A study of California's weapons
registration law found that blacks were far more likely to be charged
with a felony than whites, who were more often charged with a
misdemeanor for the same offense. The study by state Attorney General
Bill Lockyer prompted calls for changes from the National Association
for the Advancement of Colored People; the lawmaker who authored the
legislation defended it. The study examined data on how the law, which
took effect Jan. 1, 2000, is being applied. The law makes it illegal
for anyone to possess a gun who is not registered with the state as
that firearm's owner. Offenders can be charged with a felony or a
misdemeanor, a lesser count. In 2003, less than 40 percent of whites
faced felony charges under the law; more than 70 percent of blacks and
nearly 70 percent of Hispanics were charged with felonies. "Blacks were
proportionately most likely to be filed on at the felony level,
followed by Hispanics, other race/ethnic groups, and whites. This
pattern exists throughout the period shown," the report states. Alice A. Huffman, president of the California State
Conference of the NAACP, said her organization will work with the
Legislature's black caucus to change the law or its enforcement. "We
know intuitively that we are being dealt with more harshly than whites.
This just reinforces it," she said. The overall disparity is such that
"I don't know what else it could be other than race," she said [more]
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