not work, invalidating the legality of it. Or it will reduce the safety of the firearm, so a company can not sell it. So yeah, a company would spend some amount of money developing the stamps, and never recuperate a cent, because it will never be sold.
This is simply a pipe dream idea, created by people who are not engineers.Leave a comment:
-
For the rest of us it's a real question of whether schemes such as "roster" are something that should pass legal review. Or, more broadly, what the implications are of a paradigm shifting case such as Heller.
(Also, your most cynical remarks seem to lack the signature giggly smiley which appears to be reserved for more obvious digs.)
Leave a comment:
-
What if...gun manufacturers simply put magazine disconnects and loaded chamber indicators on their "latest and greatest" models (the plaintiffs in Pena helpfully submitted all the evidence and studies to justify these safety regulations when they filed their first MSJ) and just got on board with microstamping (notice that their evidence stops more than a little short of saying it's not possible to do it), then they could sell those models to their heart's content! Even if the number of approved handguns keeps on dwindling, the DOJ has a good argument that it's the gun manufacturer's intransigence not the law that's responsible for that.
Even if there were some radical diminution in the number of handguns on the roster, there would be a huge cause and effect problem; if manufacturers stop selling in california en masse it wouldn't be a matter of "can't comply with the roster law" but "don't want to comply." Whatever points might be scored on anomolaies/irrationalities in the law can be fixed by legislation. There will not be any knockout punch.
And I don't understand what you mean by a "huge cause and effect problem". Didn't the microstamping requirement originate 15 years or so ago and get activated in 2007, then shelved over the patent issue and then activated again? If microstamping was the hottest tech gadget to end all tech gadgets would manufacturers have waited all these years for CA to mandate it rather than cash in from the beginning? They could have licensed it from the patent holder or developed their own technology. Cause and effect are ordinarily constrained to time's arrow. The manufacturers didn't didn't balk until CA implemented the microstamping mandate, not the other way round.
Anyway, the naughty manufacturers aren't the plaintiffs in this case, their customers are. We're stuck in the middle. But K. C. Brown's First Theorem will probably prevail, and if not there will be a fix by legislation as you suggest.
__________________Leave a comment:
-
I find the micro stamping stipulation complete nonsense.
Imagine if you will a situation where someone decides to commit a crime using his OWN registered gun with the knowledge that it has a micro stamping feature. It would be right up there with someone using their own vehicle to rob a bank.
No one with half a brain is going to use their own micro stamping pistol to commit a crime, instead, they would steal someone else's or find a pistol without the feature.
I know I'm just stating the obvious, but it is more apparent that micro stamping is not really there to assist lazy LE, but there to further wipe out our already extremely limited options in the pistol market.
Also, I find it more of a safety concern as a consumer when I can not find a pistol that meets my exact needs to comfortably manipulate its trigger and safety mechanisms and am forced to get something that makes me feel like I'm holding a brick (most gen 3 glocks, hk's etc).The roster is in itself a safety concern by limiting its options for people of different sizes.Leave a comment:
-
In that case the judge ruled that it was difficult to find housing of a particular type. Using the "class" logic, a house is a house is a house. So, if that case goes through, then the same logic must be applied to this one. This means the roster fails.Leave a comment:
-
It can be viewed as logic or sophistry, but either way it's an argument that in a judicial setting can be argued either way.Leave a comment:
-
where the court dropped the ball, and completely screwed up is that the roster allows states to legislate and regulate away rights, having the effect of an outright ban, but not being a direct ban. imagine:
-an author license requiring all authors publishing books to first pay a $10,000 fee to submit a book to a publisher. and limiting authors to publishing one book per year.
-a requirement that all women undergo psychiatric counseling, a 10 day wait, visual ultrasound, and visitation to a hospital nursery prior to having an abortion. or limiting women to one abortion every five years.
those are a couple of examples, and I'm sure we can come up with plenty more. the biggest difference between cars and guns is that cars are specifically used in the public sphere, whereas guns are primarily a private sphere. hunting licenses apply to the public sphere of firearm usage. thus, licensing and regulating (i.e. cars) can pass muster if only because of how and where they are used. do we need a "self defense of home and family" license? no. it's implied in the 2A.
this is a very dangerous decision if for no other reason than it gives government unlimited powers to regulate each and all of our actions, private as well as public. no right is sacred or protected, as no right is free from regulation.
note: I only use abortion, which is so near and dear to the leftists, as an argument they would never accept.Leave a comment:
-
Not according to the study the plaintiffs submitted. Magazine disconnects would save many lives and prevent many catastraphoic injuries; many children have died in accidental shootings already!Last edited by FABIO GETS GOOSED!!!; 03-09-2015, 2:25 PM.Leave a comment:
-
Because many people would not buy guns with magazine disconnects.
LCI done right isn't a big deal (my 90yo luger has one), but magazine disconnects is a safety hazard, not feature.Leave a comment:
Calguns.net Statistics
Collapse
Topics: 1,854,809
Posts: 24,999,622
Members: 353,086
Active Members: 5,896
Welcome to our newest member, kylejimenez932.
What's Going On
Collapse
There are currently 33711 users online. 93 members and 33618 guests.
Most users ever online was 65,177 at 7:20 PM on 09-21-2024.
Leave a comment: