BREAKING: California Releases Assault Weapons Ban Language

In order to be legally registered, the firearm has to have been legally acquired on or before December 31, 2016.

Each gun owner would have to establish an account under the California Firearms Application Reporting System (CFARS). The following information must be provided:
Full name
Address
Telephone number
Date of birth
Sex
Height
Weight
Eye color
Hair color
Military identification number (if applicable)
CA driver’s license or identification card number
United States citizenship status
Place of birth
Country of citizenship
Alien registration number (if applicable)

The following information would have to be provided on each firearm that falls under their definition of an “assault weapon”:
Firearm type, make and model
Caliber
Firearm color
Barrel length
Serial number
All identification marks firearm
Country of origin/manufacturer
The date the firearm was acquired
The name and address of the individual from whom or business from which the firearm was acquired
Clear digital photos of firearms listed on the application.
One photo shall depict the bullet-button style magazine release installed on the firearm.
One photo shall depict the firearm from the end of the barrel to the end of the stock if it is a long gun or the point furthest from the end of the barrel if it is a pistol.
The other two photos shall show the left side of the receiver/frame and right side of the receiver/frame.

If you’re like most families, you probably share your firearms amongst yourselves. If that’s the case, each family member who will be shooting the firearm must be registered as well. One person who have to be identified as the “primary registrant,” while others must register as “joint registrants.” To be a “joint registrant” you must live at the same address as the primary registrant. Everyone who is registered must be 19 by December 31, 2017.

Only direct family members (parent to child, child to parent, spouses) are allowed to be joint registrants.

Joint registrants have to provide proof of address showing they live with the primary registrant.

You’ve gone through the above steps but wait. You’re not done yet! The CA DoJ will provide each of your firearms with a specific serial number. You must then take your firearm and your new serial number and have an FFL engrave it on your firearm.
Once the serial number is engraved on your firearm, you have to provide pictures to the DoJ showing the serial number was completed.

Pay a $15 fee per firearm to register your gun. There are no limits to the number of firearms that can be registered in a single transaction but the DoJ can deny your application for any reason.

Or, leave the State!
 
This is a joke right? They've gone far off the deep end.
In order to be legally registered, the firearm has to have been legally acquired on or before December 31, 2016.

Each gun owner would have to establish an account under the California Firearms Application Reporting System (CFARS). The following information must be provided:
Full name
Address
Telephone number
Date of birth
Sex
Height
Weight
Eye color
Hair color
Military identification number (if applicable)
CA driver’s license or identification card number
United States citizenship status
Place of birth
Country of citizenship
Alien registration number (if applicable)

The following information would have to be provided on each firearm that falls under their definition of an “assault weapon”:
Firearm type, make and model
Caliber
Firearm color
Barrel length
Serial number
All identification marks firearm
Country of origin/manufacturer
The date the firearm was acquired
The name and address of the individual from whom or business from which the firearm was acquired
Clear digital photos of firearms listed on the application.
One photo shall depict the bullet-button style magazine release installed on the firearm.
One photo shall depict the firearm from the end of the barrel to the end of the stock if it is a long gun or the point furthest from the end of the barrel if it is a pistol.
The other two photos shall show the left side of the receiver/frame and right side of the receiver/frame.

If you’re like most families, you probably share your firearms amongst yourselves. If that’s the case, each family member who will be shooting the firearm must be registered as well. One person who have to be identified as the “primary registrant,” while others must register as “joint registrants.” To be a “joint registrant” you must live at the same address as the primary registrant. Everyone who is registered must be 19 by December 31, 2017.

Only direct family members (parent to child, child to parent, spouses) are allowed to be joint registrants.

Joint registrants have to provide proof of address showing they live with the primary registrant.

You’ve gone through the above steps but wait. You’re not done yet! The CA DoJ will provide each of your firearms with a specific serial number. You must then take your firearm and your new serial number and have an FFL engrave it on your firearm.
Once the serial number is engraved on your firearm, you have to provide pictures to the DoJ showing the serial number was completed.


Pay a $15 fee per firearm to register your gun. There are no limits to the number of firearms that can be registered in a single transaction but the DoJ can deny your application for any reason.
 
Kalifornia: Leading the way in restricting civil liberties since 1850.

Eff them, the horse they rode in on, and their mother who birthed them. Interesting angle to this though: You now need a permanent residence to own a firearm in CA?

So much bullshit in this.
 
It's obvious to me that the main method the California State government has been using since probably the mid-1980's to destroy legal gun ownership has been to pass as many ridiculous new laws as quickly as possible, to prevent the courts from keeping up with them when lawsuits are brought to overturn them.

A constitutional crisis is looming in the not-too-distant future.
 
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