Post-Tribune

Judge alters ‘red-flag’ process after Indiana FedEx shooting

- By Casey Smith

All “red-flag” cases filed by Indianapol­is police will now come before a judge after an Indiana prosecutor was criticized for declining to use the law to pursue court hearings that could have prevented a man from accessing the guns used to kill eight people at a FedEx facility last month.

Judge Amy Jones, who oversees the filings of red-flag cases in Marion County, issued new guidance this week. All such reports will now go straight to her courtroom instead of the prosecutor’s office.

Indianapol­is police will have 48 hours to submit those filings, and two judges will then decide within 14 days whether to hold a hearing.

Indiana’s red-flag law allows police to confiscate guns from a person deemed dangerous to themselves or others. Prosecutor­s can then ask a court to ban that person from buying any other firearms, though the law does not mandate prosecutor­s to seek a red flag hearing.

Jones’ new guidance comes after Marion County prosecutor Ryan Mears decided not to bring Brandon Scott Hole before a judge for a red-flag hearing, even after his mother called police last year to say her son might try to die from “suicide by cop.”

Police seized a pump-action shotgun from Hole, then 18, in March 2020. Mears said his office did not seek a red-flag hearing because the law didn’t give prosecutor­s enough time to definitive­ly demonstrat­e Hole’s propensity for suicidal thoughts.

Mears specifical­ly pointed to a 2019 change in the law that requires courts to make a “goodfaith effort” to hold a hearing within 14 days.

Indianapol­is police have said they never returned that shotgun to Hole. Authoritie­s have said he used two “assault-style” rifles in the April 15 shooting before he killed himself.

Michael Leffler, a spokespers­on for the Marion County prosecutor, said Thursday that conversati­ons about changes to the red-flag filing process began before the shooting. He said the prosecutor’s office hopes the new guidance “will improve the process.” One change involves having a second deputy prosecutor review red-flag cases, which Leffler said “will provide a diversity of opinion for these important decisions.”

Leffler said Mears will continue to pursue legislativ­e changes to the law.

 ?? ROBERT SCHEER/THE INDIANAPOL­IS STAR ?? Marion County Prosecutor Ryan Mears speaks during a news conference in Indianapol­is on April 19. Mears said a former FedEx employee who shot and killed eight people at a FedEx facility in Indianapol­is never appeared before a judge for a hearing under Indiana’s “red-flag” law, even after his mother called police last year to say her son might commit “suicide by cop.”
ROBERT SCHEER/THE INDIANAPOL­IS STAR Marion County Prosecutor Ryan Mears speaks during a news conference in Indianapol­is on April 19. Mears said a former FedEx employee who shot and killed eight people at a FedEx facility in Indianapol­is never appeared before a judge for a hearing under Indiana’s “red-flag” law, even after his mother called police last year to say her son might commit “suicide by cop.”

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