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HOW TO SUBVERT THE 2ND-REQUIRE A LICENSE TO SELL AMMO, THEN ISSUE NONE
A missed deadline at the California Department of Justice is leaving some stores with a tough choice: close their doors or keep selling ammo while breaking the law.
Ammunition vendor licenses are a new requirement starting Jan. 1, 2018 for stores that sell ammunition.
The licenses are supposed to be issued by the California Department of Justice. The CA DOJ said last week the licenses would be issued by the deadline, however that didn’t happen.
When Foothill Ammo owner Chris Puehse opens his Cameron Park store Tuesday, he’ll likely be breaking the law. “I did all my paper work. I paid the fees. They’ve had time to figure this out. This is not my problem,” Puehse said.
However Craig Deluz, who works for the Firearms Policy Coalition, said the missed deadline will force other stores to close. To his knowledge, none of the roughly 230 stores that applied for licenses have been issued them.
“Unless the California Department of Justice basically says we’re not going to enforce the law, they really don’t have a choice,” Deluz said.
One person who won’t be enforcing the law is the El Dorado County sheriff, who doesn’t believe store owners should have to pay for the state’s tardiness.
“That’s unacceptable, that’s harm to them, I can’t enforce it, nor will I allow the state to come in and enforce it when it’s unenforceable at this time,” Sheriff John D'agostini said.
Puehse’s reasoning is more personal -- he can’t afford to close. “I have a family to feed, I have a mortgage to pay, I got a lease on my store, I got to stay in business,” Puehse said.
http://www.kcra.com/article/why-this-eldorado-county-ammo-store-is-opening-without-a-license/1452
