Newsom signs several bills improving gun safety 

By Tanu Henry and 

Antonio Ray Harvey 

Contributing Writers

SACRAMENTO —  Gov. Gavin Newsom has signed new legislation enhancing gun safety measures, further solidifying California’s position as a national leader in implementing controls on the use and distribution of firearms. 

Joined by Attorney General Rob Bonta, lawmakers, gun safety advocates and gun wound survivors, Newsom i at a press conference discussed several of the gun laws he signed. 

They included Senate Bill 2 authored by state Sen. Anthony Portantino, D-Glendale, which reinforces the state’s public carry regulations; and SB 452, authored by Sen. Catherine Blakespear, D-Encinitas, which mandates the use of microstamping on handgun cartridges to help trace guns used in crimes.

SB 2 imposes new restrictions for obtaining a concealed-carry weapons permit. According to Portantino’s office, the law ensures licensees are law-abiding citizens over 21 years of age; establishes an appeal process for denied permits; introduces gun handling, loading, unloading and storage training requirements; and restricts locations where people can legally carry firearms. 

When the Legislature passed SB 2, Newsom stated that people are less likely to die from gunshots in California. In 2022 alone, California’s gun death rate was 43% lower than the national average, according to the Centers of Disease Control. The Giffords Law Center also ranked the state No. 1 in the U.S. for gun safety. 

“While radical judges continue to strip away our ability to keep people safe, California will keep fighting — because gun safety laws work,” Newsom said in a statement.

Newsom also signed bills introduced by California Legislative Black Caucus members Mike Gipson, D-Gardena, Kevin McCarty, D-Sacramento, and Reggie Jones-Sawyer, D-Los Angeles. 

McCarty’s Assembly Bill 1406 gives the California Department of Justice the authority to postpone firearm delivery if additional time is required to do background checks. Gipson’s AB 1089 adds new regulations and guidelines for the ownership and operation of computer numeric control (milling machines, commonly used to manufacture ghost guns.

AB 574, introduced by Jones-Sawyer which takes effect in March 2025, requires gun dealers making any sale of a gun — or overseeing the transfer of ownership — to confirm that both the buyer and seller “confirm possession of every firearm they own or possess.”

AB 28, which was authored by Assemblyman Jesse Gabriel, D-Woodland Hills, was also on the list of gun legislation Newsom approved. The law enacts a first-in-the-nation effort to raise $160 million annually on the sale of bullets by imposing an 11% excise tax on gun vendors and gun manufacturers across the state. The revenue collected will be used to improve school safety, behavioral health and gun violence intervention. 

“How about a little damn accountability,” said Newsom at a press conference. “You’re selling a product, a leading product, a purveyor of death for our kids.”

Gabriel shared the governor’s perspective. 

“It’s shameful that gun manufacturers are reaping record profits at the same time that gun violence has become the leading cause of death for kids in the United States,” he said. 

AB 455 authored by Assemblywomen Sharon Quirk-Silva, D-LaPalma, and Diane Papan, D-San Mateo, keeps guns out of the hands of potentially dangerous individuals.

Two more public safety laws, Newsom signed deal with limiting ghost guns and the “relinquishment of firearms.” AB 725, authored by Quirk-Silva and Papan, updates the definition of a firearm to include ghost gun parts.

AB 732, authored by Assemblyman Mike Fong, D-Monterey Park, simplifies the process for removing firearms from people who are prohibited from owning them.

The same day Newsom signed the package of gun laws, the Firearms Policy Coalition, a nonprofit focused on advancing gun rights, announced that it filed a complaint challenging some parts of SB 2. 

“SB 2 restricts where persons with licenses to carry a concealed weapon may legally exercise their constitutional right to wear, carry, or transport firearms,” the complaint stated. “And it does so in ways that are fundamentally inconsistent with the Second Amendment and the Supreme Court’s decision in Bruen.”

Three groups, Orange County Gun Owners, San Diego County Gun Owners and California Gun Rights Foundation have joined the coalition in the lawsuit. 

“With Gov. Newsom’s signing of SB 2 today, California continues to exhibit its disdain for the rights of Californians, the U.S. Constitution and the Supreme Court’s Bruen decision,” said Cody J. Wisniewski, the Firearms Policy Coalition Action Foundation’s general counsel and vice president. “Unfortunately for California, and contrary to Governor Newsom’s misguided statements, the state does not have the power to unilaterally overrule individual rights and constitutional protections.”

Attorney General Bonta disagreed, saying gun safety laws protect people. 

“Addressing gun violence is critical to protecting public safety; we cannot pretend that they are distinct problems,” Bonta said. “In California, we won’t settle for inaction when it comes to saving lives.”

On Oct. 10, Newsom scored another win on gun control. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the California state law that bans guns with high-capacity, detachable magazines can remain in effect while California appeals a U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals September ruling that declared that law unconstitutional. 

Tanu Henry and Antonio Ray Harvey are reporters for California Black Media.