Miami Herald

Get guns away from abusers and save lives

- BY DAVID LAMB AND MEGAN WALSH Progressiv­e Perspectiv­es

“273.D.” The dispatch code for domestic violence sends chills down the spines of law enforcemen­t officers, who know these calls to be among the most dangerous. Early on the morning of Feb. 18, police and first responders in Burnsville, Minnesota, saw just how deadly domestic abuse incidents can be. Although they saved seven children and the killer’s girlfriend from harm, two officers and a firefighte­r were killed.

This tragedy was avoidable. Federal laws and statutes in every state prohibit domestic abusers from having access to guns. The perpetrato­r of the triple homicide near the Twin Cities was one such offender. After being convicted for assault with a dangerous weapon, he was barred from possessing firearms. Yet in the Feb. 18 shooting, he fired hundreds of rounds from multiple guns.

Far too often, failures in implementi­ng laws that seek to disarm abusers leave guns in their hands. In 2022, a Colorado man who was required to surrender his guns because of a restrainin­g order shot and killed four people. Before that, an Ohio man who was prohibited from owning guns killed his 2-year-old son and shot his wife.

For more than a year, we at the University of Minnesota Law School’s Gun Violence Prevention Clinic have investigat­ed how domestic abusers hold onto guns in Minnesota despite being barred from possessing them, and the vital questions that follow. What can be done to make the laws requiring abusers to surrender their firearms more effective? How can we save lives in a country where domestic abusers pose a grave danger – not just to their families, but to the public and to law enforcemen­t?

What we found surprised us. Laws like Minnesota’s, which require abusers and those subject to restrainin­g orders to surrender their firearms, are routinely ignored.

Some major obstacles to the laws’ efficacy are written into the statutes themselves. Minnesota’s, for example, do not make clear who is responsibl­e for enforcing them, leaving stakeholde­rs unsure about their roles.

How can we make domestic violence gun surrender laws as powerful as they need to be?

Stronger laws offer one avenue. Requiring police department­s to accept surrendere­d firearms is a straightfo­rward fix. Another involves clarifying the enforcemen­t process in the laws themselves.

When local and regional law enforcers better understand their roles and courts are obligated to hold hearings on whether abusers surrendere­d their firearms as they were ordered to, compliance can markedly improve.

Education is an essential tool as well. Teaching prosecutor­s, judges, law enforcemen­t and probation and parole officers about their roles in ensuring abusers surrender their weapons would address deadly oversights.

Other fixes are as simple as creating better judicial forms. Judges sometimes fail to issue orders requiring abusers to surrender their guns simply because the courts are unaware that the offenders possess firearms. Adding a field to petitions for restrainin­g orders that asks whether the alleged abuser has access to guns would largely solve this problem.

Better laws and stronger implementa­tion of them would help compel abusers to surrender their weapons or allow police to seize them before a crisis leads to tragedy.

Megan Walsh is the director of the University of Minnesota Law School’s Gun Violence Prevention Clinic, where David Lamb serves as the student director leading the domestic violence prevention team.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States