Free: Contests & Raffles.
None of this is inforceable!!! Every law enforcement officer I know has said this is just silly. It is why it had wide spread dissaproval from all Law Enforcement in Washington. At the end of the day it will make new purchases a pain in the arse because....which is ultimately what they wanted. Business as usual......It will get thrown out of court the first time they try to hold a homeowner accountable for a stolen gun. It will cost a lot of money....(again an intended consequence of the libs)....but it will not go anywhere. Simple defense.....a car gets stolen and kills someone in a high speed chase that insues......is the car owner responsible. What about my machette, hammer, bat, etc get stolen.....Am I responsible. No differnece.
Quote from: konradcountry on November 07, 2018, 09:02:30 AMQuote from: Fl0und3rz on November 07, 2018, 08:59:17 AMQuote from: bobcat on November 07, 2018, 08:56:20 AMWhat if you have a gun stolen from your house and you don't even know it's gone? I could see that happening.By the way, Whitman county voted for 1639, so it's not just the Westside and Spokane.80% receivers.Shhhhhhhhh. The idiots that wrote this bill didn't consider those.80% receivers are semi-automatic assault rifles under this bill I believe. I didn't see anything requiring the firearm to be complete - similar to the federal laws.
Quote from: Fl0und3rz on November 07, 2018, 08:59:17 AMQuote from: bobcat on November 07, 2018, 08:56:20 AMWhat if you have a gun stolen from your house and you don't even know it's gone? I could see that happening.By the way, Whitman county voted for 1639, so it's not just the Westside and Spokane.80% receivers.Shhhhhhhhh. The idiots that wrote this bill didn't consider those.
Quote from: bobcat on November 07, 2018, 08:56:20 AMWhat if you have a gun stolen from your house and you don't even know it's gone? I could see that happening.By the way, Whitman county voted for 1639, so it's not just the Westside and Spokane.80% receivers.
What if you have a gun stolen from your house and you don't even know it's gone? I could see that happening.By the way, Whitman county voted for 1639, so it's not just the Westside and Spokane.
Quote from: Bob33 on November 07, 2018, 09:05:45 AMQuote from: bobcat on November 07, 2018, 08:56:20 AMWhat if you have a gun stolen from your house and you don't even know it's gone? I could see that happening.By the way, Whitman county voted for 1639, so it's not just the Westside and Spokane.If you report it stolen within five days of knowing it was stolen, you should be exempt from consequences if the law is followed as written.Except for the "reasonably should have known" part. This is standard verbiage for imputing knowledge to you when you say "I did not know" of a fact. It is called constructive knowledge and it is a standard process in law enforcement. People should not downplay that this could eviscerate any reporting safe-harbor that implies you could still report five days after you did actually discover the fact of the stolen firearm. I forget the case, but there was a federal firearms prosecution where a guy was prosecuted for selling to a prohibited possessor (illegal alien, as I recall), because he "reasonably should have known" that the buyer was a prohibited possessor. So this is not just in the realm of fantasy, as some would have you believe. It is smack dab in the middle of reality.
Quote from: bobcat on November 07, 2018, 08:56:20 AMWhat if you have a gun stolen from your house and you don't even know it's gone? I could see that happening.By the way, Whitman county voted for 1639, so it's not just the Westside and Spokane.If you report it stolen within five days of knowing it was stolen, you should be exempt from consequences if the law is followed as written.
So just to be sure,You now have to attend a gun ownership safety class before you can purchase your next firearm?What about the firearms already owned?
Quote from: jrebel on November 07, 2018, 09:17:58 AMNone of this is inforceable!!! Every law enforcement officer I know has said this is just silly. It is why it had wide spread dissaproval from all Law Enforcement in Washington. At the end of the day it will make new purchases a pain in the arse because....which is ultimately what they wanted. Business as usual......It will get thrown out of court the first time they try to hold a homeowner accountable for a stolen gun. It will cost a lot of money....(again an intended consequence of the libs)....but it will not go anywhere. Simple defense.....a car gets stolen and kills someone in a high speed chase that insues......is the car owner responsible. What about my machette, hammer, bat, etc get stolen.....Am I responsible. No differnece. Not business as usual. Read the full text. You sign over full access to your medical records if you buy a semi-automatic which includes a 10/22. There is no due process or even a set of conditions specified. So a state worker can just look at your medical records and say NOPE. This is a nightmare.
Quote from: Fl0und3rz on November 07, 2018, 09:12:39 AMQuote from: Bob33 on November 07, 2018, 09:05:45 AMQuote from: bobcat on November 07, 2018, 08:56:20 AMWhat if you have a gun stolen from your house and you don't even know it's gone? I could see that happening.By the way, Whitman county voted for 1639, so it's not just the Westside and Spokane.If you report it stolen within five days of knowing it was stolen, you should be exempt from consequences if the law is followed as written.Except for the "reasonably should have known" part. This is standard verbiage for imputing knowledge to you when you say "I did not know" of a fact. It is called constructive knowledge and it is a standard process in law enforcement. People should not downplay that this could eviscerate any reporting safe-harbor that implies you could still report five days after you did actually discover the fact of the stolen firearm. I forget the case, but there was a federal firearms prosecution where a guy was prosecuted for selling to a prohibited possessor (illegal alien, as I recall), because he "reasonably should have known" that the buyer was a prohibited possessor. So this is not just in the realm of fantasy, as some would have you believe. It is smack dab in the middle of reality.Yeah, kind of what I was thinking. So say your handgun was stolen from your house and you don't even know it. A month later a crime is committed with the handgun. You never reported it stolen. Are they going to prosecute you because you SHOULD HAVE known it was stolen?
Quote from: Stein on November 07, 2018, 09:16:21 AMQuote from: konradcountry on November 07, 2018, 09:02:30 AMQuote from: Fl0und3rz on November 07, 2018, 08:59:17 AMQuote from: bobcat on November 07, 2018, 08:56:20 AMWhat if you have a gun stolen from your house and you don't even know it's gone? I could see that happening.By the way, Whitman county voted for 1639, so it's not just the Westside and Spokane.80% receivers.Shhhhhhhhh. The idiots that wrote this bill didn't consider those.80% receivers are semi-automatic assault rifles under this bill I believe. I didn't see anything requiring the firearm to be complete - similar to the federal laws.(25) "Semiautomatic assault rifle" means any rifle which utilizes a portion of the energy of a firing cartridge to extract the fired cartridge case and chamber the next round, and which requires a separate pull of the trigger to fire each cartridge."Semiautomatic assault rifle" does not include antique firearms, any firearm that has been made permanently inoperable, or any firearm that is manually operated by bolt, pump, lever, or slide action.(22) "Rifle" means a weapon designed or redesigned, made or remade, and intended to be fired from the shoulder and designed or redesigned, made or remade, and intended to use the energy of the explosive in a fixed metallic cartridge to fire only a single projectile through a rifled bore for each single pull of the trigger.
One easy way to do that would be to slightly amend 1639 to include semi-auto rifles "or other semi-auto firearms capable of being modified to fit the definition of assault weapon through the use of commercially available parts or components." Most, if not virtually all semi-auto shotguns have factory or aftermarket rifled barrels available which I believe would qualify them as assault rifles. If so, it isn't clear what happens if you have both barrels for a shotgun, is it only an assault rifle if the rifled barrel is installed, or by simply owning one do you have an assault rifle?