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The Gunslinger Syndicated Radio Show • April 25, 2025

California Gun Roster, Walther PPK .380 & Best Snubnose Revolvers for Carry

Mark from Woodland Hills calls in with two questions in one: whether a decades-old marijuana possession charge affects his in-law's ability to legally own firearms today, and why the only Walther pistols on the California Approved Handgun Roster are chambered in .22. Jeff answers both, and on the Walther question, it becomes a broader look at how the California roster has effectively closed the door on most of the modern handgun market for no mechanical reason. A second Mark, this one calling from Phoenix, wants a hammerless .38 snubnose for concealed carry as a backup to his everyday .380, and the crew works through the available options honestly.

1

Caller Mark, Woodland Hills: California DOJ Criminal History Lookup

Mark calls in with a two-part question. The first concerns his in-law, who caught a marijuana possession charge back in the 1980s – more than the allowable amount at the time – and now needs to know how that old conviction might affect his ability to legally own a firearm. The host points him to oag.ca.gov, the California Office of the Attorney General, where the criminal history information lookup lives. Mark plans to sit down with his in-law and walk through it together. That is exactly the right approach: check first, then act. Do not guess at your legal standing when the state offers a public tool to verify it.

2

The California Handgun Roster: Why Your Options Are Limited

Mark’s second question lands on the California Handgun Roster – specifically, he notices that the only Walther pistols listed are chambered in .22 Long Rifle. The host confirms it: the Walther P22 is the lone Walther on the roster at the time of the show.

For anyone unfamiliar with the roster, the host gives the straight account. California passed the handgun safety roster law in 2000, framed as a measure against Saturday night specials. In practice, it requires any manufacturer who wants to sell a new handgun in California to submit three sample guns of each model, pay a fee to the Department of Justice, and pass a list of testing requirements. If the gun clears the process, it goes on the roster and can be legally sold new in the state. If it does not, no sale. The roster shrinks over time as older models age out and manufacturers decline to pay the recurring fees for updated designs. It functions as a slow, quiet restriction on the new handgun market – one that does not touch used guns or private party transfers in the same way.

Mark wanted a Walther in .380 ACP for concealed carry – something like a PPK or PPK/S. The host’s solution: skip the new gun counter and look used or on consignment. As it happens, Gunslinger Auctions has at least one PPK or PPK/S available in their upcoming Saturday auction. To find it, go to gunslingerauctions.com, click the Bid Now button, and search PPKS in the search bar. The PPK/S is a double-action .380 – exactly what Mark is after. There is also a .32 ACP variant in the mix for anyone looking for that caliber, though Mark passes on the smaller round. Hard to argue with him.

3

Caller Mark, Phoenix: Snubnose Revolvers for Concealed Carry

The second Mark of the evening calls in from Phoenix. He carries a Ruger .380 as his everyday gun but is looking to add a hammerless snubnose .38 revolver to the rotation – something short-barreled, reliable, and suited for close-quarters carry in the Arizona heat.

Top Pick: The Kimber K6S

The host does not hesitate. The Kimber K6S is his first call, and he carries one himself. It is a stainless, six-shot, double-action revolver chambered in .38 Special and capable of handling .357 Magnum as well. The host loads his with .38 Special +P rounds and walks five miles a day with it in a belly band – through sweat, summer heat, and everything else Arizona can throw at a person. He has had no problems with it. The stainless finish handles moisture without rusting, and the balance and slim profile make it comfortable against the body. Street price runs around a thousand dollars.

Budget Option: Smith and Wesson Model 442

For the caller looking to spend closer to four or five hundred dollars, the host drops to the Smith and Wesson 442. It is a five-shot, hammerless, .38 Special revolver – lightweight, widely available, and proven in carry use. It loses one round compared to the Kimber, but for most defensive scenarios, five rounds of .38 +P from a few feet away is more than adequate. The 442 is the hammerless variant; the 640 series offers an exposed hammer for those who want the option of single-action fire. The S&W Bodyguard also comes up as a solid blue-steel alternative in this price range, and it ships from the factory with a built-in Crimson Trace laser – a practical addition at no extra cost for that configuration.

The host closes this segment with the same point he makes every week: a firearm is an investment. Paying a few hundred dollars more for something built to last a lifetime is a better deal than replacing a cheaper gun in five years. The Kimber is more money, but it earns it.

4

An Armed Society: Memories of the Pomona Gun Show

Between calls, the hosts take a moment to reflect on the culture around gun ownership. The observation is simple: gun shows, by and large, attract polite, courteous crowds. The host attributes that to the nature of people who take personal safety seriously – they do not need to be aggressive because they are not afraid. When someone did act up at a show, it got handled quickly. The atmosphere was civil because the people were prepared.

The Pomona Fairgrounds gun show gets a fond mention as a landmark event in its day. The show ran across every building on the fairgrounds – enormous hangar-sized spaces, especially Building Four. It ran Friday through Sunday, and three days was not enough to see everything. The host recalls crossing paths with Judge Ito, and a seven-foot-two basketball legend with a sky hook for a jump shot, and Tom Selleck, best known as Magnum PI. They were just people walking the tables, same as anyone else. The show had that quality. Zevier eventually ended it, and the host makes clear that was a loss for Southern California’s gun community.