Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Strengthen red-flag laws

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Brandon Hole’s ability to acquire guns so easily after he had been deemed by police too dangerous to possess a weapon speaks to many levels of failure. Law enforcemen­t failed to take steps under Indiana’s red-flag law to prevent him from purchasing new weapons after they had confiscate­d one gun. The law itself is too limited in who can petition the court for suspension of someone’s right to own a gun. And lawmakers, primarily Republican members of Congress, refuse to recognize that no one, least of all a troubled 19-year-old, should have access to assault weapons and high-capacity magazines that are designed to kill quickly, brutally and in large numbers.

As investigat­ion into last week’s mass shooting continues, details of how the state’s red-flag law might have been used to prevent the rampage have only added to the grief of a community mourning the senseless loss of lives. In 2005, Indiana became one of the first states to enact legislatio­n that allows authoritie­s to temporaril­y take guns away from people found by a judge to pose a danger to themselves or others. In principle, it should have stopped Hole.

In March 2020, when he was 18, his mother reported his suicidal tendencies to police, and they confiscate­d a brand new shotgun. The law requires that once police take a weapon, prosecutor­s have 14 days to justify the seizure to a judge. A person deemed unstable by the court would be barred from possessing any guns for at least six months. But prosecutor­s didn’t pursue the matter, and months later, Hole bought the two assault weapons. Prosecutor­s have since said that because Hole surrendere­d the gun and committed no violent act, they had no reason to pursue the matter. They also complained that the law’s two-week turnaround is too short to conduct an investigat­ion and that they are handicappe­d by their inability to get an individual’s medical records.

No, red-flag laws alone would not prevent all firearm-related deaths, but they would help. So would universal and more rigorous background checks. So would a ban on the assault-style weapons that enabled Hole—and the countless mass murderers who preceded him—to kill with speed and efficiency.

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