https://www.npr.org/2019/08/22/753062116/in-vermont-a-case-of-one-man-whose-gun-was-seized-under-red-flag-law
This is one of those scenarios, where in my opinion, a red flag law is totally applicable. This guy flips his lid, goes out back and starts threatening suicide and suicide by cop.
Clearly a man with intent and a means to execute, I think I could stand behind the law since there was eyewitness testimony to support him being 'flagged'. I don't know if I could make a valid argument to NOT take his guns away from him, seeing that he's not in a great frame of mind.
What if they'd left him with his guns and he'd snapped later, hurting his girl or her kids? There's no way to prove that he WOULD have, which is the rub, isn't it?
I don't know man. We like to argue that the real problem with guns isn't guns, but rather the human condition, which we all know is true. But if a red flag law isn't the solution, what is the palatable solution from a legislative perspective? You can't make lack of morals or lack of IQ illegal.
I think if red flag laws are written very VERY carefully with a focus on mental health and means to recovery, they could *cringing slightly* "do something".
Any version of a law that permits a biased judge to sign an order on merely "hearsay" should of course be rejected. Reluctantly submitting in 3..2..1..
This is one of those scenarios, where in my opinion, a red flag law is totally applicable. This guy flips his lid, goes out back and starts threatening suicide and suicide by cop.
Clearly a man with intent and a means to execute, I think I could stand behind the law since there was eyewitness testimony to support him being 'flagged'. I don't know if I could make a valid argument to NOT take his guns away from him, seeing that he's not in a great frame of mind.
What if they'd left him with his guns and he'd snapped later, hurting his girl or her kids? There's no way to prove that he WOULD have, which is the rub, isn't it?
I don't know man. We like to argue that the real problem with guns isn't guns, but rather the human condition, which we all know is true. But if a red flag law isn't the solution, what is the palatable solution from a legislative perspective? You can't make lack of morals or lack of IQ illegal.
I think if red flag laws are written very VERY carefully with a focus on mental health and means to recovery, they could *cringing slightly* "do something".
Any version of a law that permits a biased judge to sign an order on merely "hearsay" should of course be rejected. Reluctantly submitting in 3..2..1..