(a) As used in this section, the
following definitions apply:
(1) "Locking device" means a device that is
designed to prevent the firearm from functioning and
when applied to the firearm, renders the firearm
inoperable.
(2) "Loaded firearm" has the same meaning as
set forth in subdivision (g) of Section Penal Code 12031.
(3) "Child" means a person under 18 years of
age.
(4) "Great bodily injury" has the same meaning
as set forth in Section Penal Code 12022.7.
(5) "Locked container" has the same meaning as
set forth in subdivision (d) of Section Penal Code 12026.2.
(b)
(1) Except as provided in subdivision (c), a
person commits the crime of "criminal storage of a
firearm of the first degree" if he or she keeps any loaded
firearm within any premises that are under his or her
custody or control and he or she knows or reasonably
should know that a child is likely to gain access to the
firearm without the permission of the child's parent or
legal guardian and the child obtains access to the
firearm and thereby causes death or great bodily injury
to himself, herself, or any other person.
(2) Except as provided in subdivision (c), a
person commits the crime of "criminal storage of a
firearm of the second degree" if he or she keeps any
loaded firearm within any premises that are under his or
her custody or control and he or she knows or
reasonably should know that a child is likely to gain
access to the firearm without the permission of the
child's parent or legal guardian and the child obtains
access to the firearm and thereby causes injury, other
than great bodily injury, to himself, herself, or any
other person, or carries the firearm either to a public
place or in violation of Section 417.
(c) Subdivision (b) shall not apply whenever
any of the following occurs:
(1) The child obtains the firearm as a result of
an illegal entry to any premises by any person.
(2) The firearm is kept in a locked container or
in a location that a reasonable person would believe to
be secure.
(3) The firearm is carried on the person or
within such a close proximity thereto so that the
individual can readily retrieve and use the firearm as if
carried on the person.
(4) The firearm is locked with a locking device
that has rendered the firearm inoperable.
(5) The person is a peace officer or a member
of the armed forces or National Guard and the child
obtains the firearm during, or incidental to, the
performance of the person's duties.
(6) The child obtains, or obtains and
discharges, the firearm in a lawful act of self-defense or
defense of another person, or persons.
(7) The person who keeps a loaded firearm on
any premise that is under his or her custody or control
has no reasonable expectation, based on objective facts
and circumstances, that a child is likely to be present on
the premises.
(d) Criminal storage of a firearm is punishable
as follows:
(1) Criminal storage of a firearm in the first
degree, by imprisonment in the state prison for 16
months, or two or three years, by a fine not exceeding
ten thousand dollars ($10,000), or by both that
imprisonment and fine; or by imprisonment in a county
jail not exceeding one year, by a fine not exceeding one
thousand dollars ($1,000), or by both that fine and
imprisonment.
(2) Criminal storage of a firearm in the second
degree, by imprisonment in a county jail not exceeding
one year, by a fine not exceeding one thousand dollars
($1,000), or by both that imprisonment and fine.
(e) If the person who allegedly violated this
section is the parent or guardian of a child who is
injured or who dies as the result of an accidental
shooting, the district attorney shall consider, among
other factors, the impact of the injury or death on the
person alleged to have violated this section when
deciding whether to prosecute an alleged violation. It is
the Legislature's intent that a parent or guardian of a
child who is injured or who dies as the result of an
accidental shooting shall be prosecuted only in those
instances in which the parent or guardian behaved in a
grossly negligent manner or where similarly egregious
circumstances exist. This subdivision shall not
otherwise restrict, in any manner, the factors that a
district attorney may consider when deciding whether to
prosecute alleged violations of this section.
(f) If the person who allegedly violated this
section is the parent or guardian of a child who is
injured or who dies as the result of an accidental
shooting, no arrest of the person for the alleged
violation of this section shall occur until at least seven
days after the date upon which the accidental shooting
occurred.
In addition to the limitation contained in this
subdivision, a law enforcement officer shall consider the
health status of a child who suffers great bodily injury
as the result of an accidental shooting prior to arresting
a person for a violation of this section, if the person to
be arrested is the parent or guardian of the injured child.
The intent of this subdivision is to encourage law
enforcement officials to delay the arrest of a parent or
guardian of a seriously injured child while the child
remains on life-support equipment or is in a similarly
critical medical condition.
(g)
(1) The fact that the person who allegedly
violated this section attended a firearm safety training
course prior to the purchase of the firearm that is
obtained by a child in violation of this section shall be
considered a mitigating factor by a district attorney
when he or she is deciding whether to prosecute the
alleged violation.
(2) In any action or trial commenced under this
section, the fact that the person who allegedly violated
this section attended a firearm safety training course
prior to the purchase of the firearm that is obtained by a
child in violation of this section, shall be admissible.
(h) Every person licensed under Section
Penal Code 12071
shall post within the licensed premises the notice
required by paragraph (7) of subdivision (b) of that
section, disclosing the duty imposed by this section
upon any person who keeps a loaded firearm.
--
Raymond Lutz - 09 May 2008