
SACRAMENTO, Feb. 19 (UPI) -- California's attorney general said it could cost up to $50 million to confiscate guns from people on the state's Armed Prohibited Persons list.
California is the only state in the union with a program to confiscate guns from people who bought them legally but were later disqualified, the Los Angeles Times reported Tuesday.
Attorney General Kamala Harris said California has more than 19,700 gun owners who are no longer qualified to possess firearms.
They are identified by analysts who track gun sales back to 1996 and match them against databases listing criminal convictions, restraining orders and mental health detentions.
For the past five years, California's gun apprehension teams have been sweeping through neighborhoods in unmarked trucks to retrieve guns from owners no longer permitted to have firearms.
To date more than 10,000 guns have been collected.
"This is about prevention," Harris said.
California's program is being studied as a potential model for the nation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Additional U.S. News Stories | |
BRIDGEWATER, Nova Scotia, May 23 (UPI) --
The mother of a Canadian teenager who was chained up and raped last fall said Thursday she wanted the man who pleaded guilty to the crime to "suffer."
|
LONDON, May 23 (UPI) --
U.S. rocker Jon Bon Jovi is advising 19-year-old pop star Justin Bieber to respect his fans if he wants to have a long and successful career.
|
HAIFA, Israel, May 23 (UPI) --
The reported delivery of supersonic Russian anti-ship missiles to Syria heightened Israeli concerns about protecting its offshore gas fields.
|
LOS ANGELES, May 23 (UPI) --
A Los Angeles teenager who created a popular online video asking supermodel Kate Upton to prom is getting a consolation date from another model, Nina Agdal.
|
| Stories | Photos | Comments |
View Caption