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Nearly 200 people have had their guns seized in N.J. under new ‘red flag’ law

What obvious mistake was not fixed? The man’s firearm was not taken in the video?

Read!

I was talking about a case out of I think Florida. The guy lost his guns because his name matches the person reported. Never mind that his description very much doesn't match. The burden is on him to get her (the woman who reported the guy) to come to court to testify he's not the one she was talking about--but he has no power to compel her to show up.
Do you have a link to substantiate your rendition of events?

Here's most of it: https://www.alloutdoor.com/2019/08/20/florida-man-loses-cc-license-guns-mistaken-identity/
 
Pay attention, the law worked because his guns were not confiscated.

And I suppose you're fine with the police coming questioning you about a crime because the perp was identified as a white male.
Oh, get the fuck over yourself.

Cops respond to 'false' complaints thousands of times a day. Just because this one happens to involve guns, doesn't really make it any different.

As a general rule, I don't trust cops. I think they are some of the worst people on the planet. However, gun nuts are quickly getting to the same level.

This isn't the police responding to a false complaint, the police initiated this.
 
So by your description of no complaints, this example has nothing to do with red flag laws.

As far as I know the red flag laws may entail not just complaints or reports, but anything that raises concerns for the authorities. It's possible that the group or political movement someone is associated may count as being a concern. If someone is associated with a radical organization, citizen militia, etc, that may be cause to raise a red flag (it probably should.)

However, the issue is seizing someones property without sufficient evidence. A complaint alone is not sufficient evidence to seize someones firearms....malicious intent by the complainant, etc.

I don't think anyone would complain about action taken on good reason based on evidence.
You admit you have no idea what the red flag process entails, yet you continue to complain about it. You have no evidence that a complaint is sufficient to generate a temporary seizure, one that can be reversed.

Haven't you noticed that our problem is with the process, not the basic idea? Doesn't that suggest we aren't being gun nuts, but rather objecting to specific problems?
 
You admit you have no idea what the red flag process entails, yet you continue to complain about it. You have no evidence that a complaint is sufficient to generate a temporary seizure, one that can be reversed.

Haven't you noticed that our problem is with the process, not the basic idea? Doesn't that suggest we aren't being gun nuts, but rather objecting to specific problems?
No, because you are imagining problems.
 
You admit you have no idea what the red flag process entails, yet you continue to complain about it. You have no evidence that a complaint is sufficient to generate a temporary seizure, one that can be reversed.

Haven't you noticed that our problem is with the process, not the basic idea? Doesn't that suggest we aren't being gun nuts, but rather objecting to specific problems?
No, because you are imagining problems.

No, we are not. And not surprising, there isn't one set of red flag laws. They vary from state to state, some being more reasonable than others but many if not most still have the potential for misapplication and injustice.

''Indiana’s law allows police to seize firearms without first obtaining a judicial order. However, they must then submit a statement to a judge, who can overturn the officer’s decision and refuse to issue a preliminary order, according to Giffords. Similar to other states, that preliminary order requires a hearing on a final order be held within 14 days.''

''The "red flag" law allows police to temporarily confiscate firearms from people who are threatening to harm themselves or others. No warrant or judge's signature is necessary.''

More;

''Most red flag laws are vague on what constitutes a “significant danger,” which gives courts broad discretion to seize firearms, Parris said. And in some states, respondents are not guaranteed representation in court, since these are civil and not criminal matters.

Many defense lawyers say respondents fare much better with legal representation. Of Parris’ seven cases that have gone to a hearing, she has won five — which she said is a “vastly higher” success record than when someone represents themselves.
Due Process Concerns

Seventeen states and D.C. have laws on the books that allow law enforcement or family members to petition courts to remove weapons from people who may be dangerous and prevent them from buying other weapons for up to a year. In many of these states, bipartisan groups of lawmakers led the drive to pass the legislation.

States define “red flags” differently, but they largely follow the same process for taking away somebody’s guns.''

In many cases, the subject of a petition can’t present a defense until the final hearing. But that’s where the process gets legally dubious to some critics.

Dave Kopel, research director at the Independence Institute, a Denver-based libertarian think tank, said states have taken the same approach President Donald Trump spoke in favor of in March 2018: “Take the guns first, go through due process second.”

When it comes to seizing guns through a temporary order, the standards that a judge uses should be high, Kopel said. Vermont, he believes, has a fair system, which requires “specific facts” that show “an imminent and extreme risk.”
 
I have a question.

How many people will be killed because of these red flag laws?

Now compare that to the number killed now.


I'm not against red flag laws. I support red flag laws. I am merely expressing concerns about how they are defined and implemented. Some states appear to have a reasonable balance between public safety and the individual, others not. The concern is that innocent people may be punished because of malicious or frivolous claims, which a judge may approve on the basis of better safe than sorry. Meanwhile the victim of the malicious or frivolous claim faces court, paying lawyers, reputation questioned...which may be the very result a malicious claimant was looking to get.

