User:Msh8171/sandbox

Evaluation of Overview of gun laws by nation
Article is rated S (start class) and is part of the WikiProjects for Firearms (deferred-class), Gun politics (c-class, mid-importance), Lists, and Law (S-class, low-importance.)

The list of "permissive" countries in the first paragraph seems overly long and distracting, without actually defining what "permissive" entails (until the third paragraph).

There seems to be a lack of citation in the introduction (only 3, all within the first paragraph.)

The "unlimited magazine" column in the table doesn't seem to be a fitting title and is empty for a lot of countries. Would recommend replacing with a "magazine restrictions" column to contain a short summary of information per country. "Free of checks" is confusing as it mentions two types (background and medical) and a "yes" answer indicates the lack of a check, rather than the presence - would recommend splitting into "required background check" and "required medical check" categories.

Breakdown by nation of gun laws seems to have a good amount of citations throughout (or is at least flagged in countries that need more) but a few sections could use clarification or removal of irrelevant material ("most common types of firearms", etc.)

Talk page seems to be discussing issues such as the inclusion of the EU, translation of North Korean law, and terminology of gun laws.

Editing Child access prevention law
Individual states decide what actions warrant criminal liability. As of 2019, 27 states and the District of Columbia have passed Child Access Prevention laws[4], though 11 states require "intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly" storing firearms to be criteria for criminal liability, rather than negligent storage[4]. Some states, such as California and Massachusetts, have more stringent CAP laws that impose criminal liability when a minor is merely likely to gain access to a gun that is negligently stored. [4] On the other end of the spectrum, some states, such as Utah, only impose criminal liability when a minor is directly provided a gun by an adult.[4] In Massachusetts, all firearms are required to be stored using locking device[6], and children unsupervised access to handgun result $5,000 fine and/or 2.5 years in jail.[7]