Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson wrote a letter to the state’s 39 sheriffs addressing points of confusion over a recently passed gun safety initiative. Several sheriffs said they would not enforce the new controversial law.

Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson released a document answering frequently asked questions about Initiative 1639, which is one of the nation’s strictest gun laws.

On Monday, Ferguson sent a letter to all 39 sheriffs across the state directing them to the newly released document. Several Washington sheriffs have come out and said they would not enforce the measure until it is decided by the courts.

“Recent public statements from your colleagues regarding the refusal to enforce Initiative 1639, approved by nearly 60% of Washington voters last November, suggest widespread misunderstanding regarding the requirements and status of the new law,” Ferguson wrote in the letter.

I-1639 raises the purchase age of semi-automatic rifles to 21, incentivizes safe storage, and creates enhanced background checks for rifles that are line with the checks for handguns in the state. The initiative also authorizes the state to require gun sellers to add $25 to sales of semi-automatic rifles to pay for new regulations.

Last month, Ferguson wrote in an open letter that local law enforcement was entitled to their opinions on the law, but that does not give them license to not enforce it.