Judge overturns San Francisco ban on handguns, firearm sales

By: DAVID KRAVETS - Associated Press | Monday, June 12, 2006 5:38 PM PDT

SAN FRANCISCO -- A state trial judge sided Monday with the National Rifle Association in overturning a voter-approved city ordinance that banned handgun possession and firearm sales in San Francisco.

Measure H was placed on the November ballot by the San Francisco County Board of Supervisors, who were frustrated by an alarmingly high number of gun-related homicides in the city of 750,000. The NRA sued a day after 58 percent of voters approved the law.

In siding with the gun owners, Superior Court Judge James Warren said a local government cannot ban weapons because the California Legislature allows their sale and possession.

"My clients are thrilled that the court recognized that law-abiding firearms owners who choose to own a gun to defend themselves or their families are part of the solution and not part of the problem," NRA attorney Chuck Michel said. "Hopefully, the city will recognize that gun owners can contribute to the effort to fight the criminal misuse of firearms, a goal that we all share."

The ordinance targeted only city residents, meaning nonresidents and even tourists could possess or sell guns here.

Warren's decision was not unexpected. In 1982, a California appeals court nullified an almost identical San Francisco gun ban largely on grounds that the city cannot enact an ordinance that conflicts with state law.

But years later, in 1998, a state appeals court upheld West Hollywood's ban on the sale of so-called Saturday night specials, small and cheap handguns that city leaders said contributed to violent crime. And three years ago, the California Supreme Court ruled in favor of Los Angeles and Alameda counties, saying local governments could ban the possession and sale of weapons on government property, such as fairgrounds.

That decision, however, did not address the issue of private property sales and possession, as outlined in the San Francisco law.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit also is considering a challenge to a similar handgun ban in the District of Columbia that alleges the law violates a Second Amendment right of individuals to bear arms.

The NRA lawsuit here avoided those allegations.

Matt Dorsey, a spokesman for City Attorney Dennis Herrera, whose office unsuccessfully defended the law before Warren, said the city was considering a possible appeal.

"We're disappointed that the court has denied the right of voters to enact a reasonable, narrowly tailored restriction on handgun possession," Dorsey said. "San Francisco voters spoke loud and clear on the issue of gun violence.

The case is Fiscal v. San Francisco 05-505960.

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2 comment(s)[-]Go to Top

RWC wrote on Jun 13, 2006 9:56 AM:Lenin said, "One person with a gun can control 100 people without one." Gun control is not about guns, it is about control. Stalin, Lenin, and Hilter all promoted gun control. Gun control exposes honest citizens to criminals with no defense. Imagine if a criminal entered a bank pointing a gun and told everyone to drop to the floow. Everyone would drop to the floor fearing for their lives. Now imagine if all honest citizens carried a gun for their personal protection. When the criminal entered the bank all the honest citizen would pull their gun and tell the criminal to drop his gun and fall to the floor. All gun control is a violation of the 2nd Admendment. Therefore, it should null and void with or without a judge's ruling.

Kurt wrote on Jun 13, 2006 1:57 PM:The article said that the judge sided with gun owners. That's disingenuous--he upheld the law, which (I had thought) is his job.

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