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Eight New Firearms Laws in Colorado

Mulligan

Silver $$ Contributor
Total of 8 new gun bills passed



By JESSE PAUL

The Colorado Sun

Gov. Jared Polis signed into law eight bills passed by the Legislature this year that tighten Colorado’s gun statutes.

Colorado Ceasefire, a nonprofit that calls for tougher gun regulations, says that’s a legislative- session record for the state.

The laws impose new requirements on people obtaining concealed carry permits, the way firearms must be stored in vehicles and how weapons and ammunition are sold.

Here’s what the new laws do and when they go into effect:

INVESTIGATING GUN CRIMES

Senate Bill 3 authorizes the Colorado Bureau of Investigation to probe gun crimes, including illegal firearms purchases. It also sends $1.5 million to the agency for that work, money that will be spent hiring 10 employees next fiscal year, which starts July 1.

GUNS BANNED IN AREAS

The Colorado Capitol, courthouses, child care facilities, K-12 schools, colleges and polling locations have been added to the list of places where the open or concealed carry of a firearm is prohibited under Senate Bill 131.

The legislation has exemptions for law enforcement offices, security personnel and on-duty members of the military. State lawmakers at the Capitol are not exempt starting on Jan. 4, 2025.

People caught carrying a gun in a place where it is prohibited face a Class 1 misdemeanor, punishable by up to 364 days in jail or a fine of up to $1,000 or both.

As introduced, the measure would have applied to even more places, including bars, sporting events and amusement parks.

RESTRAINING ORDERS

A rare example of a bipartisan bill tightening Colorado’s gun regulations, House Bill 1122 requires people who are subject to a temporary domestic violence restraining order to relinquish their guns and ammunition and prevents them from purchasing more firearms or ammunition while the order is in effect.

The law also requires the restraining order to include notice of the relinquishment requirement and the purchase prohibition

CONCEALED CARRY PERMITS

Starting July 1, 2025, the requirements for obtaining a concealed carry permit will change.

House Bill 1174 mandates that training classes to qualify for a concealed carry permit offer at least eight hours of instruction, including a live-fire test where participants shoot at least 50 rounds. Passing the live-fire test,

See GUN, page 8A ➤



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as well as a written exam, will also be mandatory to get a concealed carry permit.

CATEGORY CODES

By May 2025, credit card companies will have to assign specific merchant codes to firearms and ammunition dealers under Senate Bill 66.

The legislation is aimed at making it easier to track gun purchases. The attorney general will have the power to levy a $10,000 fine for each violation of the new law.

POSSIBLE EXCISE TAX

Under House Bill 1349, Colorado voters will be asked in November to impose a 6.5% excise tax on firearms, gun parts and ammunition sold in the state beginning April 1, 2025.

The revenue — expected to be up to $39 million annually — would go to crime victims, schools and behavioral health programs.

The federal government imposes an 11% excise tax on firearms and ammunition. Nonpartisan legislative staff say California is currently the only state that imposes an excise tax on guns and ammunition.

SELLER PERMITS

Firearms dealers in Colorado will be required by July 1, 2025, to obtain a state permit that costs $400 and be subject to random and regular inspections under House Bill 1353.

The law will also require employee background checks and training to identify people trying to illegally purchase guns. Employees will have to report anyone who tries to unlawfully purchase a gun to law enforcement within 48 hours. Finally, the measure will require gun stores to lock up their firearms.

A dealer whose permit is revoked must wait three years before reapplying for a permit.

VEHICLE STORAGE

Starting in 2025, a gun will have to be in a locked, hard-sided container out of view — such as a glove box or center console — when kept in a vehicle under House Bill 1348.

The bill will also require the vehicle to be locked. Violators will face a fine, though there are exceptions for people who work on farms and ranches or in the military or law enforcement.

The penalty for violating the law will be a civil infraction that carries a fine.

The measure also requires gun dealers to post a sign notifying customers of the new law.

BILLS THAT FAILED

Stolen weapons: A measure that would have increased the penalties for stealing a gun valued at less than $1,000 was rejected in its first committee hearing in the House.

House Bill 1162 would have made it a Class 2 misdemeanor, punishable by up to 120 days in jail, to steal a firearm valued at less than $1,000.

The penalty for stealing a firearm in Colorado currently depends on how valuable the weapon is. Stealing a gun that’s worth less than $300 is a petty offense, punishable by up to 10 days in jail. Gun theft becomes a felony, and carries the possibility of prison, only when the weapon stolen is worth more than $2,000.

So-called assault weapons: For the second year in a row, a bill that would have banned the purchase, sale and transfer of a broad swath of semiautomatic firearms, defined in the measure as assault weapons, failed in the Colorado Legislature.

House Bill 1292 was killed in its first Senate committee at the request of one of its Senate sponsors, who said “more conversations need to take place.”

Firearm liability insurance: Coloradans who own a firearm would have been required to have homeowners, renters or other liability insurance starting in 2025 under House Bill 1270, which died on the calendar in the Senate. (That means the Legislature adjourned before it could get enough hearings and votes to pass.)

