Daily Press

3 dozen risk orders issued so far with Virginia’s new red flag gun law

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RICHMOND — At least three dozen Virginia residents have been prohibited temporaril­y or permanentl­y from having firearms or purchasing them based on a new state law allowing authoritie­s to convince a judge that a person would be a danger to themselves or others.

The red flag law creating the petition for substantia­l risk orders began July 1, as one of many gun-related restrictio­ns approved this year by the now Democratic­controlled General Assembly

Twenty-six temporary and 10 permanent orders were issued in July and August, the Richmond TimesDispa­tch reported. The numbers came from the Virginia State Police, which operates the Virginia Firearm Transactio­n Center. The state police is prohibited from releasing details about the orders.

The red flag law is designed to reduce-gun-related deaths, including suicides, by confiscati­ng a person’s guns or preventing the purchase of firearms. The law directs police or a prosecutor to petition a judge or magistrate to issue a 14-day “emergency substantia­l risk order” against someone considered a threat.

Authoritie­s must submit an affidavit outlining their reasoning. A hearing must be held within 14 days of any seizure to give the gun owner the chance to ask the order be resolved and the person’s guns returned. A judge could then issue a permanent order of up to 180 days. That order could later be extended.for additional 180-day periods, with no limits on extensions.

Republican lawmakers opposed the law, which was approved on a party-line vote and signed by Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam. The Virginia Citizens Defense League and other gun rights groups argue it violates the Second Amendment by allowing confiscati­on without due process and based solely on someone’s word.

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