Los Angeles Times

California Democrat’s ‘red flag’ bid advances

Senate may muster enough votes to OK the House-approved gun safety measure.

- By Nolan D. McCaskill

WASHINGTON — The House advanced a comprehens­ive package of gun reforms Wednesday that would, among other things, raise the age required to legally purchase semiautoma­tic rifles, restrict high-capacity ammunition magazines and create stiff gun storage requiremen­ts.

While none of those proposals are likely to make it through the evenly divided Senate, another Democratic initiative may stand a chance: On Thursday, the House passed a “red flag” bill that would seek to temporaril­y remove guns from those deemed to be a danger to themselves or others.

A top Senate Republican has signaled that a bipartisan group of senators seeking a compromise measure on gun safety discussed the possibilit­y of including redflag provisions.

The House’s red-flag bill was the result of separate measures being pushed by Reps. Salud Carbajal (DSanta Barbara) and Lucy McBath (D-Ga.), both of whom have experience­d personal loss from gun violence. When Carbajal was 12 years old, his sister killed herself with a revolver, and McBath’s teenage son was shot and killed in 2012.

The bill addresses the issue in more than one way.

Carbajal’s portion would create a grant program at the Justice Department to encourage states to adopt red-flag measures. Nineteen states including California, plus Washington, D.C., already have such laws.

McBath’s portion would allow family members and law enforcemen­t to obtain “extreme risk” protection orders from a federal judge to temporaril­y prevent access to firearms by people deemed a danger to themselves or others.

Carbajal said red-flag laws “go a long way to preventing ” mass shootings, everyday gun violence and suicides.

“Many individual­s who demonstrat­e through their behavior that they’re a danger to themselves or others usually tell someone, usually write something, and the signs are there,” said Carbajal, who was serving on the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisor­s when a massacre occurred near UC Santa Barbara in 2014.

It’s not clear whether Senate Democrats and Republican­s can find common ground on guns. Democrats would need at least 10 Senate Republican­s to advance a gun package, and the House would have to pass a much narrower bill than what cleared the chamber this week.

Only five House Republican­s supported the red-flag measure in Thursday’s 224202 vote.

In an alert to House Republican­s’ offices Wednesday night, GOP leaders warned their members that McBath’s legislatio­n would “strip” Americans of their 2nd Amendment rights “by confiscati­ng firearms without due process,” and framed Carbajal’s measure as unnecessar­y because federal law already prohibits firearm possession by those who have had criminal and domestic violence conviction­s, or have been under certain protective orders or committed for mental health treatment.

Senate Republican­s broadly oppose most gun safety policies Democrats are seeking, but Democrats believe that incentiviz­ing states to adopt red-flag laws could win GOP support because it would essentiall­y empower states to make their own decisions. Polls show Americans broadly support such measures, and new research indicates such laws may reduce certain kinds of gun violence.

A study from the Violence Prevention Research Program at UC Davis published last week found that California’s red-flag laws “show promise for preventing suicide and possibly mass shootings, but implementa­tion” in the laws’ first three years “has been slow and variable across jurisdicti­ons in California.”

A study by the same program, published last year, found that two-thirds of California­ns had never heard of the state’s red-flag laws, which went into effect in 2016. Gov. Gavin Newsom said last week that the state would spend $11 million on education programs to promote the use of the laws.

While not as popular as mental health screenings and requiring background checks to purchase firearms at gun shows or through private sales, 74% of registered voters surveyed said they would definitely vote for a congressio­nal candidate who supports red-flag laws, according to a national NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll.

“California has shown us that that red f lag laws work,” Sen. Dianne Feinstein (DCalif.) said in a statement to The Times. “These laws have taken guns from dangerous individual­s before they could kill. They save lives.”

Feinstein has sponsored a bill in the Senate that mirrors Carbajal’s grant proposal. She said the chamber should “absolutely pass it” because it would “help more states enact these commonsens­e laws.”

“Family members and law enforcemen­t are often the first to recognize a person is a threat, so it just makes sense to allow them to get a legal court order to remove guns before things turn violent,” she added.

Sen. John Cornyn (RTexas) has led bipartisan negotiatio­ns with Sen. Christophe­r S. Murphy (DConn.) and others. Speaking on the f loor Thursday, he highlighte­d areas of agreement senators are looking at.

“Mental health and school safety are — seem to me — as kind of no-brainers, in a sense where I don’t think there’s a lot of division between that side of the aisle and this side of the aisle,” Cornyn said. “But we’re also looking at ways to keep guns out of the hands of people who already by law are prohibited from having them.”

“We can do this,” he insisted of the Senate. “Sometimes politics is called the art of the possible, and I think this is possible.”

Murphy was less sanguine.

“It’ll be a miracle if we get a framework agreement, never mind a final bill,” Murphy told reporters on Thursday, highlighti­ng the heavy lift ahead to strike a bipartisan deal. “But miracles sometimes happen.”

House Democrats who supported the red-flag initiative said they believed it stood a chance of being passed in the Senate. But they said they doubted whether Carabjal’s proposal would do much to change the gun landscape in much of the country.

“Simply incentiviz­ing states, when it comes to a state like mine, does nothing, really,” said Rep. Veronica Escobar (D-Texas). “We have a governor and a Republican-controlled Legislatur­e that will absolutely not pass a red-flag law, regardless of the amount of incentives that the federal government provides.”

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