In other words, the potential problems with red flag laws if they do not have sufficient safeguards in place. And as mentioned, these vary from state to state.
 
I have a question.

How many people will be killed because of these red flag laws?

Somewhere near right about zero - or less.

Worldtraveler said:
Now compare that to the number killed now.

I don't think pragmatism matters to a purist. All that matters is perfection. That people will die because guns were not perfectly confiscated is irrelevant. The constitution is holy and inviolate and finished. The constitution is not an ongoing human process, it is something like a god. We all need to be as perfect as the constitution. Hail the constitution!

I think police officers should have to obtain a writ before they can handcuff anyone, anywhere, anytime.

/snarky point making.
 
No, because you are imagining problems.

No, we are not.,,,
Yes you are. Bringing up potential issues is exactly that. Your example hsd nothing to do with red flag laws. LP’s example if a mistake was quickly rectified.

Potential issues are there. They have been described in relation to the red flag laws. Did you not read the articles provided?

LP's example is probably not the only mistake to have happened. A mistake is not as bad as wrongful or malicious accusation, perhaps a vindictive ex partner, which is not so easy to rectify.
 
So, again, some of the issues being raised.

Pretty much what I have been saying:

Quote:
''In a 14-page analysis, the organization (the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Rhode Island), last year took issue with “the breadth of this legislation, its impact on civil liberties, and the precedent it sets for the use of coercive measures against individuals, not because they are alleged to have committed any crime, but because somebody believes they might, someday, commit one.”

Possible violation of due process is the primary concern of this paper, which likens this law to the science fiction scenario of The Minority Report, in which precognitive police try to stop crimes before they’re committed.

The paper also argues that an ERPO “could be issued without any indication that the person poses an imminent threat to others, and without any evidence that he or she ever committed, or has even threatened to commit, an act of violence with a firearm.”

It also points out that a respondent is not automatically appointed counsel for a court hearing, and that ultimately the burden of regaining possession of confiscated guns is placed on the respondent.

The paper questions whether “overblown political rhetoric” on social media might constitute grounds for a judge to issue one these orders. Also, it expresses concern that police might someday use this law “as a shortcut to seize lawfully owned weapons” from suspected gang members, or “as a general search warrant that could conveniently allow police to ‘stumble across’ evidence of unrelated illegal activity.”

Finally, there’s the unintentional social damage that such an order might do to a respondent, since the law could allow police “to warn potentially hundreds of people that the individual might pose a significant danger to them.”



The national ACLU has taken a more ambiguous stance on red flag laws, saying only that these laws “must at a minimum have clear, nondiscriminatory criteria for defining persons as dangerous and a fair process for those affected to object and be heard by a court,” but without going into further specifics.

Many of the concerns raised by the Rhode Island ACLU are shared by the Rutherford Institute, a legal defense nonprofit generally viewed as the ACLU’s conservative mirror-image. “The major due process concern with ERPOs is that they allow a person to be deprived of property (a gun) and liberty (their Second Amendment right) before they are granted an opportunity to be heard,” John W. Whitehead, president of The Rutherford Institute...''
 
I have a question.

How many people will be killed because of these red flag laws?

Now compare that to the number killed now.


I'm not against red flag laws. I support red flag laws. I am merely expressing concerns about how they are defined and implemented. Some states appear to have a reasonable balance between public safety and the individual, others not. The concern is that innocent people may be punished because of malicious or frivolous claims, which a judge may approve on the basis of better safe than sorry. Meanwhile the victim of the malicious or frivolous claim faces court, paying lawyers, reputation questioned...which may be the very result a malicious claimant was looking to get.

In other words, the potential problems with red flag laws if they do not have sufficient safeguards in place. And as mentioned, these vary from state to state.
Why do you not seem so "concerned" about people dying?
 
No.





And be it further enacted,Rules of discipline. That the rules of discipline, approved and established by Congress in their resolution of the twenty-ninth of March, one thousand seven hundred and seventy-nine, shall be the rules of discipline to be observed by the militia throughout the United States, except such deviations from the said rules as may be rendered necessary by the requisitions of this act, or by some other unavoidable circumstances. It shall be the duty of the commanding officer at every muster, whether by battalion, regiment, or single company, to cause the militia to be exercised and trained agreeably to the said rules of discipline.

How often have you mustered, Trausti?

How do you not interpret “each and every white male citizen” as everyone? (In 1862 it was expanded to all males.) Note that each person is to arm themselves. Why is it that the “right of the people” to keep and bear arms is always ignored? The Second Amendment does not say the “right of Congress” or the “right of the States.” The whole point of the Bill of Rights was to limit the power of government.

why is it that the "WELL REGULATED" part is always ignored?
 
I have a question.

