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Trump's DOJ to investigate LA Sheriff's Department over long waits for gun permits

Kevin Rector, Clara Harter and Keri Blakinger, Los Angeles Times on

Published in News & Features

LOS ANGELES — The federal Department of Justice says it has launched an investigation into whether the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department is violating people’s gun rights with excessive fees and wait times for concealed carry permits.

The DOJ announced Thursday afternoon that it was opening an investigation into the Sheriff’s Department’s possible abuse of Second Amendment rights, part of a broader review of “restrictive firearms-related laws” in California and other states.

The federal authorities cited a lawsuit that challenged the 18-month delay plaintiffs faced in receiving concealed carry licenses from LASD as a reason for the probe. A DOJ news release stated that it is likely others are “experiencing similarly long delays that are unduly burdening, or effectively denying, the Second Amendment rights of the people of Los Angeles.”

The Justice Department called California a “particularly egregious offender” that has resisted the Supreme Court’s recent pro-Second Amendment rulings and enacted new legislation to further restrict the right to bear arms. Last month, Trump directed Attorney General Pam Bondi to launch a review of Second Amendment law and infringements nationwide.

“This Department of Justice will not stand idly by while States and localities infringe on the Second Amendment rights of ordinary, law-abiding Americans,” said Bondi in a statement about the LASD investigation. “The Second Amendment is not a second-class right, and under my watch, the Department will actively enforce the Second Amendment just like it actively enforces other fundamental constitutional rights.”

The Sheriff’s Department issued a statement Thursday, saying it respects and upholds the Second Amendment. The department said limited staff and a backlog of applications are to blame for the delays in permit approvals.

“We are committed to processing all Concealed Carry Weapons (CCW) applications in compliance with state and local laws to promote responsible gun ownership,” the statement said. “The Department is facing a significant staffing crisis, with only 14 personnel in our CCW Unit, yet we have successfully approved 15,000 CCW applications. Currently, we are diligently working through approximately 4,000 active cases, striving to meet this unfunded mandate.”

Jacob Charles, an associate professor of law at Pepperdine Caruso School of Law who studies the Second Amendment, said he had not seen a similar investigation before. It struck him as “another culture war issue pitting red versus blue” amid a broader flurry of “partisan targeting” by the Trump administration of liberal jurisdictions and groups.

 

“This has to be seen in the context of Trump attacking law firms, universities, and cities, counties and states who don’t profess fealty to him personally and to his vision,” Charles said. “He’s not even pretending to be a president for all of America.”

Chuck Michel, president of the California Rifle and Pistol Association, celebrated the investigation and told the Los Angeles Times it “is one result” of his group’s lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of LASD’s concealed carry permitting process.

“I think the reason the DOJ is getting involved in this particular jurisdiction is because of the things we uncovered in this lawsuit,” he said.

Michel said he would not be surprised if the investigation expanded beyond the county, because other jurisdictions and police agencies in California, including the Los Angeles Police Department, are also guilty of long wait times and exorbitant costs for permits.

“The primary issues that we are now facing from somewhat recalcitrant jurisdictions is excessive fees to go through an application process and excessive wait times to try to get a license — and wait times that exceed the state 120-day limit, some going out to 18 months or two years,” he said.

Bondi said she hopes Thursday’s announcement will prompt other localities to “voluntarily embrace their duty to protect Second Amendment rights.” If not, this investigation will be the first of many similar ones in California and across the country, she added.


©2025 Los Angeles Times. Visit at latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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