Need all Congresses? Press Enter for expanded results.

AB 1974

California - Session 2025-2026

Assembly in_committee 2026-03-26
Bill Details

Title: Firearms: voluntary firearm storage program.

Summary

Existing law requires a person, who claims title to a firearm that is in the custody of a court or law enforcement agency and wishes to have it returned, to make an application for a determination by the Department of Justice as to whether the applicant is eligible to possess a firearm. Under existing law, a law enforcement agency or court that has taken custody of a firearm is prohibited from returning the firearm to an individual unless specified requirements are met, including, but not limited to, requiring the person to be eligible to possess a firearm and verifying that the firearm is not listed as stolen and the firearm has been recorded in the Automated Firearms System in the name of the person, as specified. Existing law requires any weapon that was carried unlawfully for specified crimes to be surrendered to specified law enforcement entities. Existing law requires weapons surrendered pursuant to these provisions to be destroyed by the law enforcement entity. This bill would authorize a law enforcement agency, as defined, to create a voluntary firearm storage program that allows a person to voluntarily transfer custody of their firearm to the local law enforcement agency for temporary safekeeping purposes to prevent firearm violence, suicide, and other injury. The bill would authorize a law enforcement agency adopting this program to provide clear instructions on the procedure to voluntarily transfer custody of a firearm and to provide explicit instructions on the process for requesting return of the firearm, as specified. Upon receipt of a firearm, the bill would authorize a law enforcement agency to, among other things, check a certain database to ensure the firearm has not previously been reported lost, stolen, or involved in a crime and ensure that the requesting person is eligible to possess firearms when the firearm is returned to the person. The bill would require a law enforcement agency to destroy a firearm that a person failed to retrieve at the end of a time period specified by the law enforcement agency, except as provided. Existing law prohibits the carrying of a concealed firearm or the open carrying of a firearm, as specified. Existing law provides certain exemptions to these prohibitions, including exemptions for peace officers, retired peace officers, and persons possessing a valid license to carry a concealed firearm. Existing law generally regulates the sale and transfer of firearms, including, among other requirements and subject to exceptions, that the transfer of a firearm be conducted through a firearms dealer. This bill would exempt the voluntary transfer of a firearm to a local law enforcement agency pursuant to the provisions above from these prohibitions and regulations.

Sponsor
Stefani
Official Source Back to Bills
Support LegiList

Tracking state legislation? Support LegiList with a small contribution. Independent, ad-free, and built by one developer.

Payments are processed securely by Stripe in a separate window. LegiList never stores card details.
Actions Timeline
Date Event Detail
2026-02-13 Introduced Bill introduced
2026-03-26 Status in_committee
2026-03-26 Latest Action Re-referred to Com. on PUB. S.
More Bills In Similar Categories
Bill Title Status
AB 1598 Behavioral sciences. in_committee
AB 1796 Licensed Professional Interior Designer Practice Act. in_committee
SB 1001 Local agency, corporation, or mutual water company: personnel access: Personal Identity Verification-Interoperable. in_committee
SB 1004 Law enforcement: masks. in_committee
SB 1089 Preventive Treatment Health Care Act. in_committee
SB 1208 Money laundering: digital financial assets. in_committee
SB 1211 Criminal procedure: postconviction investigation. in_committee
SB 1257 Federal immigration enforcement: report. in_committee