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PCPenal CodeMisdemeanor

California Penal Code §417.25Aiming Laser Scope or Laser Pointer at Another Person

PC §417.25 makes it a MISDEMEANOR to intentionally aim or point a LASER SCOPE (attached to a firearm) or LASER POINTER at another person in a threatening manner, with the specific intent to cause a reasonable person to fear bodily harm. Penalty is up to 30 days in county jail for a first offense; subsequent offenses expose the defendant to up to 6 months county jail. Separately, PC §417.26 makes aiming a laser scope at a peace officer punishable by up to 1 year county jail. Federal 18 USC §39A criminalizes aiming a laser pointer at aircraft.

Reviewed by Daniel S. Rubin, CA Bar 302093 · Los Angeles Criminal Defense Attorney · Aiming Laser Scope or Laser Pointer at Another Person Cases in All LA County Courts

01 — Quick Facts

PC §417.25 — Aiming Laser Scope or Laser Pointer at Another Person at a Glance

FactDetail
Full NameCalifornia Penal Code §417.25 — Aiming Laser Scope or Laser Pointer at Another Person
Code TypePenal Code (PC)
ClassificationMisdemeanor
PenaltyUp to 30 days county jail (first offense) / up to 6 months (subsequent)
Controlling DefinitionPC §417.25 — 'laser scope' means portable battery-powered device attached to firearm emitting laser beam used as sighting device; 'laser pointer' means handheld device emitting laser beam designed as a pointer
Mens Rea StandardSpecific intent (§417.25) — otherwise general intent + In re Jorge M. knowledge gloss
Firearm Rights§29805 10-yr (misdo) / §29800 lifetime + §922(g)(1) (felony)
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01 — What Is PC §417.25?

What Is California Penal Code §417.25?

PC §417.25 Reads:

"California Penal Code §417.25 — Aiming Laser Scope or Laser Pointer at Another Person. Penalty: Up to 30 days county jail (first offense) / up to 6 months (subsequent). Controlling definition: PC §417.25 — 'laser scope' means portable battery-powered device attached to firearm emitting laser beam used as sighting device; 'laser pointer' means handheld device emitting laser beam designed as a pointer."

California Penal Code §417.25 (paraphrased)

PC §417.25 — Aiming Laser Scope or Laser Pointer at Another Person — is part of California's weapons and public-safety framework. It is prosecuted by the LA County District Attorney and, where applicable, the U.S. Attorney's Office. PC §417.25 makes it a MISDEMEANOR to intentionally aim or point a LASER SCOPE (attached to a firearm) or LASER POINTER at another person in a threatening manner, with the specific intent to cause a reasonable person to fear bodily harm. Penalty is up to 30 days in county jail for a first offense; subsequent offenses expose the defendant to up to 6 months county jail. Separately, PC §417.26 makes aiming a laser scope at a peace officer punishable by up to 1 year county jail. Federal 18 USC §39A criminalizes aiming a laser pointer at aircraft.

Statutory Definition and Core Litigation Issues

The definition — PC §417.25 — 'laser scope' means portable battery-powered device attached to firearm emitting laser beam used as sighting device; 'laser pointer' means handheld device emitting laser beam designed as a pointer — is the pivotal element in every §417.25 prosecution. Rubin Law, P.C. defends by challenging the statutory elements at preliminary hearing (§995 dismissal), litigating Fourth Amendment suppression (§1538.5), and (where applicable) negotiating §17(b) reduction, §1170(h) split sentencing, or diversion.

Within §417.25 Statutory Scope

Full statutory exposure — Up to 30 days county jail (first offense) / up to 6 months (subsequent)

Outside §417.25 Statutory Scope

Case dismissed — no violation.

Why the §417.25 Definition Drives Defense

The specific-intent element, laser-scope vs. laser-pointer classification, and reasonable-fear analysis drive these cases.

02 — Elements of the Crime

Elements the Prosecution Must Prove Under PC §417.25

The prosecution must prove each of the following beyond a reasonable doubt.

01

Item Is a Laser Scope or Laser Pointer

Portable battery-powered laser device — either firearm-mounted sighting laser (scope) or handheld pointer.

