Yuma Sun

Arizona gun bill would impact parent, child rights

- BY HOWARD FISCHER

PHOENIX – A House panel approved legislatio­n Wednesday that some lawmakers say could shield parents from liability when a child takes a gun from the house and kills someone else.

Rep. Quang Nguyen, R-prescott Valley, said the purpose of his legislatio­n is to close a loophole in state laws that generally prohibit unaccompan­ied minors from carrying a firearm. There is an exception, however, if the minor is on the property of the parent, grandparen­t or guardian.

Where that becomes a problem, according to Rebecca Baker, a deputy Maricopa County attorney, is when the adults don’t want a child to have a gun. And what that means, she said, is police called to the home are powerless to take the gun from the child.

“So it’s very problemati­c because it allows a juvenile to possess a firearm in circumstan­ces where their parent or guardian doesn’t want them to do so,’’ Baker told members of the House Judiciary Committee. “It could be, and often is, that the parent or the guardian doesn’t want the child to have the gun and they want the police to take it.’’

She said that’s a particular problem in group homes where current law says a child living there could bring in a weapon and possess it legally.

But Rep. Analise Ortiz, D-phoenix, said the measure could have broader effects.

She cited the case in Michigan where Jennifer Crumbley was convicted earlier this month of four counts of involuntar­y manslaught­er after a jury concluded she was “grossly negligent’’ in giving a son to her son, Ethan, who was 15 at the time and failing to get him mental health care. He later went out and killed four students and wounded six students and a teacher in 2021.

“So if a child commits a crime, the parent could just easily tell law enforcemen­t, ‘No, I didn’t give them consent,’ even though they may have given them consent,’’ Ortiz said. “All they have to do is just lie to the police officer.’’

House Minority Leader Lupe Conteras said that goes to another flaw in HB 2819: how parental consent is determined and verified. The Avondale Democrat said there is no requiremen­t for a signed, dated consent form that shows a parent consented at a specific time to a child possessing a weapon in the home.

And Contreras said the fact that a parent might have given a weapon to a child in the first place doesn’t resolve the issue of responsibi­lity.

“We’re giving them a scapegoat by saying, “I didn’t give them consent, but, yet, I just purchased the firearm that they just used,’ ‘’ he said. “We need to be careful of what we’re doing here and what we’re trying to pass.’’

Baker said she doesn’t see the problem that Contreras said this would create.

“This language is not going to provide any sort of defense if someone’s shooting a gun,’’ she said.

“It only provides a defense to possessing the gun in a home,’’ Baker said. “The narrow interest of this bill is to try to tighten up that broad exception of any child can unequivoca­lly possess a gun in the home.’’

Contreras disagreed.

“We’re not tightening up the language,’’ he said. “This is loosening the language.’’

And Ortiz, voting against the measure, called it “another halfbaked bill.’’

Rep. Alexander Kolodin, R-scottsdale, said he’s not convinced that parents will lie and tell police that they didn’t consent to a child having a weapon.

“I’m not going to throw my kid under the bus,’’ he said.

“If anything, the parent is going to lie the other way and say, ‘I did give consent,’ ‘’ Kolodin said, trying to protect a child from getting a felony record.

But he had some issues with the wording, including whether a consent would be something that a parent needed to grant just one time or whether it would have to occur multiple times. And then there’s the question of the need for state legislatio­n in the first place.

“Why are we making a parental discipline issue into a criminal justice issue?’’ Kolodin asked. “Isn’t it up to the parent to enforce the rules of their own household?’’

The measure, which now goes to the full House, also has the blessing of the Arizona Citizens Defense League which generally lobbies against any legislatio­n designed to restrict gun ownership.

“It supports parental rights,’’ said lobbyist Michael Infanzon. “And it supports the rights inside a home for parents to teach their kids responsibl­e gun ownership.’’

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argus hamilton is the host comedian at The Comedy Store in hollywood and a speaker. his email address is argus@argushamil­ton.com.

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