How many people will be killed because of these red flag laws?

Now compare that to the number killed now.


I'm not against red flag laws. I support red flag laws. I am merely expressing concerns about how they are defined and implemented. Some states appear to have a reasonable balance between public safety and the individual, others not. The concern is that innocent people may be punished because of malicious or frivolous claims, which a judge may approve on the basis of better safe than sorry. Meanwhile the victim of the malicious or frivolous claim faces court, paying lawyers, reputation questioned...which may be the very result a malicious claimant was looking to get.

In other words, the potential problems with red flag laws if they do not have sufficient safeguards in place. And as mentioned, these vary from state to state.
Why do you not seem so "concerned" about people dying?


That is a concern. I have said that I support red flag laws. The only issue being not to trample on civil rights and punish innocent gun owners.

There is always a trade off between liberties and rights and safety. Most people are prepared to take the risk of driving on the roads...where more people are probably killed or injured than by guns.

The concern is achieving a balance between civil rights and public safety. Total control or confiscation of all firearms is not going to happen, so a balance has to be found.

The problem here is people being punished for no good reason, perhaps a subjective assessment based on someones claim, a claim that may have malicious intent.
 
So, again, some of the issues being raised..,,
More “some people are saying” about potential issues does not rebut my point that you have no evidence of actual problems.

The problems have been described in every article I provided.

Once again:

''The process of issuing a GVRO in most states starts with someone petitioning the court for it. States vary on who can bring these petitions. In some states, only direct family members and dating partners can petition the court for a GVRO. In others, though, this list is expanded to former dating partners, co‐​workers, friends, et al.

The problem here is that the petition speeds through the court, often without giving the subject person actual notice or an opportunity to defend against the accusation. The bare minimum should be for a hearing ahead of the issuance of a GVRO, with the subject present.


This type of framework, while it may enable people close to a troubled person some opportunity to diffuse a potentially dangerous situation, sets up a system of perverse incentives. The term “red flag” is something of a misnomer, too, as the “suspicious” activity that can be the basis of a petition includes the simple act of buying a gun, or just being interested in weapons. This turns constitutionally protected First and Second Amendment activity into the basis of a seizure of property. Where the orders are granted with relaxed evidentiary burdens, and the petitions can be brought by an ex‐​boyfriend or girlfriend, GVROs can become an instrument for malicious individuals to harass and endanger. This concern is far from baseless, as the forensic psychology journal “Behavioral Science & the Law” observed that about a third of GVROs were issued against innocent people.

When a confiscation order is issued “ex parte” (without the subject person present or even informed), due process is but one of many serious issues. Confrontations between police and unknowing individual’s subject to seizure can be tense interactions for both parties. This has already claimed at least one life, when officers shot a 61‐​year‐​old man to death last year while serving a confiscation order. In a country plagued with needless violence as a result of no‐​knock raids and a heavily militarized police, the potential benefits of red flag laws pale in comparison to the certain damage they will bring to community relationships with police.

In addition to worsening police relationships and violating due process, GVROs, as they stand, disproportionately harm the poor. Imagine police officers arriving at your door to seize your car, because it had been independently determined, without any opportunity for you to plead your case, that you were no longer safe to drive. Your only recourse is now to hire an expensive lawyer to fight for the return of your property. That’s exactly what happens after a GVRO is issued.''
 
The problem in a nutshell;

''Notably, judges may consider "any evidence," and respondents have no right to legal representation if they cannot afford it. Nor do they have a civil cause of action against petitioners who lie, a potentially significant problem in light of all the people who are allowed to file a petition. What is to stop an in-law, cousin, ex-spouse, ex-girlfriend, or former housemate with a grudge from abusing this process by seeking to take away someone's constitutional rights?

Theoretically, they could be prosecuted for lying, but that almost never happens. "The odds of criminal prosecut[ion] are low, even if an affidavit is sworn under
penalty of perjury," David Kopel, a gun policy expert at Denver's Independence Institute, noted in Senate testimony last March. "Perjury prosecutions are rare, and rarer still from civil cases….Without a strong civil remedy, there is little practical deterrent to malicious reports."
 
Why do you not seem so "concerned" about people dying?


That is a concern. I have said that I support red flag laws. The only issue being not to trample on civil rights and punish innocent gun owners.

There is always a trade off between liberties and rights and safety. Most people are prepared to take the risk of driving on the roads...where more people are probably killed or injured than by guns.

The concern is achieving a balance between civil rights and public safety. Total control or confiscation of all firearms is not going to happen, so a balance has to be found.

The problem here is people being punished for no good reason, perhaps a subjective assessment based on someones claim, a claim that may have malicious intent.
So how exactly do you balance "not having a gun" with "not being killed by someone with a gun".

It seems obvious to me where the preponderance of the balance of caution should be. But it seems that you and many others think guns are more important than actual lives.
 
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