
Ruling impacts buying or selling of high-capacity magazines capable of holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition
Brett Davis
The Center Square Washington
State Supreme Court Commissioner Michael Johnston ruled Thursday morning that the buying or selling of high-capacity magazines – those capable of holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition – will remain illegal in Washington while legal challenges against the ban are being decided.
That means Johnston is keeping in place an emergency stay he issued earlier this month.
The ban had been effectively overturned on April 8 when Cowlitz County Superior Court Judge Gary Bashor ruled the law itself was unconstitutional in a lawsuit between the state and Gator’s Custom Guns in Kelso and issued an injunction to stop the state from enforcing the ban.
Within 90 minutes of Bashor’s ruling, Johnston approved a request by the Attorney General’s Office to stay the lower court’s ruling.
Bashor in his ruling striking down Washington’s high-capacity magazine ban referenced the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2022 Bruen decision, in which the nation’s highest court ruled 6-3 that firearm regulations must be “consistent with the Nation’s historical tradition and firearm regulation.”
In Thursday’s 81-page opinion, Johnston circled back to “highly debatable” issues in Bashor’s decision that he mentioned in a hearing last week.
“Stated another way, debatability does not turn on a finding that the lower court erred, but rather, whether reasonable minds can differ on the issue at hand,” Johnston wrote, saying he considered the potential harm that could result from lifting the stay and allowing high-capacity magazines to be sold in the meantime.
“The historical record shows that [large-capacity magazines] greatly increase the number of fatalities and injuries inflicted in a mass shooting and that the frequency of such incidents has grown in recent years,” Johnston wrote. “The idea that I could lift the stay and something awful happens with a [large capacity magazine] that would not have been obtained but for that decision keeps me awake at night.”
Washington’s high-capacity magazine ban went into effect on July 1, 2022. The ban prohibits the sale of magazines with a capacity of more than 10 rounds, along with the manufacturing, distribution or import of said magazines in the state.
This report was first published by The Center Square Washington.
Also read:
- Opinion: What would it take for elected officials to believe high earners are leaving Washington?Capital gains tax collections fell more than 50% in 2024 despite a 25% stock market gain that year.
- The Study of Sports Podcast May 13, 2026: The playoffs have started for Washington high school sports, plus how the three of us have adapted to new roles in our careersPaul Valencia, Cale Piland, and Tony Liberatore reunite to cover spring playoffs and Vancouver’s newest burger joint.
- Opinion: IBR creates 50,000 road refugeesLars Larson argues IBR’s tolling plan would push 50,000 daily commuters off I-5 onto I-205.
- Arrest made in 2025 Fern Prairie fatal collisionMatthew Kenne’s blood alcohol was above 0.08 when his Jeep struck a tree, killing 18-year-old Nicholas Ortiz.
- Opinion: It’s time to save taxpayers from Sound Transit’s strategic misrepresentationSound Transit’s ST3 rail program faces a $35 billion shortfall, and Southwest Washington taxpayers could bear new costs.
- Opinion: A tax scam based on a climate lieNancy Churchill argues the CCA costs families 52+ cents per gallon while missing every emissions target.
- C-TRAN board asks IBR to bring light rail to Library Square, with no protection for taxpayersC-TRAN’s board rejected 7-2 an amendment shielding taxpayers from extra costs tied to a light rail extension that could approach $1 billion.








