Police shoved two M16s within inches
of gun owner Joe Mendez’s face during a raid on his house to seize his
legally-purchased firearms.
Fourteen officers total were
involved.Police even showed up later to lie to Mendez’s wife about the raid, saying that they were only taking a report after her car was involved in a “hit and run.”
All of the targeted APPs had purchased their firearms legally but the State of California declared afterwards that they were prohibited from gun ownership due to minor misdemeanor convictions or mental health concerns.
Gov. Jerry Brown even signed a bill
this past spring to expand the program by spending $24 million to hire an
additional 36 officers for a total of 69 agents to track down nearly 20,000
people on the APP list.
Before they can embark on gun
confiscations, officers perform “tedious, expensive and time-consuming work,
requiring hours of background checks and cross-referencing,” as reported by
NPR.
“There’s a lot of work that goes
into these,” said California Dept. of Justice spokesperson Michelle Gregory to
NPR. “People aren’t always home, there’s different stories as to where the
firearms may be and there’s a lot of follow-up [that] needs to happen after.”
“So there’s still going to be a lot
of work even after they come out to these homes trying to confiscate these
weapons.”
In 2011, a gun confiscation sweep
across 43 counties over a six week period resulted in over 1,200 firearms
seized from 723 people.
Later on, the state can easily
expand the list of “prohibited persons” to include even people who are behind
on their state taxes or did not pay their toll fees on time.
This is clear evidence that gun
registration ultimately leads to confiscation.
Source: http://www.infowars.com/gun-confiscation-begins-in-california/
No comments:
Post a Comment