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Peņa v. Cid (Handgun Roster) **CERT DENIED 6-15-2020**
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This topic is closed.
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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.sigpicNRA Benefactor MemberComment
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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.Oppressors can tyrannize only when they achieve a standing army, an enslaved press, and a disarmed populace. -- James Madison
The Constitution shall never be construed to authorize Congress to prevent the people of the United States, who are peaceable citizens, from keeping their own arms. -- Samuel Adams, Debates and Proceedings in the Convention of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 86-87 (Pearce and Hale, eds., Boston, 1850)Comment
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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.Oppressors can tyrannize only when they achieve a standing army, an enslaved press, and a disarmed populace. -- James Madison
The Constitution shall never be construed to authorize Congress to prevent the people of the United States, who are peaceable citizens, from keeping their own arms. -- Samuel Adams, Debates and Proceedings in the Convention of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 86-87 (Pearce and Hale, eds., Boston, 1850)Comment
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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.Benefactor Life Member NRA, Life Member CRPA, CGN Contributor, US Army Veteran, Black Ribbon in Memoriam for the deceased 2nd Amendment
sigpicComment
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The requirement isn't just for the firing pin stamp. I believe as written the casing needs to be stamped as well.Comment
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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.
The firing pin would be an insignificant cost in the long run. The extra manufacturing necessary to do the case stamp, that's where the big bucks (comparatively) would have to be spent. And I still don't think it would work, or be safe, following the letter of the law.
It does, that's why no manufacturer can come up with a way to do it. No matter how you implement it, you are fundamentally weakening the most important piece of a gun. It would be like giving someone an air compressor, but first drilling a hole in it and covering it with some epoxy, then calling it good. Sure, it might hold, but probably not forever. People have guns blow up in their hand often enough.Originally posted by kcbrownI'm most famous for my positive mental attitude.Comment
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How is MS even a safety feature?!
What I still can't fathom is why micro-stamping is even a requirement. The stated purpose of the roster is to ensure that a pistol is "safe" for sale in CA. Can someone explain to me how the presence, or lack of, micro-stamping affects the "safety" of the pistol?
I would understand if the Legislature were to pass a separate law that required micro-stamping on all guns sold in CA as an aid to LE; but including it as a requirement on the roster (implying it is a safety feature) makes zero sense.
-RuskieThe Second Amendment is a doomsday provision, one designed for those exceptionally rare circumstances where all other rights have failed - where the government refuses to stand for reelection and silences those who protest; where courts have lost the courage to oppose, or can find no one to enforce their decrees. However improbable these contingencies may seem today, facing them unprepared is a mistake a free people get to make only once.
-Hon. Alex Kozinski (Silvera v Lockyer, 2003)Comment
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What I still can't fathom is why micro-stamping is even a requirement. The stated purpose of the roster is to ensure that a pistol is "safe" for sale in CA. Can someone explain to me how the presence, or lack of, micro-stamping affects the "safety" of the pistol?
I would understand if the Legislature were to pass a separate law that required micro-stamping on all guns sold in CA as an aid to LE; but including it as a requirement on the roster (implying it is a safety feature) makes zero sense.
-RuskieComment
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Yup.
Drop safety requirement for guns intended to be carried in public (open carry or CCW) would be a safety law that would have been reasonable, with the exception that you can buy any gun for hunting or range shooting.
The roster as is, it's just BS.Originally posted by kcbrownI'm most famous for my positive mental attitude.Comment
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If the micro stamping goes in to effect, do you think we will still be grandfathered to still own our older NONROOSTER guns?Comment
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