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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

San Francisco swaps gifts for guns


Mikail Ali,  of the Mayor's Office of Criminal Justice, holds a rifle collected during San Francisco's
Jason Dearen Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO – A man carrying a semiautomatic handgun approached a group of San Francisco police officers Saturday afternoon and, with a smile, handed over the pistol in exchange for $150 in gift cards.

“I used to fire it at bottles or do some plinking in the woods,” said the gun’s owner, 48-year-old Bruce Bourne. “But I have a 6-year-old daughter now and my wife was uncomfortable with it being in the house.”

For a few hours on a sunny yet brisk Saturday, San Francisco police officers accepted 100 guns from about 80 people in the city’s second “Gifts for Guns” event. The first event in July brought in 117 handguns and 2 shotguns.

The idea is to make the streets seem a little safer when the city’s murder rate has risen in recent years – San Francisco has had at least 89 homicides so far this year.

Among the 100 guns collected Saturday were 4 assault rifles and two sawed-off shotguns, said Mikail Ali, director of the Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice.

As Ali discussed the city’s efforts to curb violence another man walked up with a large, black gun case. He took out a black assault rifle with a folding stock and pistol grip and turned it in.

“Twenty years ago you could buy a gun like that legally in California. Some were registered properly, some weren’t,” Ali said.

California law makes owning an assault weapon illegal, but Gifts for Guns allows people to turn in their firearms without showing identification, and officials promise not to ask any questions about the guns’ origins.

Once in police custody the guns are checked with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms to see if they were stolen. Ali said 99 percent of the guns recovered are destroyed. If the guns were stolen, they are returned to their owners, if possible.

Participants received $100 gift cards for turning in rifles or shotguns, $150 cards for revolvers or semiautomatic pistols and $200 cards for assault-type weapons.