State law requires background checks for the sale or transfer of a firearm where either the purchaser or seller or the transferee or transferor is in Washington unless specifically exempted by state or federal law. This requirement applies to all sales or transfers including, but not limited to, sales and transfers through a licensed dealer, at gun shows, online, or between unlicensed individuals. When neither party to a prospective firearms transaction is a licensed dealer, the parties must complete the transaction through a licenses dealer who must process the sale or transfer as if it is selling or transferring the firearm from its own inventory.
Pursuant to legislation enacted in 2020, the Washington State Patrol (WSP) created an automated firearms background check system to conduct background checks on applicants for the purchase or transfer of firearms. Firearm dealers must now use the WSP system to process all firearm background checks.
When WSP receives a request from a dealer for a background check in connection with the sale or transfer of a firearm, WSP must:
When a person is detained under the Involuntary Treatment Act (ITA) for 72 hours on the grounds the person presents a likelihood of serious harm, but not detained for an additional 14 days, that person loses their right to possess a firearm for six months after the date of detention. The facility detaining the person must forward a copy of the person's identifying documents to the Department of Licensing and WSP. WSP must then forward the document to the NICS. The person's right to possess a firearm is automatically restored at the end of the six-month period. At the end of the six-month period WSP must forward notice that the person's right to possess a firearm has been restored to the NICS.
WSP firearms background check program is defined as meaning the division within the state patrol that conducts all firearm transfers and the disposition of firearms. Statutes concerning firearm background checks are updated to specifically reference the WSP firearms background check program.
After the six-month period in which a person has lost their right to possess a firearm due to a 72-hour detainment under the ITA, the WSP firearms background check program must remove the person from the NICS database rather than forwarding notice of the restoration of firearm rights to NICS.
Beginning July 1, 2025, and annually thereafter, the WSP firearms background check program must report the average time between receipt of requests for background checks and final decision to the appropriate committees of the Legislature.
The committee recommended a different version of the bill than what was heard. PRO: Firearm safety starts with a strong and reliable system of background checks. The creation of the Washington State Patrol firearm background check program moved Washington from a fragmented and often unreliable system to a robust single point of contact system. This bill simply updates statutes related to firearm background checks to reference the State Patrol system rather than the myriad precursors. This bill cleans up several statutes by removing references to local jurisdictions that no longer process firearm background checks. This also makes it easier for citizens to know where to go and who to contact when they have questions about background checks.
CON: The bill expands the recordkeeping requirements of the Department of Licensing by requiring the department to keep records of all firearm background checks. Keeping such records is illegal. There is no historical analog to this bill, and given recent U.S. Supreme caselaw, this bill is unconstitutional.