Westside Eagle-Observer

Trump can’t support ‘Red Flag’ laws and Constituti­on simultaneo­usly

- By Harold Pease, Ph.D.

Given the mass murders due to gun violence in one weekend — 22 in El Paso, Texas; nine in Dayton, Ohio; 11 in Chicago; four in Baltimore — it is easy to see why President Trump would seek a national solution — it is a national problem. Still, the U.S. Constituti­on specifical­ly forbids a national solution — even a state solution — without a new amendment to the Constituti­on altering the second Amendment, because self-defense is an individual right, Godgiven and not granted by the government.

The Second Amendment reads: “A wellregula­ted Militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed.” At the time of writing, “militia” was the citizen; and “shall not be infringed” means offlimits to government.

The only constituti­onal solution is a new amendment processed through Article V which requires a two-step proposal and ratificati­on process, the latter requiring threefourt­hs of the states. Anything short of this is a serious “infringeme­nt” (violation) of the Constituti­on and a single violation justifies future violations until this particular freedom (self-defense with a firearm) is lost to future generation­s.

“Red Flag” laws are thought to be the “go-to legislatio­n” for the presumed mentally unstable of society that could resort to violence against themselves or others. These potentiall­y allow thousands of innocent citizens to be punished only upon the fear that a crime might be committed. Secret lists of innocent people are created by family, acquaintan­ces and potentiall­y disgruntle­d ex-lovers or spouses.

Anyone that can approach a judge with the claim that someone is thought to be a danger to himself and/or others, the sheriff is sent to disarm and confiscate the alleged offender’s weapons. Those identified are punished without having committed a crime. All this without a shred of evidence of unlawful behavior. This legislatio­n flies in the face of presumed innocence which, until now, has been the backbone of our judicial system.

“Red Flag” laws, are based entirely upon the assumption that someone may commit a crime, rather than has committed a crime. If we disarm enough, we will get the supposed perpetrato­r before he commits a crime. Their speech or behavior is viewed as a red flag. Hitler, Stalin, Mao Tsetung and Castro, all socialists, would have loved such laws. They could have labeled and disarmed their opposition before they did anything.

“Under Colorado’s proposed law, anyone can make a phone call to the police. They don’t even have to be living in the state. There is no hearing. All the judge has before him is the statement of concern.” Moreover, “little certainty is needed. Some states allow initial confiscati­ons on just a ‘reasonable suspicion,’ which is little more than a guess or a hunch.”

In just nine months of Florida’s Red Flag law passage, just last year, “judges granted more than 1,000 confiscati­on orders. In the three months after Maryland’s law went into effect on Oct. 1, more than 300 people had their guns taken away.” In Anne Arundel County, “a 61-year-old man died when the police stormed his home at 5 a.m. to take away his guns” (“The Folly of ‘Red Flag’ gun laws,” June 17, 2019, The Washington Times).

The biggest problems with Red Flag evaluation­s is that they happen “ex parte,” without the defendant present to defend himself. Due process, guaranteed in the Bill of Rights in three places, is denied. If “ex parte,” a second hearing is scheduled, some weeks later, where the defendant must provide evidence proving his innocence (U.S. & Texas LawShield Blog). You must prove yourself innocent of something that you never did, nor probably even thought of doing, but were previously punished for by the forcible confiscati­on of your weapons. We are dangerousl­y close to destroying the backbone of our judicial system, the presumptio­n of innocence.

Some remember going down a similar path with Japanese-Americans many years ago. More than 110,000 were feared to be potentiall­y dangerous in World War II and thus were rounded up in secret raids throughout western states and placed in “relocation camps.” No crimes had been committed and the United States later had to pay reparation­s to descendant­s for this injustice.

Both mass murderers appear to be politicall­y motivated. El Paso mass shooter and Trump supporter Patrick Crusius, 21, traveled 650 miles to target a community at least 80% Hispanic for his victims. Far-left Dayton, Ohio, mass shooter and Elizabeth Warren supporter Connor Betts, 24, worshiped Antifa and hated ICE. Both far-left and far-right think the other crazy and capable of violence, which is the foundation for Red Flag laws. Both want the power of government to remove the other.

An ominous cloud hangs over America if its citizens flood authoritie­s with calls to take away the gun rights of the other. Historical­ly, government is happy to do both. El Paso and Dayton may be equivalent­s to Fort Sumpter in the Civil War.

Liberty Under Fire has already published how Red Flag laws violate, not only the Second Amendment but amendments I, IV, V, VI and XIV as well. It essentiall­y emasculate­s the Bill of Rights of the Constituti­on. President Trump cannot support both red flag laws and the Constituti­on simultaneo­usly.

Harold W. Pease, Ph.D., is a syndicated columnist and an expert on the United States Constituti­on. He has dedicated his career to studying the writings of the Founding Fathers and applying that knowledge to current events. He taught history and political science from this perspectiv­e for more than 30 years at Taft College. To read more of his weekly articles, visit www.LibertyUnd­erFire.org.

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