Gun owners would have been able to petition a judge for an exemption in certain situations, including after being denied coverage by at least two insurance carriers. The bill would also have required insurers to make firearms coverage available as part of liability coverage for homeowners and renters policies, though they could offer discounts for people who own a gun safe or other secure firearm container.

Violators would have faced fines.



This was sent to me by a friend
I believe it was published in The Daily Sentential

CW
 
BILLS THAT FAILED

Stolen weapons: A measure that would have increased the penalties for stealing a gun valued at less than $1,000 was rejected in its first committee hearing in the House.

House Bill 1162 would have made it a Class 2 misdemeanor, punishable by up to 120 days in jail, to steal a firearm valued at less than $1,000.

The penalty for stealing a firearm in Colorado currently depends on how valuable the weapon is. Stealing a gun that’s worth less than $300 is a petty offense, punishable by up to 10 days in jail. Gun theft becomes a felony, and carries the possibility of prison, only when the weapon stolen is worth more than $2,000.


So if you're a thief, Colorado gives you a pass. You've been fully Californicated!
 
When you travel the outline areas of Colorado, you see such a different concept of the state. Hard working ranchers, American flags at the entrance of most properties, and people who guide hunters. Unfortunately, they are not the majority of the population. Too bad land owners do not get "special" voting privileges.
Was the governor smoking dope again when he signed this bill?
 
When you travel the outline areas of Colorado, you see such a different concept of the state. Hard working ranchers, American flags at the entrance of most properties, and people who guide hunters. Unfortunately, they are not the majority of the population. Too bad land owners do not get "special" voting privileges.
Was the governor smoking dope again when he signed this bill?
“Smoking” something
 
Probably cause of the shootings, Columbine High School - 12 students and a teacher. Aurora movie theater - 12 killed, 78 wounded by gunfire. Now shootings occur every day in the Denver area.

There weren’t shootings 40 years ago like there are today.

For whatever reason lots of people want something done
 
When you travel the outline areas of Colorado, you see such a different concept of the state. Hard working ranchers, American flags at the entrance of most properties, and people who guide hunters. Unfortunately, they are not the majority of the population. Too bad land owners do not get "special" voting privileges.
Was the governor smoking dope again when he signed this bill?
The exact same thing can be said about all but a handful of states that are basically conservative, but controlled by large liberal cities or cesspools depending on how you want to look at it.
 
Probably cause of the shootings, Columbine High School - 12 students and a teacher. Aurora movie theater - 12 killed, 78 wounded by gunfire. Now shootings occur every day in the Denver area.

There weren’t shootings 40 years ago like there are today.

For whatever reason lots of people want something done
yep, I get that.

How are any of these bills going to address the issues that led to those shootings?

They will not.........

None of us want to see more shootings...... just the opposite actually.

Writing a legal gun owner a ticket for not locking his/her car door when a gun is stored in the auto but not arresting the criminal that brakes into said locked auto unless the firearm is worth more that a $1000. is bull squirt!

CW
 
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and less laws for the criminals
Plus for every new place the politicians list as a "gun free Zone" and firearms are not allowed, give the criminal one more place to carry out a crime/shooting, knowing there is 99% chance no resistance will be on seen to stop them. Politicians are just so ignorant these days. Soft on crime and criminals, but are hard on lawful citizens, seems to me their Motto.
 
I am so afraid of being shot by gun violence I am going to move to Colorado. These laws will keep Methew and Methany Baggydrwers from buying a gun, using a gun, obtaining a gun, carrying one in thier whip, giving it to anyone else, or missing when they shoot at each other (they have to pass the test right?!), so I will feel infinitly more secure that gun violence will not harm me. I am for sure glad that the politicians in Colorado have finally solved the gun violence issue. Whew...
 
Every time I read something like this ; I am so glad my Legislators , and the citizens of Arizona dealt with all these potential "Gun-Grabber" issues over a decade ago . Before the influx of anti-gun Leftist radicals came here from the Blue States they ruined with their evil Socio-Marxist anti-gun ideology !
 
I am so glad my Legislators , and the citizens of Arizona dealt with all these potential "Gun-Grabber" issues over a decade ago
Let's hope it stays that way with all the folks movin here in the last decade and I dont believe theyve stopped yet from the look of things,........
 
Do you see the trend, tell the poorly educated voter these laws will make your life safer but the laws won't/don't do that. They only make LEGAL ownership more difficult and expensive, which is an overt attempt to subvert constitutional rights. You don't even need to be CONVICTED of a crime to have your 2nd Amendment rights revoked, you can though rest easy, I'm sure the legal fees to recover your firearms will be VERY EXPENSIVE.
 
Coloradians, you should have built a wall. Now you suffer and Denver runs the show. NEWS FLASH!! Criminals don't obey laws. They are put there to control the honest. Take a look at a Red/Blue county map of NY. 5 counties in the south east corner run the state.
 

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