Huntington Beach sues to stop residentâs petition proposing local ban on semiautomatic and automatic weapons
Huntington Beach is taking legal action to try to stop a resident from circulating a petition seeking to put a proposed ban on semiautomatic and automatic guns on the cityâs Nov. 6 election ballot.
City Attorney Michael Gates filed a lawsuit April 24 in Orange County Superior Court against Daniel Horgan, a local real estate agent and mortgage broker, contending the petition is âunconstitutional, invalid and not entitled to a place on the ballot.â
Horganâs proposed law would make possession and sale of semiautomatic and automatic firearms in Huntington Beach a felony by April 1. Such weapons already in circulation would have to be surrendered to the Police Department by Jan. 1, though there would be a three-month probationary period to comply.
âThese weapons are a clear and imminent danger to our community,â Horgan wrote in a notice of intent to circulate the petition that he filed with the city in November.
Gatesâ suit argues that Horganâs petition places the city at odds with the Constitutionâs Second Amendment, which protects the right to keep and bear arms. Gates also contends the proposal isnât presented as legislation that the city could adopt.
âWe have to do whatâs right for the community,â Gates said Thursday. âWe canât let any citizen with an idea try and stop federal law.â
According to city officials, Horganâs Committee to Reduce Gun Violence needs about 12,000 signatures from Huntington Beach registered voters by June 2 for the measure to qualify for the November ballot.
Horgan, a Huntington Beach resident since 1984, said Thursday that the petition is âlocked at less than 1,000â signatures, though he has been getting the word out, mainly via direct mailers.
âThe support hasnât been there for this petition,â said Horgan, who said he was inspired to act after seeing ânews of another shooting.â
âItâs a little too extreme,â he said of his proposal. âThat being said, the people who support what weâre doing agree this problem isnât going anywhere and itâs just going to get worse.â
Though the petition is unlikely to land on this yearâs ballot, Horgan said he anticipates further action.
âIâve never done anything like this before,â he said. âItâs too bad I went too extreme in verbiage, and in hindsight, I wouldâve worded the petition differently.â
Twitter: @vegapriscella
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