Farmer Tries To Comply With California’s New Gun Laws, Gets Horrific Surprise

Farmer Tries To Comply With California’s New Gun Laws, Gets Horrific Surprise

source: https://goo.gl/gEB4SG
A farmer in Communist California recently tried to comply with the ultra-liberal state’s new gun laws by registering his rifles. However, he has gotten a horrific surprise that you don’t want to miss. This isn’t how a state government should treat law-abiding gun owners.

According to Blue Lives Matter, a farmer in Bakersfield, California, was recently arrested and charged with 12 felony weapons offenses after he tried to comply with the state’s new law. Jeffrey Scott Kirschenmann, a member of a prominent farming family, had his home raided in April before he was arrested. Court documents show that Kirschenmann had tried to register an AR-15 using the state of California’s website, according to local news source KGET.

KGET reported that Kirschenmann had tried to comply with California’s state-mandated gun registration laws, which require gun owners to register “assault-style weapons” by the end of June 2018. Kirschenmann is obviously being targeted by the state’s liberal run Department of Justice under California State Attorney General Xavier Becerra who has proven to be a full-fledged progressive.
Kirschenmann, who is the CEO of Scott Kirschenmann Farms, Inc., runs one of the chief potato suppliers for the potato chip company Frito Lay. In the wake of his arrest and the charges being brought against him by the left wing degenerates in Sacramento, Kirschenmann’s business relationships are sure to come under attack by the mainstream media. Likely, that will be an attempt to cripple his farming business simply because of the fact that he’s a pro-Second Amendment American.

The farmer had reportedly submitted photographs of his AR-15 via California’s website as part of the registration process. It wasn’t long before the California Department of Justice started an investigation into Kirschenmann and then raided his home. According to court documents, one of the firearms Kirschenmann tried to register was deemed to be “illegally modified” and was used by the state’s Department of Justice to obtain a warrant in