KEY POINTS
  • A U.S. judge on Tuesday struck down a nearly century-old California law that banned handgun ads at gun shops
  • The 1923 law banned any handgun ads at gun shops that were visible from outside the store.
  • The law, however, did not restrict ads for other firearms.
A U.S. judge has struck down a nearly century-old California law that banned gun shops from advertising handguns on their premises. 

A U.S. judge on Tuesday struck down a nearly century-old California law that banned handgun ads at gun shops, saying the state failed to show it would prevent suicides or crime.

The 1923 law banned any handgun ads at gun shops that were visible from outside the store. State officials argued the ads would spur impulsive people to buy a handgun, and impulsive people are more prone to suicide and crime.