Defense angle: Item is a flashlight, LED, non-laser sighting device, or item lacking §417.25 laser characteristics.
02

Aiming or Pointing at Another Person

Physical aiming of the laser beam at the alleged victim's body.

Defense angle: Beam aimed at wall, target, or object — not at the person. Ricochet or accidental contact insufficient.
03

Threatening Manner

Aimed in a threatening manner such that a reasonable person would fear bodily harm.

Defense angle: Presentation was demonstration, play, or professional use (presentation laser pointer at business meeting).
04

Specific Intent to Cause Fear

Defendant SPECIFICALLY INTENDED to cause reasonable person to fear bodily harm — this is a specific-intent crime.

Defense angle: No intent to threaten — accidental sweep of beam, mistaken identity, or intent to warn/signal rather than threaten.

04 — Penalties

Penalties for PC §417.25 Aiming Laser Scope or Laser Pointer at Another Person in California

§417.25 is a straight misdemeanor.

ChargeCodePrison TermProbationStrike
Misdemeanor §417.25PC §417.25Up to 30 days county jail (first offense) / up to 6 months (subsequent)StandardNo
Concurrent §29800(a)(1)PC §29800(a)(1)16 months, 2, or 3 years — if prior felonyRareNo
Concurrent §245(a)(1) if force usedPC §245(a)(1)Up to 4 years — strikeAvailableYes
Gang EnhancementPC §186.22(b)Adds 2, 3, or 4 yearsRareYes

Enhancements That Increase §417.25 Exposure

School Grounds

PC §626.9 / §626.10

Firearm or weapon on school grounds — separate felony or wobbler exposure.

Courthouse / Airport

PC §171b / 49 USC §46505

Weapon in courthouse or airport — state wobbler and federal 10-year exposure.

Gang Predicate

PC §186.22(b)

Adds 2-4 years and converts to strike.

Prior Convictions

PC §667.5(b)

Prior prison priors support enhanced sentencing on felony filing.

Great Bodily Injury

PC §12022.7

Adds 3 years when GBI inflicted during a felony.

Beyond the Sentence

  • PC §29805 10-year firearm prohibition on misdemeanor firearm-related conviction; §29800 lifetime on felony
  • Federal 18 USC §922(g) firearm prohibition on felony conviction
  • Immigration consequences under 8 USC §1227(a)(2)(C) on felony firearm conviction — case-specific analysis
  • Employment and professional-license consequences
  • School / campus disciplinary consequences (on §626.9 school-zone cases)
  • TSA / travel disclosure consequences

05 — Defense Strategies

How Rubin Law Defends PC §417.25 Aiming Laser Scope or Laser Pointer at Another Person Charges

§417.25 defenses focus on statutory-element challenges, mens rea, and Fourth Amendment suppression.

Statutory Definition / Element Challenge

Prosecution must prove the specific statutory elements of §417.25. Definition-driven cases resolve on §995 dismissal or trial acquittal.

PC §417.25

No Knowing / Specific Intent

Mens rea challenge — no knowledge, mistake of fact, borrowed item / vehicle defense. Where §417.25 is specific-intent, prosecution must prove the required mental state beyond reasonable doubt.

Mens Rea

Constructive-Possession Defense

Shared vehicle, third-party bag, roommate's property. People v. Sifuentes.

People v. Sifuentes

Fourth Amendment Suppression

Warrantless search, Terry-stop overreach, Rodriguez prolongation, pretextual vehicle / bag search. PC §1538.5 motion.

PC §1538.5

Statutory Exemption

Licensed dealer, CCW permit, law enforcement, private-property, or antique / sporting exemption where applicable.

Statutory Exemption

Fifth Amendment Miranda

Custodial interrogation without Miranda advisement; statements suppressed under Miranda v. Arizona.

Miranda v. Arizona

07 — Court Process

How PC §417.25 Aiming Laser Scope or Laser Pointer at Another Person Cases Move Through Los Angeles Courts

§417.25 cases follow the weapons-prosecution track with heavy motion practice.

  1. 1

    Step 1Police Encounter

    Cases arise from 911 calls, traffic stops, probation searches, school-resource-officer investigations, and consent searches.

