According to Firearm Chronicles
The state of Maryland has had universal background checks for a while…for handguns. Long guns, however, were a completely different matter. They weren’t as heavily restricted, probably in part because they’re also far less likely to be used in crimes.
Now, those universal background checks have failed to make Baltimore the peaceful Utopia gun control advocates often envision.
Despite that failure, though, the legislature in Maryland has been angling to expand universal background checks to include guns unlikely to be used in criminal enterprises for the last couple of years. Well, it looks like they made it happen.
Maryland lawmakers gave final approval Monday to a bill that will require all buyers of rifles and shotguns to submit to background checks.
State law already requires buyers to undergo a computerized federal background check when buying a long gun from a licensed dealer, and the bill extends that requirement to private sales and permanent gifts of such guns.
The buyer and seller would need to go to a licensed dealer, who could facilitate the check for a $30 fee.
The bill’s passage represents a victory for gun control advocates, who have sought for years to eliminate what they believe is a “loophole” in background check requirements. Their advocacy ramped up over the last two years, and the legislation failed in the waning hours of the 2019 General Assembly session after the House of Delegates and the state Senate could not work out differences in the versions of the bill they passed.
Joy.
Now, this isn’t as bad as some universal background check bills. This one doesn’t require a transfer for temporary loans of firearms, for example. Then again, saying it’s not as bad as some universal background check laws is like saying Covid-19 isn’t as bad as some other diseases like Ebola. It may be technically true, but it’s also kind of irrelevant at this point.