Nevada Attorney General Says Question One Background Check Law ‘Unenforceable’
Today Nevada Attorney General Adam Laxalt issued an opinion on Nevada’s new “universal” background check law, saying the initiative, as written, is “unenforceable.”
This is what happens when you allow
uninformed, out-of-state lobbying groups that prey on people’s emotions
to write your laws. NRA Nevadans for Freedom has been saying all along
that this poorly written initiative was drafted without any input from
Nevada law enforcement. Not a single sheriff supported Bloomberg’s
Question One.
The director of the Nevada Department of
Public Safety, James Wright, requested the formal opinion from the
Attorney General on two questions:
“First, does the Background Check Act allow
the Nevada “Point of Contact” program to perform background checks for
private-party sales or transfers of firearms conducted by federal
firearms licensees? Second, if the Department is legally authorized to
perform these checks, may it charge fees for doing so?”
Laxalt, responded “no” to both questions, stating the Act was written in such a way that all private transfer background checks must
be conducted by the federally administered National Instant Criminal
Background Check System, or NICS, as opposed to being conducted through
the Nevada “Point of Contact” system.
Nevada’s “Point of Contact” system checks
applicant names through both NICS as well as the state database of
prohibited persons. As the Reno Gazette-Journal explains, “When
someone buys a gun from a federally licensed dealer in Nevada, the
dealer contacts the Nevada Central Repository. Someone there runs the
name through a number of databases, including those for state mental
health records and misdemeanor domestic battery convictions.”
The new law was written so that dealers cannot
access the state system, and must rely solely on the federal process.
Initiative supporters avoided utilizing the state system because had
they done so, Question One would have required the filing of a fiscal
note, explaining to voters how much the new background checks would cost
the state.
The FBI recently sent a letter to the Nevada Department of Public Safety saying, in short, that the FBI would not
conduct background checks on private firearms transfers as called for
in the new law. In the letter, the FBI noted that the State of Nevada “…
cannot dictate how federal resources are applied.”
Laxalt concluded his opinion by
stating that because the FBI would not conduct the checks, the law is
“unenforceable” and, therefore, “citizens may not be prosecuted for
their inability to comply with the Act….”
There does not appear to be an easy
fix to this over-reach by Question One’s proponents. Under Nevada State
law, laws passed by ballot initiative cannot be altered for three years.
As we review the Attorney General’s
opinion more closely, we will provide more insight into how law-abiding
Nevadans should proceed when making a private firearms transfer under
the new law.
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