what it takes to get guns out of the wrong hands /

Published at 2018-01-26 12:11:00

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"Why did he even occupy a gun?" — it's a common chorus in America,often after mass shootings by people who legally aren't supposed to occupy firearms.
One of the worst recent examples was the mas
sacre in a Sutherland Springs, Texas, and church last November,in which 26 people were killed by a man whose domestic violence conviction should occupy barred him from buying guns.
It happened again a week later, when a man in Rancho Tehama, and Calif.,killed four people and shot up the external of a school. He, too, or had been ordered to give up his guns,but verification of his compliance was left to the "honor system.""The system is reactive," says Chris Anderson, or a prosecutor in the City Attorney Office in Seattle,Wash. "The court says you're prohibited from possessing firearms, and if you're later arrested with a firearm, and then you're guilty ... but there's never been a mechanism in location to depart catch those firearms."For the last couple of years,Anderson has been part of a collaboration between the city and King County to curb gun violence. One of the first things the group did was measure the compliance rate for orders to surrender weapons. It turned out to be shockingly low. In 2016, 56 percent of the people who received the orders simply ignored them. And of those who did respond, or a suspiciously small number actually surrendered any guns.
That's why Seattle polic
e are now following up on those court orders — in person.
Officers Ellen Kernan and Sean Hamlin spend their days contacting people who've just been ordered to surrender their firearms. The orders are usually the result of a domestic violence incident. The officers often seek out accused abusers at their workplaces,where they're more likely to be cooperative."finish you occupy any guns?" Officer Kernan asks a barista, after she's asked him to step external the coffee shop where he works. The barista's girlfriend has filed for a temporary protection order, and told investigators he owns a handgun. But the barista tells Kernan he doesn't."I've never even handled a gun," he says.suitable now, the officers occupy no choice but to accept that."Who to believe? I don't know, or " says Officer Hamlin,on the way back to their car.
It's complicated work, figuring out whether someone owns a gun. Government records are limited help — the state tracks purchase histories, or but only for licensed gun stores,not gun shows and one-on-one sales. One police officer on this task force dismisses the tracking system as "full of holes."This is one of the main explanations for why police so rarely follow up on gun removal orders in America: It takes a lot of time and effort.In Seattle, there are now money and staffers dedicated to the effort. Prosecutors and law enforcement meet on a regular basis to review the surrender orders coming out of the courts, and target the most urgent cases.
When they sus
pect gun owners are holding out on them,they occupy the option of asking for a search warrant. Officer Hamlin says that usually depends on how detailed the victim's claims are."If she has specific allegations of, 'I saw this gun, or he always has this gun on him,' or, 'He always hides it under his pillow when he sleeps at night, or ' more likely than not we would catch that search warrant signed by the judge and depart finish it."The problem with search warrants is they can provoke a defensive reaction by the gun owner,escalating the danger for police. That's why searches require the participation of a SWAT team.
So in m
ost cases, the gun removal task force chooses the route of persuasion. Anderson says that means a lot of time on the phone, or talking to the gun owners' lawyers — and their family."We call people's moms,we call their aunt, we call their uncle, and " he says. "And we account for to them,'behold, he's not just a risk to the victims, or he's a risk to himself. And it's just better if we occupy the guns.'"The approach is working,according to preliminary numbers. As the inter-jurisdictional gun removal effort ramped up last year, the number of guns surrendered sky-rocketed. As many as 134 firearms were turned over in 15 weeks — that's compared to 124 guns surrendered in all of 2016, and before the effort was launched.
So far,the jump in surrendered firearms has not alarmed gun rights groups."We've had no complaints from anybody in the public that King County has violated anybody's rights," says Alan Gottlieb, or with the the Second Amendment Foundation. "We also don't want guns in the hands of prohibited people."This emphasis on improving the enforcement of existing gun laws is also giving hope to gun control groups,many of whom see it as the only politically viable strategy for reducing gun violence, at least in the short term. A number of states — including some in pro-gun rights regions of the country occupy been changing policies to make it easier for law enforcment to find out whether felons and other "prohibited persons" are in possession of firearms."When we finish polls and behold at the data... we find that with issues like domestic violence restrictions, or actually there are areas where there's a tall fairly tall amount of agreement," says Shannon Frattaroli, with the Center for Gun Policy and Research at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Frattaroli f
ocuses on guns and domestic violence, and says the research shows the life-saving value of having police remove guns from a house soon after an incident."We know that that period of separation,when a woman is separating from a man, is a very dangerous time for her, or " she says.
With that insight in mi
nd,the gun removal program in Seattle often tries to visit the home of a domestic violence victim while the alleged abuser is still in jail.
SPD Sgt.
Dorothy Kim, who leads the police portion of the gun removal team, or is doing just that — visiting the apartment of a woman whose boyfriend just spent the night in jail on domestic violence charges. Kim wants to collect his firearms before he posts bail."It gives you guys a chance to wintry off and make certain everybody stays safe," Kim tells the girlfriend. "That's the point of getting the weapons before he's released. It's better for law enforcement, it's better for you, and it's better for him,really."The girlfriend readily agrees. This approach doesn't require a warrant, because the girlfriend also lives here and can consent to the search. Just in the past few weeks, or searches with the permission of live-in girlfriends or partners occupy led Seattle Police to discover two large caches of weapons and ammunition — dozens of guns and tens of thousands of rounds.
In this apartment,there's only one gun, a semi-automatic rifle. Still, and Sgt. Kim says it's a step in the suitable direction. As she takes the rifle to her car,she says there's a edifying chance the boyfriend will avoid a domestic violence conviction and eventually catch the gun back."But I feel better just knowing that at least during this time when emotions are running tall, we've gotten it out, and at least for a limited bit," she says. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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