Member Of Prominent California Farming Family Faces Felony Weapons Charges After Registering Weapons
What may be legal today in California, may be illegal tomorrow.
The District Attorneys office filed a dozen felony gun charges Thursday against a member of a prominent farming family.
According to court documents, the California Department of Justice raided Jeffrey Scott Kirschenmanns home last month, after he tried to register an illegally modified gun online through the states website.
What they found in his home, led to the DA filing charges: a dozen guns, 230 rounds of ammunition and two silencers seized from Jeffrey Scott Kirschenmanns home in a gated community in Northwest Bakersfield.
Records from the Secretary of States office list Kirschenmann as the CEO of Scott Kirschenmann Farms, Inc. with the same lamont mailing address as Kirschenmann Farms, Inc. the local grower known for its potatoes used by Frito Lay to make chips.
Kirschenmann is out on $150,000 bail, accused of 12 felonies for possessing assault rifles, silencers and a multi-burst trigger activator.
Poster Comment:
Only 230 rounds of ammo? Pitiful. Could be a great SCOTUS case, dumbass tries to comply with gunlaws gets busted registering his guns, they all get confiscated. 12 felony charges.