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NRA-ILA | Washington: Trigger Modification Ban Passes Committee

Substitute Senate Bill 5444 seeks to restrict commonly owned semi-automatic rifles based on cosmetic features that do not affect functionality by raising the minimum purchase age from 18 to 21. Such semi-automatic rifles only fire one shot per action of the trigger and are fundamentally no different from any other semi-automatic rifles that have been available to American consumers for over a century. This bill would also add a waiting period of up to 10 days, and creates a back-door registry by allowing the Washington Department of Licensing store the records of these firearms purchases.


Senate Bill 6049 seeks to ban standard capacity magazines. Standard capacity magazines are commonly owned by law-abiding citizens for various purposes such as self-defense, recreation, competition, and hunting.


Substitute Senate Bill 5463 would create civil liability for individuals that do not lock up their firearm if it is obtained and used by a prohibited person in the commission of a crime or to cause harm or injury to another. There is nothing in SB 5463 to protect individuals who have their firearms stolen or acquired by illegal entry, theft, or burglary. A firearm owner should not be held liable for the crimes committed by a prohibited person who has illegally obtained their firearm. Suitable storage of firearms varies by personal circumstances as different gun owners have different requirements.


Senate Bill 5992 has poorly thought out, broad language that could be easily interpreted to ban match grade triggers, ergonomic enhancements, recoil reducing weights and muzzle brakes, and other modifications that countless law-abiding gun owners utilize in order to make their firearms more user friendly and suitable for self-defense, competition, hunting, and even adapting to physical disability. Many of these modifications simply make it easier to deliver accurate and controlled shots with less physical discomfort for the shooter without fundamentally changing the mechanics of how a firearm operates.


Senate Bill 6146 seeks to repeal Washington's decades old state firearm preemption statute. The state preemption statute, which passed in 1983, helps keep firearm and ammunition laws consistent throughout Washington by establishing that the State Legislature has full authority to regulate and create laws pertaining to firearms and ammunition. In addition to preventing a confusing patchwork of laws, it also ensures that all law-abiding citizens have the same Second Amendment rights across the whole state.
 

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