Gun seizures from red flag laws? Got any cites?
Sure, there have been a few.
Here's one;
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FERNADALE, Md. (WJZ) — A 61-year-old man is dead after he was shot by an officer trying to enforce Maryland’s new ‘red flag’ law in Ferndale Monday morning.
Anne Arundel County Police confirmed the police-involved shooting happened in the 100 block of Linwood Avenue around 5:17 a.m.''
You can argue that it was justified. Perhaps it wouldn't have happened had it been handled better...but it did.
Police turning up on your doorstep based on a complaint or a suspicion is not unjust under any mature and rational viewpoint.
Not if they turn up on your doorstep to confiscate property because someone has a grudge and put in a complaint.....which is the point of the concerns being raised by some, a flaw or weakness in the law. Which I'm sure most people support in principle. Just a matter of amendment.
Moreover, the idea that if some legal process may not cause someone an injustice, then all legal processes must be eliminated.
That is not what I said. I was pointing to a flaw in the red flag law. I have stated that numerous times. I think that any reaonable person would support them in principle.
Once again, the problem is not with the principle of red flag laws, but some of the details. And, perhaps, in some cases how they are carried out.
Coning from someone basing a position on imagined possible outcomes that is ironic. Coming from someone uses inappropriate examples to justify imagined fears, that is incredibly hilarious. Finally, coming from someone who posits that is possibly unjust for the police to come to one's doorstep based on a complaint and then go away, that is just plain stupid.
The flaw, seizing firearms on mere complaint made, is not imagined. It has the potential to cause problems for people who have done no wrong but becomes victims of false or malicious claims and have to face the difficulties and expense of clearing their name.
One comment with examples of problems;
''These
kinds of court orders are usually obtained from a judge ex parte. That’s fancy Latin for: The judge only hears one side of the story, it is not your side, and you may not even know about it until after the fact. Then they immediately strip you of fundamental constitutional rights for the duration of the orders. You’ll get your “full due process” hearing, but not until later.
And any violation of these orders is separately punishable as a crime. So even if you are innocent of the underlying conduct that inspired the “red flag” order, if you violate the order pending your hearing, you can still face criminal charges.
The initial temporary orders are usually “self-executing.” That means you might get served with a court order that tells you to take your guns and surrender them to the police or a local dealer within the next 24 to 48 hours.
You are, of course, expected to comply. But since you cannot legally possess guns upon being served with the order, how are you supposed to transport your guns to surrender them? Perhaps you could just call the police and tell them you were served with a “red flag” order – marking you a “dangerous and volatile” person (even if you’re not) – and ask them to come pick up your guns.
That kind of situation is ripe for danger. In one situation in Baltimore, police ended up shooting a man when they came to collect his guns under a “red flag” law.
Or perhaps you could take your guns to a local gun dealer and ask them to store them for you – that is, if you can find one that’s willing. In my experience, storage will cost you about $200 per month for a couple of guns. And that might be the best deal you can get. Local governments are now charging people thousands of dollars to store guns that are confiscated, and they tack on a charge for inventory and processing fees.
In one case in Southern California, a client had to pay a $1,000 ransom, that was reduced from an initial “offer” of $4,000, to get his 50-gun collection back.
Experienced counsel to defend you in a “due process” hearing will run about $15,000 in fees. If you lose and want to appeal, expect to spend another $25,000 to $100,000 in fees and costs. And even with all of that, you might still lose.
To win these hearings, you have to refute an allegation that you pose a danger to yourself or others where a judge already issued a temporary ex parte order that concluded you were already a danger. Many judges will likely err on the side of caution, and against your rights.
As a practical matter, if the government’s interest is in separating a potentially-dangerous person from guns, it makes no sense to leave other guns that belong to family members in the home. So, if you live with someone that gets a red flag order issued against them, then you and others living in the same home risk losing your guns, too.
Think that’s a fantasy?
Ask Lori Rodriguez, a plaintiff in a case that has been kicking around the California and federal courts for six years. The Ninth Circuit Court recently invented a new exception to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement. The court approved the police seizing Rodriguez’s firearm which was owned, registered, and locked in a gun safe , from her, while the police were at the home seizing firearms from a different family member.
Even if you win, the judge isn’t going to just hand your guns back to you at the end of the hearing. It’s probably a good idea to “lawyer up” just to go through the process of recovering your guns, so you don’t go to jail or prison for accidentally breaking an obscure firearm law or regulation.
You wouldn’t want to set off a red flag''.