You still miss the point. The issue is precisely as outlined by me and the numerous quotes and articles I provided. Once again, in plain English, this is about seizing property, guns in this instance, without due process. The examples that I gave are examples of a lack of due process, and due diligence.
Acting upon a remark, seizing firearms, license, etc, on a remark heard by a waitress is not an example of due process or due diligence.
Acting upon a malicious claim without first checking is not due process or due diligence. There are more stories, but you reject these as unreliable, yet appear accept the word of claimants in red flag laws as reliable enough to be acted on.
Please pay attention, it doesn't matter if one case did not involve red flag law, it's irrelevant.
It's irrelevant because the issue here is about due process and the right of individual, presumption of innocence, that no action be taken before the actual risk is assessed.
Five main issues prevail:
1.The seizure of guns without any form of due process.
2. They are based on the testimony of one unrelated person (who need only be someone harboring a grudge).
3. The burden of proof is absurdly low (much leeway to reason No. 2).
4. They shift the burden of proof to the gun owner, rather than the accuser.
5. Even if the accused manages to clear their name, it will require a lot of time and money to regain their firearms, rendering them without defense for an indefinite period of time.
Red Flag Laws Violate Due Process
The Constitution mandates that no one shall be "deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law."
Seizing the property of individuals who have been convicted of no crime violates this provision. Gun control advocates claim due process is not violated because people whose firearms are taken can appeal to courts to reclaim their property. However, as economist Raheem Williams has observed, “this backward process would imply that the Second Amendment is a privilege, not a right.”