File #: 22-0848    Version: 1
Type: Ordinance Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 7/11/2022 In control: City Council
On agenda: 7/19/2022 Final action:
Title: Conduct the first reading of the ordinance amending Title 3 of the Naperville Municipal Code to prohibit the local commercial sale of assault weapons and large-capacity magazines
Attachments: 1. DRAFT Assault Weapon Sales Ban Ordinance - July 13, 2022

CITY COUNCIL AGENDA ITEM

 

ACTION REQUESTED:
title

Conduct the first reading of the ordinance amending Title 3 of the Naperville Municipal Code to prohibit the local commercial sale of assault weapons and large-capacity magazines

body

 

DEPARTMENT:                     Legal Department

 

SUBMITTED BY:                     Michael DiSanto, City Attorney

 

BOARD/COMMISSION REVIEW:
N/A

 

BACKGROUND:

There have been dozens of mass shootings in the United States during the last decade, including three within the last two months:

 

1.                     July 4, 2022 - Highland Park, IL

Seven people were murdered, and 46 others were injured during a mass shooting that took place during an Independence Day parade. The shooter used an AR-15-style semi-automatic rifle with three 30-round magazines to fire 83 shots into the parade crowd from the rooftop of a local store. A 22-year-old suspect has been arrested and charged.

 

2.                     May 24, 2022 - Uvalde, Texas

21 people were murdered (19 children and 2 staff members), and 18 others were injured during a mass shooting that took place at Robb Elementary School. The 18-year-old shooter used an AR-15-style semi-automatic rifle.

 

3.                     May 14, 2022 - Buffalo, New York

Ten people were murdered, and 3 others were injured during a mass shooting that took place in a grocery store. The shooter used an AR-15-style semi-automatic rifle. An 18-year-old suspect has been arrested and charged.

 

Commonplace in mass shootings are the use of lawfully purchased assault weapons and large-capacity ammunition magazines. The U.S. Department of Justice describes assault weapons as "semiautomatic firearms with a large magazine of ammunition that were designed and configured for rapid fire and combat use.”

 

Like many of the municipalities that have encountered mass shootings involving assault weapons and large-capacity magazines, Naperville has a vibrant commercial area, public parks, restaurants, movie theaters, music venues, parades, elementary, middle and high schools both public and private, colleges and universities, houses of worship of many denominations, and other places where members of the public gather with an expectation of safety.

The Second Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that, “A well-regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.” However, no fundamental right is set forth in the United States Constitution for persons or entities to engage in the commercial sale of assault weapons or large-capacity magazines.

                     

In 1994, the U.S. Congress passed the Federal Assault Weapons Ban (“AWB”), a United States federal law which prohibited the possession and sale of assault weapons and large-capacity magazines (limiting magazines to ten rounds). Several constitutional challenges were filed against provisions of the ban, but all were rejected by the courts.

 

The AWB expired in 2004, in accordance with its sunset provision, and attempts to renew or replace the AWB have been unsuccessful.

 

Currently, seven states and Washington, D.C. prohibit assault weapons. Federal appellate courts have decided four cases concerning the Second Amendment and assault weapons, each time reaching the same conclusion that assault weapon bans are constitutional (the D.C. Circuit upheld the District of Columbia's ban in 2011, the Second Circuit upheld New York and Connecticut laws in 2015, the Seventh Circuit upheld Highland Park’s local ordinance in 2015, and the Fourth Circuit upheld Maryland's ban in 2017).

 

The Illinois legislature has limited the ability of public bodies to enact laws to protect the public from assault weapons and large-capacity magazines that are used in mass shootings that have devastated many communities and countless individuals.

 

In 2013, the Illinois General Assembly enacted legislation amending the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act (“FOID Act”). As part of the 2013 amendment of the FOID Act, the state legislature granted municipalities only ten calendar days to enact local ordinances regulating the possession or ownership of assault weapons. If a municipality could not, or did not, pass a local ordinance within the ten-day window, the legislature provided that a municipality could not thereafter pass an ordinance pertaining to the possession or ownership of assault weapons.

 

The City of Naperville did not pass an assault weapon ordinance regulating the possession or ownership of assault weapons within the ten days allotted by the state legislature.

 

The City of Naperville is a home rule unit of local government under the laws and Constitution of the State of Illinois. Under the Constitution of the State of Illinois, home rule units of government have broad authority to pass ordinances and promulgate rules and regulations that protect the public health, safety, and welfare of their residents unless the state legislature specifically states that state legislation preempts home rule authority.

 

The 2013 FOID Act preempts home rule municipalities relative to regulation of the possession or ownership of assault weapons in a manner that is inconsistent with that Act. However, the FOID Act does not preempt home rule municipalities from regulating the commercial sale of assault weapons and large-capacity magazines within their jurisdiction. Therefore, the City retains its broad home rule authority to legislate with respect to commercial sales.

 

DISCUSSION:

The attached ordinance has several key aspects, including:

 

1.                     Prohibiting the commercial sale of both assault weapons and large-capacity magazines, defined as ammunition magazines capable of holding more than ten rounds of ammunition.

 

2.                     Prohibiting all sales by licensed gun sellers of assault weapons and large-capacity magazines within the City. That means both the two local gun stores and other local licensed sellers will be impacted (e.g., pawn shops and other persons and entities licensed to engage in the business of selling firearms). Private transfers and private sales by non-licensed persons and entities will not be impacted.

 

3.                     Offenses are punishable by a fine of $1,000 for a first offense within a 12-month period, and a fine of $2,500 for a second or subsequent offense within a 12-month period. Each day that a violation continues shall be considered a separate and distinct offense and a fine shall be assessed for each day there is a violation. Continued violations are subject to an injunction to enforce compliance.

 

4.                     Becoming effective as of January 1, 2023. This gives impacted sellers time to adjust their businesses to comply with the new regulations.

 

FISCAL IMPACT:

Decrease in sales tax revenues corresponding to loss of local assault weapon and large-capacity magazine sales.