I'm not familiar with the term wobbler, but you are a convicted felon, you cannot own a handgun in any state in the U.S. unless you have had your rights to do so restored, which is (relatively) uncommon. If you have had your rights restored, you would know it, because there is a process you have to go through to do it. It's not something that just happens.
DISCUSSION: A wobbler is a type of crime that can upgrade its severity due to one or more factors, such as the value of the stolen item(s) (theft), quantity and type of items in possession (drugs), the number of previous convictions for the same crime (theft, drugs, prostitution), the type of victims who were affected (urinating in public, sexual crimes against children, elderly, or the disabled; battery on a law-enforcement officer).
In general, any felony makes you inelligible to own a handgun.
California Health and Safety code 12305: Illegal possesion of explosives. Misdemeanor or Felony also known as a wobbler in California.
It is known as a wobbler. It is always filed as a felony but can be set as a misdemeanor depending on the circumstances.
They can forbid you to possess any firearm.
In this case, disability means a condition that makes it illegal for you to own a gun, such as having been convicted of a felony.
It's a crime that can be charged either as a Misdemeanor or a Felony
It depends on why you were arrested. More specifically, it depends on whether you were convicted of a crime, and what you were convicted of. Most misdemeanors will not disqualify you from owning a firearm, but any any felony will.
No. Federal Law says that anyone convicted of a Felony is ineligible to own a firearm under the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act.
Bullet proof vests are legal in the state of California unless you have been convicted of a felony.
If it was a felony, no.
Section 422 of the California Penal Code is defined as criminal threats. This crime is commonly referred to as a "wobbler" meaning it can be filed or charged as misdemeanor or felony.
A felony is going to be forever. Convicted criminals remain for life unless the court expunges their record.