  2. 2

    Step 2Item / Firearm Examination

    LAPD SID / LASD firearms unit or ATF examines the item and confirms statutory-definition elements. Expert reports frequently disputed at prelim.

  3. 3

    Step 3Filing Decision

    DA files straight misdemeanor.

  4. 4

    Step 4Motion Practice

    PC §1538.5 suppression, §995 dismissal on element defense, In re Jorge M. mens-rea challenges, Miranda motions, and (where applicable) §17(b) reduction.

  5. 5

    Step 5Preliminary Hearing (Felony Track)

    Element-by-element testimony, expert examination of item, and Fourth Amendment record litigated at prelim.

  6. 6

    Step 6Resolution

    Dismissal on element / suppression defense, plea to lesser included, probation, diversion (case-specific), or trial.

Reviewed by Your Attorney

Daniel S. Rubin — Los Angeles Aiming Laser Scope or Laser Pointer at Another Person Defense Attorney

Daniel S. Rubin has defended clients charged with aiming laser scope or laser pointer at another person and related offenses in Los Angeles County courts — including Clara Shortridge Foltz, Van Nuys, Compton, and Pomona. He understands that these cases are won in the details: the suppression hearing that eliminates key evidence, the preliminary hearing cross-examination that exposes a weak witness, the penalty phase argument that keeps a client out of the worst outcome.

This page was written and reviewed by Daniel A. Rubin, Los Angeles criminal defense attorney, CA State Bar 302093, with 10+ years of experience defending clients charged under PC §417.25 in Los Angeles County. Last reviewed: July 2026.

CA Bar 302093 | Whittier Law School | Rising Star — Super Lawyers 2019–2023 | Aiming Laser Scope or Laser Pointer at Another Person Cases Throughout LA County

See our full Aiming Laser Scope or Laser Pointer at Another Person defense practice

09 — FAQs

PC §417.25 Aiming Laser Scope or Laser Pointer at Another Person Questions — Los Angeles

What is the penalty for PC §417.25?

PC §417.25 carries up to 30 days county jail (first offense) / up to 6 months (subsequent). It is a straight misdemeanor — no felony exposure on the base offense.

What is the statutory definition governing PC §417.25?

The controlling definition is PC §417.25 — 'laser scope' means portable battery-powered device attached to firearm emitting laser beam used as sighting device; 'laser pointer' means handheld device emitting laser beam designed as a pointer. The definition is the pivotal litigation issue in every §417.25 prosecution and drives §995 motions and preliminary-hearing strategy.

Does §417.25 require specific intent?

Yes — PC §417.25 is a specific-intent crime; the prosecution must prove intent to cause reasonable person to fear bodily harm.

What counts as 'possession' under §417.25?

Actual or constructive possession. Actual = on person / immediate control. Constructive = dominion and control over the location with knowledge of the item's presence. People v. Sifuentes constructive-possession analysis applies.

Are there statutory exemptions to PC §417.25?

Statutory exemptions are limited; the prosecution's burden focuses on the elements rather than exemption defenses in most §417.25 cases.

Can §417.25 be reduced or dismissed?

On misdemeanor §417.25, resolution focuses on element / suppression dismissal, diversion where available, or probation plea.

What are the immigration consequences of a §417.25 conviction?

Felony firearm-related convictions may qualify as aggravated felonies under 8 USC §1101(a)(43)(E) and trigger removability under 8 USC §1227(a)(2)(C). Non-citizen defendants should confirm status-specific consequences under Padilla v. Kentucky before entering any plea.

What are the firearm-rights consequences of a §417.25 conviction?

Misdemeanor firearm-related conviction triggers a 10-year California firearm prohibition under PC §29805. Felony conviction triggers a LIFETIME California firearm prohibition under PC §29800 and a federal prohibition under 18 USC §922(g)(1). PC §17(b) reduction and PC §1203.4 dismissal do NOT restore federal firearm rights.

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Charged Under PC §417.25 Laser Pointer / Scope?

The specific-intent element, laser-scope vs. laser-pointer classification, and reasonable-fear analysis drive these cases. Call Rubin Law, P.C. — free consult (213) 723-2337.