San Francisco

San Francisco Supervisor Proposes Video Surveillance in Gun Stores, Records of Ammunition Sales

San Francisco Supervisor Mark Farrell on Tuesday introduced an ordinance that would require firearms dealers to videotape all gun and ammunition sales and share ammunition sales data with police.

The ordinance would require gun stores to keep all videos made of gun and ammunition sales for at least a year, and all records of ammunition sales for up to five years, according to Farrell.

Current law requires records of ammunition sales only for those buying large quantities, while Farrell's ordinance would extend that requirement to all ammunition purchases. The records, which would include documentation of the purchasers photo identification, would need to be transmitted to police at least weekly.

Farrell on Tuesday said that more than a dozen other jurisdictions in the state have similar laws on the books already, which are intended to fill gaps in existing federal, state and local laws and help discourage theft and the use of false identification for gun purchases.

"Easy access to firearms continues to be a contributing factor to senseless violence, not only in San Francisco but across the country," Farrell said at Tuesday's Board of Supervisors meeting. "There continues to be more we can do."

The ordinance's requirements for records of ammunition sales would apply both to stores within the city and remote vendors, meaning any dealer who sells ammunition for delivery within the city.

San Francisco appears to have only one gun shop, High Bridge Arms at 3185 Mission St., operating within city limits.

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