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Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their country.

It was the best of times. It was the worst of times.

After five minutes, a faded, red, 1978 Ford Pinto pulled up beside my door and stopped.  The driver looked like his car.  He was faded, worn, and beyond his prime.  He rolled down his right window and asked if we knew what had happened.  “No.”  He held up a portable ham radio and said it was a comet, and it had splashed in to the ocean 100 miles off the coast.  There had been considerable damage in the Los Angeles area.  We ask if he was going on to Los Angeles.  He said he lived in Indio and was as good as home.  We waved, and he drove off down the hill.  Jim and I looked at each other.  “We should go see if we can help.”  “Ya, lets go.”  As we drove on, the people we passed were standing beside their vehicles looking west.  Two CHP cruisers, heading west, passed us doing well over 100 miles an hour. 

I am writing to express my opposition to AB 962 which would require that all lawful purchases of
handgun ammunition be registered to the buyer by the ammunition seller who must keep the records
on the premises for review by law enforcement.
It would also require that ammunition buyers must make their purchases in person, not by mail order
or the internet, that handgun ammunition not be displayed by retailers in a location where customers
can have access to it, thus necessitating that the retailer obtain it from storage upon the specific
request of a potential buyer, and other related provisions.
AB 962 is unnecessary, costly and would be a burden to lawful dealers and lawful ammunition
buyers. If its purpose is to prevent crimes involving the use or possession of a handgun, it would be
ineffective.

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