The law that took effect on 1/1/2000 covers only firearms classified by the state as "assault weapons". The article makes it sound like it covers all firearms. That is complete nonsense.
There is not now nor has there ever been a registration requirement for non-"assault" long guns unless they are fully automatic or fit the state's definition of short-barrelled rifles or shotguns.
Handgun registration is de facto, not de jure: Starting in 1968 every lawful transfer of a handgun in California has been reported to the Department of Justice, so it at least theoretically has a list of every handgun and who owns it,
except for ones transferred before reporting began, and homebuilt ones. It's not an actual registry, just a reporting requirement. I personally own two handguns that are not known to the DoJ, and it's perfectly legal for me to have them. There is one other exception that is not covered by the law: If you send a handgun out for repairs and it comes back with a different frame (i.e. a new serial number), there is no procedure and no legal requirement to update the state's records.
If you give a handgun as a gift to a family member you have to report that transfer on a special form -
http://caag.state.ca.us/firearms/forms/pdf/oplaw.pdf . But the only situation in which you can "register" a handgun that is not already on the DoJ's unofficial registry is when you move to California from another state. See
http://caag.state.ca.us/firearms/ab991.htm . You do NOT have to register rifles or shotguns; there is no way to do so (except for those that qualify as "assault weapons", which you cannot legally import). The state has
absolutely no records of rifles and shotguns other than the small number of "assault weapons" that are grandfathered.
The article seems to be about SOME kind of racial disparity in the way a law related to firearms is being enforced, but it's so garbled up with nonsense that even with my intimate knowledge of California gun laws I can't tell what law they're talking about.
:shrug: