[Senate Hearing 117-783]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]




                                                        S. Hrg. 117-783

                       STOP GUN VIOLENCE: EXTREME
                      RISK ORDER/``RED FLAG'' LAWS

=======================================================================



                                HEARING

                               before the

                    SUBCOMMITTEE ON THE CONSTITUTION

                                 OF THE

                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
                          UNITED STATES SENATE

                    ONE HUNDRED SEVENTEENTH CONGRESS

                             FIRST SESSION

                               __________

                             APRIL 28, 2021

                               __________

                          Serial No. J-117-16

                               __________

         Printed for the use of the Committee on the Judiciary
         
         
         
         
         
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                 U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE

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                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY

                   RICHARD J. DURBIN, Illinois, Chair
PATRICK J. LEAHY, Vermont            CHARLES E. GRASSLEY, Iowa, Ranking 
DIANNE FEINSTEIN, California             Member
SHELDON WHITEHOUSE, Rhode Island     LINDSEY O. GRAHAM, South Carolina
AMY KLOBUCHAR, Minnesota             JOHN CORNYN, Texas
CHRISTOPHER A. COONS, Delaware       MICHAEL S. LEE, Utah
RICHARD BLUMENTHAL, Connecticut      TED CRUZ, Texas
MAZIE K. HIRONO, Hawaii              BEN SASSE, Nebraska
CORY A. BOOKER, New Jersey           JOSH HAWLEY, Missouri
ALEX PADILLA, California             TOM COTTON, Arkansas
JON OSSOFF, Georgia                  JOHN KENNEDY, Louisiana
                                     THOM TILLIS, North Carolina
                                     MARSHA BLACKBURN, Tennessee
             Joseph Zogby, Chief Counsel and Staff Director
      Kolan L. Davis, Republican Chief Counsel and Staff Director



                    SUBCOMMITTEE ON THE CONSTITUTION

                 RICHARD BLUMENTHAL, Connecticut, Chair
DIANNE FEINSTEIN, California         TED CRUZ, Texas, Ranking Member
SHELDON WHITEHOUSE, Rhode Island     JOHN CORNYN, Texas
JON OSSOFF, Georgia                  MICHAEL S. LEE, Utah
                                     BEN SASSE, Nebraska

           David Stoopler, Democratic Majority Chief Counsel
            Andrew Davis, Republican Minority Chief Counsel
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
                            C O N T E N T S

                              ----------                              

                           OPENING STATEMENTS

                                                                   Page

Blumenthal, Hon. Richard.........................................     1
Cruz, Hon. Ted...................................................     5
Durbin, Hon. Richard J...........................................     7
Grassley, Hon. Charles E.........................................     4

                               WITNESSES

Bencomo, Vic.....................................................    10
    Prepared statement...........................................    76
Goeser, Nikki....................................................    15
Horwitz, Joshua..................................................    17
    Prepared statement...........................................    82
Kopel, David B...................................................    11
    Prepared statement...........................................    40
Wyatt, Kimberly..................................................    13
    Prepared statement...........................................    89

                                APPENDIX

Items submitted for the record...................................    39








 
                       STOP GUN VIOLENCE: EXTREME
                      RISK ORDER/``RED FLAG'' LAWS

                              ----------                              


                       WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 2021

                              United States Senate,
                          Subcommittee on the Constitution,
                                Committee on the Judiciary,
                                                    Washington, DC.
    The Subcommittee met, pursuant to notice, at 2:38 p.m., in 
Room 226, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Hon. Richard 
Blumenthal, Chair of the Subcommittee, presiding.
    Present: Senators Blumenthal [presiding],Whitehouse, Cruz, 
Cornyn, and Lee.
    Also present: Senators Durbin, Grassley and Graham.

         OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. RICHARD BLUMENTHAL,

          A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF CONNECTICUT

    Chair Blumenthal. I am going to call to order this first 
meeting of the Subcommittee on the Constitution and welcome my 
colleagues. Most especially, the Ranking Member on the 
Subcommittee, Senator Cruz, thank you so much for your 
cooperation in scheduling this first hearing, and I look 
forward to this kind of collaborative effort going forward.
    I know we have been joined by Senator Grassley, the Ranking 
Member of the Committee. I am going to turn to you after 
Senator Cruz, and I think we may be joined by Senator Durbin 
for some opening remarks as well.
    Last month, the Judiciary Committee held a very important 
hearing, as my colleagues know, on constitutional and common-
sense steps to reduce the epidemic of gun violence in this 
country that has recently claimed so many lives in Atlanta, 
Boulder, Indianapolis, and elsewhere.
    Gun violence is a real problem. We all know it. But there 
are also real solutions, and I believe, strongly and 
passionately, that we have a path to put some of those 
solutions into law during this session, and I believe we can 
with bipartisan cooperation.
    I am not naive. I do not believe that all gun violence 
prevention proposals will be adopted by unanimous consent. But 
I hope this afternoon, at least, we can focus on one topic 
where there does appear to be at least some measure of common 
ground. Extreme risk orders, also known as ``risk warrants,'' 
that is the name in Connecticut we have adopted, or ``red 
flag'' laws, whatever you call them, we know they save lives. 
We know that red flag/extreme risk orders save lives. They are 
practical and proven tools that allow law enforcement under 
some statutes and others, including family members, to keep 
guns out of the hands of individuals who possess and pose a 
danger to themselves or others. In other words, separate people 
from guns when they are in crisis.
    Firearms make dangerous decisions far more deadly and 
irreversible. Just to give you one example, among commonly used 
methods of self-harm, firearms are, by far, the most lethal. 
For people who seek to take their own lives, the fatality rate 
is approximately 85 percent with a firearm. It is 5 percent by 
any other method. Firearms are used in less than 6 percent of 
suicide attempts, but they account for more than half of the 
suicide deaths.
    In 1999, my home State of Connecticut became the first in 
the Nation to enact an extreme risk order. We call it a ``risk 
warrant.'' Studies have shown that in the first 14 years of 
Connecticut's law, for every 10 to 20 risk warrants issued, at 
least 1 suicide was prevented. In addition, many of those who 
tried to take their own lives were compelled or persuaded to 
seek help, professional help, that made a real difference in 
their lives.
    That is not some sort of abstract statistic. States across 
the country have used extreme risk or red flag statutes as 
critical suicide prevention tools. In Portland, Oregon, law 
enforcement was able to remove 10 firearms and bar future 
firearms purchases after a man called 911 and threatened to 
kill himself and his 3-year-old son with a gun because he was 
frustrated that he was not able to make a child support 
payment. The same is true probably in all of your States. I 
know you have heard these stories. I am not going to recount 
more, but I will put my full statement in the record. These 
laws don't just prevent suicide. They have also been used to 
stop mass shootings, homicide, terrorist threats, and hate 
crimes.
    Authorities in Florida used the State's extreme risk order 
law to remove an AR-15 from a high school student who had said 
he would kill himself and his ex-girlfriend if they didn't get 
back together--if she did not get back together with him.
    As my colleague Senator Graham has pointed out, the 
Parkland shooting resulted after the killer, in that instance, 
practically put an ad in the phone book saying he was going to 
shoot people, but authorities there could not stop him for lack 
of a red flag statute. After it happened, they adopted one in 
Florida.
    These laws are also bipartisan among the American public in 
State legislatures and in Congress. In fact, polling has found 
that 84 percent of Americans, including 78 percent of 
Republicans, support red flag laws. There are now 20 
jurisdictions, blue States and red States, with these critical 
tools in place, and others are on their way to passing and 
implementing the laws.
    President Biden has announced that the Justice Department 
will soon publish model legislation for States that will help 
them to adopt these statutes, and I have worked closely with 
not only my colleague Senator Graham, who has been very 
constructive, but also Senator Feinstein. Senators Rubio and 
Scott have introduced their own bill, and I look forward to 
making progress.
    Let me just touch on two points in conclusion.
    First, Indianapolis. The tragic events in Indianapolis show 
just how crucial effective implementation and enforcement is to 
the success of these efforts. Indiana has a strong red flag law 
named in honor of a police officer who was killed in the line 
of duty in a situation that might have been prevented had a red 
flag been in place at that time.
    Earlier this month, as we all know, a shooter killed eight 
people at a FedEx warehouse in Indianapolis. Several months 
prior, police had taken a shotgun from him after his mother 
reported that he might try to commit suicide by cop. Law 
enforcement knew he was dangerous. Prosecutors just didn't use 
Indiana's red flag law to bar that individual from purchasing 
new guns, and he did, in fact, purchase two semiautomatic 
rifles in the months that followed, which he used in that 
massacre.
    Some have said that Indianapolis shows red flag laws don't 
work, they ought to be scrapped. I think that point is 
ridiculous. There are 6 million car accidents in the United 
States every year. That does not mean we throw out seat belt 
requirements or speed limits. We insist on more effective 
enforcement of those laws that might have prevented those 
accidents or crashes or deaths.
    What the preventable loss of life in Indianapolis does 
prove is that even in jurisdictions where these laws exist, 
effective implementation is critical. We will hear today from 
witnesses who will tell us how Federal grants would support 
training for prosecutors and others to enhance those States' 
development and effective use and enforcement. All of us who 
have been in law enforcement know laws are dead letter unless 
they are implemented and enforced effectively, and our 
proposals on red flag statutes are designed to provide the 
resources, the training, procedures, other kinds of basic nuts-
and-bolts steps that are important here.
    Due process. To those critics who raise the specter of due 
process concerns, let me just say extreme risk orders provide 
robust due process protections that comport with both the 
Constitution and the Supreme Court precedent governing due 
process considerations, and that is my goal, here and in 
whatever we do, formulating and passing red flag statutes, to 
provide models and require that those grants and resources 
provided to States are conditioned on due process protections.
    These orders are temporary. They are used only by judges. 
The judges have to take evidence. The determinations are based 
on those evidence. The evidence is submitted under penalty of 
perjury. When a temporary order is issued, but before it 
becomes permanent, the individual subject to it is provided 
with notice and an opportunity to both challenge the evidence 
against them and present evidence of their own. Once the order 
expires, the individual subject to it must have a firearm 
returned to them, so long as they are not otherwise prohibited 
from having it.
    So, I think we are in an era that feels very different 
about gun violence. I am hoping that we can reach bipartisan 
consensus. Gun violence isn't inevitable. Extreme risk order 
laws, red flag statutes, prove it. I again welcome my 
colleagues this afternoon and hope that we will indeed make 
progress.
    Thank you to all my colleagues. I turn to Senator Grassley. 
I understand he would like to be recognized because of time 
constraints, and I am happy to do so.

         OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. CHARLES E. GRASSLEY,

             A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF IOWA

    Senator Grassley. As Ranking Member of the Full Committee, 
I thought I ought to come and show my support for this hearing 
and the very important issue of crimes that are committed with 
individuals struggling with mental health issues.
    I was going to start out by talking about the Indianapolis 
situation, but Senator Blumenthal already covered that very 
well, so I will move on to the fact that earlier this month, 
tragedy struck when a 25-year-old man rammed his vehicle into 
the security barricade just mere steps from this chamber. As we 
all know, this man's actions tragically took the life of U.S. 
Capitol Police Officer Billy Evans. While the Capitol 
attacker's exact motive is unknown, social media profiles 
indicate the man was a follower of a group that reportedly 
holds racist, anti-Semitic, anti-LGBTQ+ beliefs.
    It is too early to tell if those beliefs motivated this man 
to commit the act of terrorism, but what is clear is the man 
was struggling with mental health issues.
    Today we are talking about red flag laws. I think that we 
should be looking into possible solutions for gun violence, so 
a hearing is the right thing to do, and so I thank you for 
having this hearing.
    I do think that red flag laws are generally a State rather 
than a Federal issue. I also want to state my strong beliefs 
that any State that does decide to enact red flag laws should 
do so with strong due process protections to safeguard an 
important constitutional right. I just heard what Senator 
Blumenthal said about those strong due process laws, and I just 
want to make sure that they are always followed.
    I also want to say that red flag laws are scarcely the only 
option for ensuring that persons with mental issues are 
prevented from engaging in violence or self-harm. I turn to 
some legislation I put in that has bipartisan support called 
the ``EAGLES Act of 2021.'' It's a commonsense piece of 
legislation building upon what the Secret Service successfully 
does over a period of decades. This bill carries the namesake 
of Parkland, Florida, Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School's 
mascot, the Eagles, and it is a tribute to the 17 Eagles who 
tragically lost their lives 3 years ago, at the hands of a 
fellow student who long struggled with severe behavioral 
problems and mental health problems. If he had been sent to get 
the help that he ought to have had, he would have been in the 
database and would not have been able to purchase a gun.
    This legislation helps proactively mitigate threats of 
violence in our country through, reauthorizing and expanding 
the U.S. Secret Service's National Threat Assessment Center, 
also known as ``NTAC.'' A family member, teacher, coach, fellow 
employee, or neighbor's ability to observe someone's behavior, 
home life circumstances, work factors, and other potential 
stressors, coupled with NTAC's threat assessment training, can 
prevent harmful outcomes from occurring. But in order for this 
to be effective, we need to increase NTAC's capacity to 
continue their research and threat assessment training.
    Just this week, the EAGLES Act got the resounding 
endorsement from the National Association of Attorneys General. 
Forty attorneys general from all over the United States believe 
that the NTAC's proactive approach is critical to violence 
prevention. We cannot afford to ignore their urgent pleas of 
assistance.
    I ask my colleagues, hopefully all of them, to support the 
EAGLES Act. The more research and threat assessment and 
training that can come from it, that we can provide, the more 
violence we can prevent.
    Thank you, Senator, for bearing with me.
    Chair Blumenthal. Thank you, thank you Senator Grassley, 
and thanks for your input. You know, we are really working, as 
Senator Graham and I have done for quite some time over the 
years, to adopt an approach that is as inclusive as possible, 
that is respectful of due process, and that meets all of the 
challenges that you have raised. Thank you for being here 
today.
    With your permission, Senator Cruz, I would like to turn to 
Senator Durbin if he--Senator Cruz.

              OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. TED CRUZ,

             A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF TEXAS

    Senator Cruz. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    There is no one in this country who isn't fed up and 
furious when we hear that another monster has used a gun to 
take an innocent life. And there isn't a person in this country 
who is not heartbroken when they learn about another suicide. 
Every life is a gift from God, and every innocent life that is 
lost is unique and a tragedy.
    I can tell you in Texas, we have seen far too many mass 
murders at the hands of deranged and sick individuals. I was in 
Sante Fe the morning of that shooting. Santa Fe High School is 
less than an hour away from my house. I was in El Paso, at the 
Walmart, after another mass murder. I was in Midland-Odessa 
after yet another. I was in Dallas where five police officers 
were murdered by a deranged radical. I was in Sutherland 
Springs in that beautiful sanctuary where a monster murdered 
innocent women and children.
    I care deeply about stopping violent crime and gun crime in 
particular. I have spent much of my adult life in law 
enforcement trying to stop violent criminals who prey upon the 
innocent, and working to ensure that they receive the most 
stringent punishment.
    But one thing is abundantly clear. If the objective is to 
stop violent crime, restricting the rights of law-abiding 
citizens doesn't work. In fact, it typically makes crime worse, 
because when you disarm law-abiding citizens, you make them 
more likely to be victims.
    Two years ago, when we had a hearing on red flag laws in 
the Full Committee, I said, at the time, that those laws could 
potentially be part of the solution set at the State level. I 
still believe that. The States are laboratories of democracy. 
They are the proper place to debate the substance of red flag 
laws. We shouldn't be imposing a Federal standard or putting 
the Federal Government's very heavy thumb on the scale with 
coercive grant programs, especially when 19 States and the 
District of Columbia are already experimenting with these laws.
    But I also said and continue to believe, that even at the 
State level, laws must be narrowly targeted to those who pose 
an extreme risk, while simultaneously giving full force to the 
fundamental rights of all law-abiding Americans. Many of the 
State laws that have been implemented fall short of this 
standard in one or more ways, and none of the Democrats' 
current proposals come close to meeting it.
    Rather than taking a measured and respectful approach, 
radical gun control advocates see red flag laws as a way to 
open the door to comprehensive gun control. One of the drafters 
of Connecticut's red flag law, which we heard about earlier, 
the first in the country, admitted this last week on CNN, 
stating that these laws only work as part of comprehensive gun 
control legislation.
    The fact is, Democrats don't want Americans to own guns. In 
August 2019, a television interviewer asked then-candidate Joe 
Biden the following question: ``So, to gun owners out there who 
say, well, a Biden administration means they are going to come 
for my guns,'' Biden's response? ``Bingo.'' They are not hiding 
it.
    It is no surprise that this administration and that 
Democrats in Congress and anti-gun groups are all pushing red 
flag laws that will take guns from law-abiding Americans. In 
Connecticut, for example, 32 percent of confiscation orders are 
overturned when a judge finally hears both sides of the story, 
and this is after the Government has already seized the 
firearm. This means that one out of every three people who has 
his or her firearm seized by the Government under Connecticut's 
red flag law is an innocent, law-abiding citizen. That is an 
unacceptable rate of protecting constitutional rights.
    One reason that the error rate is so high is that most of 
these laws do not even purport to satisfy due process. Every 
red flag law currently in operation permits the Government to 
order the confiscation of firearms without notice to the 
individual and a hearing only to follow at some later time. Ex 
parte hearings may be necessary in some extreme cases, but they 
should not be the default standard.
    Moreover, in many States the word of a spurned romantic 
partner or disgruntled coworker is sufficient to meet the 
watered-down standard for unilateral, albeit temporary, 
deprivation of Second Amendment rights. Put simply, red flag 
laws empower the Government to take firearms first and ask 
questions later, often much, much later.
    No one would tolerate these procedures to deprive Americans 
of any of their other fundamental constitutional rights. But 
Democrats do not care that law-abiding Americans lose their 
rights under these laws because they do not believe in the 
Second Amendment and the right to self-defense.
    In a shockingly candid statement, President Biden's nominee 
to lead the ATF told one of the witnesses testifying today that 
it did not matter if a law-abiding citizen lost their rights 
due to red flag laws because the disarmed victims can just 
purchase a replica gun to scare criminals away. That is an 
answer that reveals a contempt for the Second Amendment right 
to keep and bear arms, and it is dangerous.
    The Second Amendment is not about hunting. It is not about 
recreational shooting. It is about the fundamental right to 
protect our lives, to protect our homes, to protect our 
families. It is about the right we have, if somebody comes into 
our home at night seeking to harm our children, to defend our 
children and to defend our lives.
    The red flag laws being pushed by Democrats and gun control 
activists are designed to deprive Americans of that fundamental 
right. And for what? As one of today's witnesses wrote in 2020, 
after reviewing all of the available literature, ``No 
research--no research has found any statistical reduction in 
crime, including mass shooting fatalities, from confiscation 
laws, and studies about suicide reduction show mixed results.'' 
That is what the data show.
    We need to act, and we need to act forcefully, to stop gun 
crimes, and I have introduced legislation and fought for 
legislation to do that. But Federal red flag laws, I don't 
believe are the answer. We do not need to impose Connecticut's 
dismissive approach to Second Amendment rights on the entire 
country.
    Thank you.
    Chair Blumenthal. Thanks, Senator Cruz.
    Just before we go to Senator Durbin, I want to make the 
point, Senator Cruz. I can't speak for every Democrat. I can 
speak for myself. I am not against Americans owning guns. I am 
very much in favor of the law, as it is interpreted by the 
United States Supreme Court, that Americans have Second 
Amendment rights. I would oppose any law that took away Second 
Amendment rights. As we know, no right is absolute.
    And so far as the Connecticut study is concerned, we have 
been through this issue again and again and again. That 2014 
study reported, ``Judges ruled that the weapons needed to be 
held by the State 68 percent of the time.''
    In the remaining 32 percent of the cases, the guns were not 
given back to the individual. The orders were not overturned. 
In many of those cases, the guns were given to someone else so 
the State did not have to keep them, a family member or someone 
else. In only 10 percent of known cases, in risk warrants in 
Connecticut, were the guns actually returned to the 
individuals.
    Now we can debate the percentages one way or the other, but 
I just think we need to be very clear on the fact that these 
red flag statutes preserve constitutional rights, that 
misleading numbers and statistics can be cited. The plain fact 
is that they save lives.
    I am going to turn to the Chairman of our Committee.

          OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. RICHARD J. DURBIN,

           A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF ILLINOIS

    Chair Durbin. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Senator Blumenthal, 
I realize this is your first hearing as Chair of the 
Constitution Subcommittee, and I want to thank you for starting 
off this Congress with a series of hearings on critical topics, 
including the epidemic of gun violence, and it is truly an 
epidemic. In my home State of Illinois and the city of Chicago, 
which I am honored to represent, we have the equivalent of at 
least one mass shooting every weekend, when you put together 
the number of people who are injured and killed by gun every 
weekend in the city of Chicago.
    I always thought the problem with those numbers is they 
don't hit you in one big number. They just keep coming at you 
every single weekend. If it is a holiday weekend, it is even 
worse, dramatically worse.
    The stories in recent weeks of the profligate use of guns 
by those who think they can never have enough guns out in 
circulation, where children are being shot, a 2-year-old in a 
car on Lake Shore Drive, a 7-year-old at a McDonald's drive-in 
a week ago. It is just an out-of-control situation. The 
question is: When will it reach a point where we do something, 
do something effective?
    I thought the point had been reached on December 14, 2012. 
I believed that that was the moment when a gunman murdered 20 
children and 6 educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 
Newtown, Connecticut. I thought, ``That has got to be it.'' A 
roomful of little kids that looked just like my granddaughter, 
gunned down in the classroom, six educators. Finally, we are 
going to do something. Countries have responded to far fewer 
deaths by changing the whole approach to guns. But sadly, in 
the months after Sandy Hook, we held hearings; we voted on some 
gun safety reform. But even key reforms, not universally but 
just overwhelmingly supported, like universal background 
checks, were filibustered and failed.
    While Congress sits here again and fails to act every day, 
the deadly toll of gun violence grows, not just in Illinois and 
Chicago, but across this country. I am not giving up on 
commonsense reforms, and I know Senator Blumenthal is not 
either.
    I want to say one thing in prefacing my remarks. When we 
often speak about people who are mentally unstable who should 
not be owning firearms, I hope we quickly add, the vast 
majority of people dealing with mental illness are not violent 
people and they are not dangerous people, and we should not 
assume that they are. Many of them need treatment and help, and 
they can lead perfectly normal and safe lives for themselves 
and others. But there are exceptions, and many times, deadly 
exceptions.
    Look at what happened in Indianapolis just 2 weeks ago. A 
19-year-old gunman murdered eight people at the FedEx facility. 
It was horrific. In March 2020, last year, that gunman's mother 
had contacted the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department, 
to inform them that her son's recent firearm purchase concerned 
her because he had suggested he planned to threaten police with 
a firearm in order to provoke a shooting. The police department 
placed him on a temporary mental health hold and removed the 
shotgun from his possession. Prosecutors, for reasons I do not 
know, never filed an extreme risk protection order petition 
under Indiana's law. In July and September of 2020, the gunman 
was able to legally buy two semiautomatic rifles, which he used 
to commit this mass murder.
    Let me tell you my experiences in Illinois which believe 
some of the extreme statements that have been said about these 
laws.
    We have a firearm restraining order that took effect in 
2019. The law allows family members and law enforcement to 
petition a court to temporarily remove firearms from the 
possession of an individual who presents a significant risk to 
himself or others. According to information reported by the 
Illinois State Police, a firearm restraining order has been 
issued 59 times under this Illinois law. In 2 years, a State of 
12.7 million people, it has been used 59 times. We have 2.2 
million licensed gun owners in Illinois, so, clearly, this is a 
targeted intervention. This is not a broad, sweeping thing 
denying due process to legal gun owners.
    I have talked with law enforcement officials in Illinois 
who point out that it takes resources to carry out these 
orders. They need some help. I think this is a tool. It is not 
the overall answer, but it is an important tool. In some cases 
it can save lives. In Indianapolis, had it been used, I think 
it could have saved those eight lives. At least we know that 
possibility.
    I thank you for calling us together today to discuss this, 
and as I said at one point here, one bill is not going to solve 
gun violence in America. But shame on us if we reject a 
commonsense approach that most gun owners endorse as the only 
sensible way to take guns out of the hands of people who are 
dangerous.
    Chair Blumenthal. Thank you, Senator Durbin.
    I am going to introduce our witnesses and then, as is our 
practice here on the Judiciary Committee, swear them in.
    First, Vic Bencomo is a resident of Denver, Colorado, and 
the current president of Colorado Gun Owners for Safety, a 
chapter of Giffords Nationwide Gun Owners for Safety Coalition. 
Bencomo is a father and a proud veteran, having served for over 
20 years in the United States Navy. He is also a gun owner, 
hunter, and advocate for laws to prevent gun violence. He has 
previously testified before both the Colorado State Legislature 
and the United States House of Representatives' Gun Violence 
Prevention Task Force.
    David Kopel is a--the research director of the Independence 
Institute and associate policy analyst with the Cato Institute 
in Washington and adjunct professor of advanced constitutional 
law at the University of Denver's Sturm College of Law. Mr. 
Kopel writes on constitutional law, criminal justice, civil 
rights, firearms policy, international affairs, technology, 
politics, environmental policy, and the media. He is the author 
of 17 books, hundreds of newspaper and magazine articles, and 
over 100 scholarly journal articles. Before joining the 
Independence Institute, Mr. Kopel served as an assistant 
attorney general of the State of Colorado, and he is going to 
join us remotely.
    Kimberly Wyatt is senior deputy prosecuting attorney with 
the King County Prosecuting Attorney's Office. She has been 
with the office since 2001. She has worked on cases involving 
domestic violence, stalking, sexual assault, child abuse, and 
other crimes of violence. Most recently, she has been part of a 
newly formed Domestic Violence Regional Firearms Enforcement 
Unit. In this role, she advises law enforcement and families on 
all aspects of extreme risk protection orders, from 
investigations to court proceedings. Ms. Wyatt also works on 
firearm compliance cases and high-risk domestic violence 
firearms offenders.
    Ms. Nikki Goeser lives in Tennessee and is the executive 
director for the Crime Prevention Research Center. She became a 
Second Amendment activist and victim rights advocate after the 
brutal murder of her husband, Ben, by a man who had been 
stalking her. She is a graduate of the University of Tennessee 
at Knoxville, and she earned her degree in psychology.
    Joshua Horwitz is the executive director for the Coalition 
to Stop Gun Violence. He has spent nearly three decades working 
on gun violence prevention issues. In 2013, Mr. Horwitz helped 
found the Consortium for Risk-Based Firearm Policy. The 
consortium released a set of policy recommendations designed to 
promote policies that can prevent those at a heightened risk of 
violent behavior from possessing firearms. One of the 
consortium's recommendations was the basis for California's 
first-in-the-Nation gun violence restraining order, which 
passed in September 2014.
    I am going to ask all of you to please stand so that I can 
administer the oath. Do you swear that the testimony that you 
will give is the truth, the whole truth, so help you God?
    Mr. Bencomo. I do.
    Mr. Kopel. I do.
    Ms. Wyatt. I do.
    Ms. Goeser. I do.
    Mr. Horwitz. I do.
    [Witnesses are sworn in.]
    Chair Blumenthal. Thank you. Mr. Bencomo, we will start 
with you.

              STATEMENT OF VIC BENCOMO, PRESIDENT,

           GIFFORDS GUN OWNERS FOR SAFETY COALITION,

               COLORADO CHAPTER, DENVER, COLORADO

    Mr. Bencomo. Good afternoon. Thank you, Chairman Blumenthal 
and Members of the Committee, for this opportunity to testify 
today. My name is Vic Bencomo. I am a parent, gun owner, 
hunter, and a proud Colorado resident for over 30 years.
    As a retired combat veteran with 21 years of service in the 
United States Navy, I know what it means to be a patriot. I 
have seen the carnage of war and personally know the emotional 
and physical scars that it leaves.
    I am the president for the Colorado Chapter of Giffords Gun 
Owners for Safety. We are a national organization of gun owners 
who support responsible gun ownership and commonsense gun laws. 
We proudly support the Second Amendment, but we can no longer 
ignore that our country is in the midst of an epidemic. The 
daily threat of gun violence is a shocking reality in countless 
communities across the country, especially in our veterans' 
community. As a veteran, I am witnessing my fellow 
servicemembers take their lives at a tragic rate. More than 17 
veterans die by suicide daily nationwide. That is over 6,400 
veteran suicides a year. In comparison, that is more than all 
the servicemembers killed in action during the last 18 years of 
Operation Iraqi Freedom.
    Tragically, Colorado's veteran suicide rate is above the 
national average. Out of the 173 veterans who died by suicide 
in our State in 2018, 112 of them used a firearm. As we know, 
firearms are the most lethal means used in suicides and account 
for nearly 70 percent of the veterans' deaths.
    Our veterans are a segment of the population that is 
uniquely positioned to own firearms. When faced with a crisis 
such as suicide, they often choose the most convenient and 
lethal form, which is a firearm.
    On more than one occasion, I have received a call from a 
wife, a concerned family member, or even a veteran who is 
displaying suicidal tendencies. Generally, veterans do not seek 
medical help. Not knowing where else to turn, the family often 
calls the police. However, law enforcements do have their 
limitations. Instead, I was the one that answered the call that 
night. I was the one that drove to their house. I was the one 
who convinced him to seek help. I was the one who took them to 
the hospital. I was the one who took possession of their 
firearms. I was the one who agreed to take custody of them once 
they were released from the hospital. But sadly, for 6,400 
veterans that committed suicide last year, they did not have 
someone like me to help them.
    Temporarily keeping the guns out of the hands of people who 
have been found, by a court, to pose a significant risk to 
themselves and others is not an infringement on their Second 
Amendment rights. It is an opportunity for a pause, which we 
have seen save lives in Colorado.
    In 2019, I testified in front of the Colorado State 
Legislature to support House Bill 1177. The bill passed, and 
Colorado became the 17th State with an extreme risk law. As of 
April 2020, 19 additional States, including the District of 
Columbia, have enacted similar legislation.
    Admittedly, the path to passing an extreme risk law in 
Colorado was not an easy one. There were many opponents of gun 
safety who raised unfounded fears that such a law would lead to 
mass confiscations of weapons from law-abiding gun owners, or 
that the law could be weaponized and used to retaliate against 
others. But after a year of the law being in place, it has been 
proven to be effective without infringing on the Second 
Amendment right.
    In 2020, Colorado had 112 petitions filed by law 
enforcement and family members. It is important to note that 
only approximately 40 petitions filed resulted in issuing a 
risk protection order. A notable petition was used to disarm a 
47-year-old veteran who threatened to shoot himself and police 
officers. Colorado has proven that this law works. It protects 
individuals' rights, doesn't allow a person's guns to be 
removed without real evidence, and if a person is a danger to 
themselves or others.
    As a veteran, I have a single request of the Senate: Please 
do everything in your power to save the lives of gun violence 
and save veterans from suicide. I urge this--I urge this 
Congress to support States' efforts to pass and implement risk 
protection orders.
    On behalf of the veteran community, I would like to thank 
Senator Blumenthal and Senator Feinstein for their courage and 
leadership on this issue.
    Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Bencomo appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Blumenthal. Thank you, Mr. Bencomo.
    I am now going to call on Mr. Kopel, who will be joining us 
remotely.

             STATEMENT OF DAVID B. KOPEL, RESEARCH

           DIRECTOR, INDEPENDENCE INSTITUTE, ADJUNCT

         SCHOLAR, CATO INSTITUTE, AND ADJUNCT PROFESSOR

          OF CONSTITUTIONAL LAW, UNIVERSITY OF DENVER,

             STURM COLLEGE OF LAW, DENVER, COLORADO

    Mr. Kopel. Great. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman and 
Subcommittee Members. As you know, the United States Senate 
Subcommittee on the Constitution has jurisdiction over 
enforcement and protection of constitutional rights and 
statutory guarantees of civil rights and civil liberties. I 
agree with the American Civil Liberties Union that gun 
confiscation laws may ``be a reasonable way to further public 
safety. To be constitutional,'' the ACLU continues, ``they must 
at a minimum have clear, nondiscriminatory criteria for 
defining persons as dangerous and a fair process for those 
affected to object and be heard by a court.''
    Persons who are blase about due process in the firearms 
confiscation context should recognize that Fourth and Fifth 
Amendment loopholes created for one type special circumstance 
eventually become widespread and normal, for example, asset 
forfeiture without proof of guilt, wireless secret 
surveillance, and police militarization. Any procedure that 
forces a judge to hear only one side of the case necessarily 
can produce a high error rate, and, Senator Blumenthal, you are 
right and I will correct my written testimony about 
Connecticut. While we were waiting, I reviewed the study that I 
had cited, and you described it correctly and I had misread it. 
But as another study, also in my written testimony, points out, 
in Marion County, Indiana, when they studied what happened, 
when the due process hearing finally took place, 29 percent of 
orders were dismissed when the judge heard both sides of the 
case. In fact, in the large majority of cases where the 
respondent appeared, the confiscation order was reversed.
    People should not be subjected to confiscation for 
exercising First Amendment rights. For example, in Florida, an 
ex parte confiscation order was issued against a man because of 
a pair of social media posts. The first was a photo of a rifle 
that he had built at home, which is perfectly legal in every 
State, along with the caption, ``It is done. Hooray.'' The 
second post criticized teenage anti-gun activists for trying to 
take away people's rights.
    In Massachusetts, 84-year-old Stephen Nichols had served in 
the Korean War and for six decades as a police officer in the 
town of Tisbury, Massachusetts. In retirement, he worked as a 
school crossing guard. One day at a diner, he complained that 
the school's assigned police officer was often ``leaving his 
post'' to buy coffee. Mr. Nichols worried that a criminal might 
exploit the officer's frequent absences and ``shoot up the 
school.'' As a result, an ex parte confiscation order was 
issued against Mr. Nichols; his firearms license, which had 
first been issued in 1958, was confiscated, as were all his 
guns and ammunition. It took nearly half a year before his 
firearms license was restored, after Mr. Nichols filed suit.
    Under some circumstances--some confiscation laws, a 
petitioner does not--the accuser does not need to show up in 
court ever. Instead, he or she can testify by telephone. Thus, 
the judge is deprived of the ability to observe the accuser's 
demeanor, which is essential for a court to be able to make 
credibility judgments.
    As in other judicial proceedings, telephonic testimony 
should be allowed only when there is a specific showing of good 
cause in the individual case.
    Sometimes Government attorneys discourage people from 
having counsel, even at their own expense. My written testimony 
includes a former Connecticut prosecutor explaining how he 
talked respondents out of using lawyers, by warning them if 
they did, they would have to pay for an attorney if they did 
not go along with what the prosecutor wanted.
    Colorado has taken steps to prevent such abuse by making 
court-appointed counsel available to all respondents, whether 
or not they are indigent. Federal funding can encourage States 
to broaden the availability of court-appointed counsel.
    According to the U.S. Supreme Court, cross-examination ``is 
beyond any doubt the greatest legal engine ever invented for 
the discovery of truth.'' But under some statutes, the accuser 
and witnesses supporting the accuser never need testify and be 
subject to cross-examination. Instead, accusations can simply 
be made by affidavit. That makes a sham of due process.
    No-knock raids should be the exception and not the norm. In 
Colorado, no-knocks require a judicial warrant issued at the 
request of a district attorney. But Colorado's new confiscation 
law was written to negate this requirement for gun confiscation 
orders.
    Violent no-knock raids, for any purpose, should only be 
allowed when authorized by a court, based on the specific 
circumstances of a case. Law enforcement officers should not 
routinely be put in the position of having to forcibly 
confiscate firearms based on a court order for which the 
accuser never appeared before a judge, and for which the 
accuser's claims were never verified or investigated by law 
enforcement.
    Finally, because perjury prosecutions are extremely rare, 
victims of intentionally false and malicious accusations should 
have a right to sue for damages. The U.S. Senate Subcommittee 
on the Constitution can properly exercise its jurisdiction by 
encouraging States to enact or improve statutes so they adhere 
to best practices.
    Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Kopel appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Blumenthal. Thanks, Mr. Kopel.
    I would like to now ask Kimberly Wyatt to give her 
testimony. Again, I think it is by remote.

              STATEMENT OF KIMBERLY WYATT, SENIOR

            DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY, KING COUNTY

       PROSECUTING ATTORNEY'S OFFICE, SEATTLE, WASHINGTON

    Ms. Wyatt. Yes, good afternoon, Chairman Blumenthal, 
Ranking Member Cruz, and distinguished Members of the Senate 
Judiciary Committee.
    My name is Kimberly Wyatt, and I am a senior deputy 
prosecuting attorney from King County, Washington. I am 
grateful for the opportunity to testify and share with you the 
importance of having an extreme risk protection order law, in 
our State, known as ``ERPO,'' and how this law has worked over 
the past years. You will hear about the need for ERPO 
implementation, the benefits of increased coordination with 
local and Federal law enforcement, and real-life applications 
of how ERPO has been used to save lives.
    As our Nation faces the most recent tragedies and senseless 
losses of life in Indianapolis, Boulder, Atlanta, and many 
others, our Nation grieves, as it all too frequently does in 
the aftermath of mass shootings. I am here today, speaking from 
experience, to say we have an opportunity to get ahead and 
create a viable path forward. It is time for us to act and lean 
into the tools that can make a difference in curbing firearm 
violence, and one of those tools is extreme risk protection 
orders.
    Extreme risk protection orders are a critical tool to 
intervene to prevent a firearm-related tragedy from occurring. 
Countless reports published by the U.S. Secret Service and many 
others have found that people who intend to do harm to 
themselves or others often share that information in one form 
or another. Being alert to this information is the key to 
saving lives. Extreme risk protection orders and how our unit 
was formed, the Regional Domestic Violence Firearms Enforcement 
Unit, has helped intervene and disrupt several potential 
suicides, mass shootings, and other threats to the community.
    Extreme risk protection orders allow family members and law 
enforcement who have seen those warning signs to come 
immediately before the court and petition for a temporary order 
that prevents the at-risk individual from purchasing and 
possessing firearms. Intervening at the time of the warning 
signs and threats can make the difference between life and 
death. ERPOs also have due process built in, as a judge oversee 
each phase.
    As we have learned locally, ERPO laws do not implement 
themselves. We quickly realized the need for ERPO education. 
Having a law alone is insufficient. It is critically important 
that law enforcement and other system partners and community 
members are aware that ERPO is a tool, specifically a tool to 
prevent suicides, threats to others--including threats of mass 
violence. Equally essential is the need for the public to know 
that if their loved one is in crisis, there is a tool perhaps 
that they could use. Having a designated ERPO prosecutor and 
advocate to help assist families to educate and to guide 
through that--the process of petitioning for an ERPO in real 
time has proved to be a successful model. Federal funding is 
needed to provide States a model policy to adopt ERPOs.
    To understand how ERPO has worked in my jurisdiction, I 
want to give a very brief context of where I am from in King 
County. King County, Washington, has a population of 
approximately 2.2 million people and is comprised of more than 
30 different law enforcement agencies. The county has densely 
populated areas like Seattle, but also many urban, suburban and 
rural areas. In 2020, our unit assisted with 79 ERPO petitions. 
The numbers do not tell the stories alone. We need to look at 
the facts of several of the cases that we assisted on.
    In one suicide prevention case, a father reached out to our 
unit, expressing concerns that his son was actively suicidal, 
had access to firearms, and had a significant substance abuse 
issue. An ERPO was filed to temporarily remove the firearms 
from the home. The father testified at the hearing and told the 
court that he ``believes in the law of commonsense,'' and that 
the ERPO, this law of commonsense, was needed to protect his 
son and family.
    We have also worked in coordination with Federal partners 
on several ERPOs, including one where a Federal employee made 
threats of mass violence toward his employer after he was 
placed on leave. The employee made threats that included a 
reference to a ``massive massacre in the Federal workplace'' 
and stated he had nothing to live for and it was going to be 
``a blood bath.'' Our unit was contacted to assist with the 
ERPO, and while Federal law enforcement was investigating the 
threats, a temporary ERPO was obtained. In coordination with 
law enforcement, the respondent was served, and the firearm 
parts that the respondent had purchased were intercepted by law 
enforcement before he could carry out his plot.
    In another case in cooperation with Federal and local law 
enforcement, an ERPO was filed against a self-admitted member 
of a neo-Nazi group known for promoting and advocating and 
advancing a violent ideology.
    The respondent was organizing hate camps that included 
firearms training, access to firearms while promoting threats 
of mass violence--including threats to kill members of the 
Jewish community. A temporary ERPO was served, and numerous 
firearms were recovered, including ghost guns.
    Every example above illustrates the importance of acting 
when behaviors suggest that someone might be a danger to 
themselves or others. In so many situations, we do not get a 
second chance to intervene. Extreme risk protection orders save 
lives. I know this firsthand. Every State in the Nation 
deserves to have this lifesaving legislation.
    Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Ms. Wyatt appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Blumenthal. Thanks, Ms. Wyatt.
    I would like to introduce Nikki Goeser, and as you begin, 
let me just speak, I am sure, on behalf of the entire Committee 
to say how deeply our hearts go out to you on your loss, and we 
really appreciate your being here today.

              STATEMENT OF NIKKI GOESER, EXECUTIVE

              DIRECTOR, CRIME PREVENTION RESEARCH

                  CENTER, NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE

    Ms. Goeser. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Can you hear me okay?
    Chair Blumenthal. We can hear you.
    Ms. Goeser. Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Members of the 
Committee. I am here speaking as a victim of a violent crime. I 
would like to give you some insight on how red flag laws can 
have devastating, unintended consequences for many Americans.
    In 2009, my husband, Ben, was shot seven times and killed 
in front of me by a man who I had just realized, that very 
night was stalking me. This occurred in a gun-free zone. I 
asked management to please remove the man from the 
establishment because I realized I was being stalked. There was 
no confrontation or words exchanged with my stalker. When 
management approached him and asked him to leave, he pulled a 
handgun, came up behind Ben, shot him in the head, and then 
stood over Ben and continued to fire six more rounds into him.
    My stalker was in complete control. He was the only one 
with a gun. Because of the law, I had to leave my legal, 
permitted firearm that I normally carried for self-defense, 
locked inside my vehicle that night. I obeyed that gun control 
law; my stalker did not.
    When police searched his vehicle at the crime scene, they 
found two more guns, ammunition, a baseball bat, binoculars, 
gloves, rope, and a knife. Ben's murderer has been sending me 
twisted love letters for years from prison, to traumatize me 
even further. Much to my dismay, he is set to be released early 
for ``good behavior'' in just 7 more years. I have very real 
fears about what he will do once released. This horrifying 
experience will be with me for the rest of my life.
    The days, months, and years that followed were very 
difficult. Depression, nightmares, grief, trauma, loss, concern 
for my safety were all things I dealt with and had to work 
through. Put yourself in my shoes. How would you feel?
    I remember thinking at the time that if I just happened to 
pass away in my sleep, I would be okay with that, because I did 
not know how I could face another day. I was never suicidal, 
but you can see where someone may misinterpret that. If red 
flag laws had been in place in my State of Tennessee, even 
those with the best of intentions could have had an exaggerated 
concern and assume they were acting in my best interest by 
having my guns taken from me. It would be devastating for a 
victim like me to be unable to protect myself after this 
stalker violated me in such a horrific and life-altering way. 
If he comes after me someday, my gun may be the only thing that 
could save my life.
    Red flag laws have a real chilling effect and can cause 
victims to fear losing their rights if they seek help by 
talking with friends, family, or psychologists. Rights should 
never be taken from people without due process first. Mental 
health experts should absolutely be involved in that due 
process.
    Under red flag laws, the burden of hiring an attorney and 
paying thousands of dollars for representation would be on the 
person flagged. Who knows how long it could take in court and 
how much money it would cost to regain my safety? The process 
is unfair and burdensome.
    It is not only victims who can be impacted by these laws. 
Anyone who has dealt with traumatic events can be affected--
police, first responders, nurses, doctors, military, et cetera. 
Research varies. There are indications that red flag laws range 
from having no significant effect on homicides and suicides to 
an increase.
    I learned, during the murder trial, that there were signs 
my stalker was a danger to others years before he crossed our 
path. His co-workers, friends, and family knew of these signs. 
I do not know if those in my stalker's life ever reported him 
to police, but if they did, just as with Nikolas Cruz, who did 
the Parkland attack, they did not act.
    Ben's murderer threatened to kill his own secretary at his 
job in Florida. My stalker's father said at trial that it 
``scared the stew'' out of her. He fired a shotgun out of anger 
at innocent hunters who were near his property. At this point, 
he should have been arrested, charged, and convicted. That, 
alone, would have prohibited him from possessing and purchasing 
firearms. But for some reason, that never happened. These are 
just a few examples of many. He had no criminal record and no 
mental illness on record, but he certainly should have. Somehow 
he fell through the cracks.
    The people in his life back then could have ``Baker Acted'' 
him. That is where they put you on a 72-hour hold; you have a 
mental evaluation; the judge looks at evidence; and there is a 
whole range of options. They can, you know, do the outpatient 
treatment, removal of guns, or involuntary commitment.
    I just feel that if someone is, indeed, a real danger to 
themself or others, simply taking away their guns is not a 
serious response. Red flag laws are overwhelmingly used because 
of fears of suicide. There are other ways to commit suicide 
that have similar high success rates.
    In conclusion, I believe the focus should be on mental 
health services and facilities in this country. Focus on 
education for the public, training for law enforcement, judges, 
and prosecutors on enforcement of existing laws like the Baker 
Act and those similar laws across the Nation already. And 
please, do not forget compassion for good people going through 
a difficult time.
    Thank you so much.
    [The prepared statement of Ms. Goeser appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Blumenthal. Thank you, Ms. Goeser. Mr. Horwitz.

                  STATEMENT OF JOSHUA HORWITZ,

                EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, COALITION TO

               STOP GUN VIOLENCE, WASHINGTON, DC.

    Mr. Horwitz. Good afternoon, Chairman Blumenthal, Ranking 
Member Cruz, and distinguished Members of the Committee. Thank 
you for giving me the opportunity to testify on the importance 
of extreme risk laws, and their value in preventing gun 
violence. My name is Josh Horwitz, and I am the executive 
director at the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence. We develop and 
advocate for evidence-based solutions to reduce gun injury and 
death in all of its forms.
    Ms. Goeser, I am so sorry for your loss. Like you and like 
so many others, I came to the gun violence prevention movement 
because of my own personal loss. Thirty-two years ago, a dear 
friend of mine took her own life using a newly purchased 
firearm in a moment of hopelessness. Back then, I did not have 
the knowledge or the tools to intervene effectively. I 
desperately wish that I could go back in time. But I can't, and 
I can't bring my friend back. What I can do is what I am doing 
right now: encouraging policymakers like you to use your power 
to support life-saving policies like extreme risk laws so that 
no other families or friends have to experience this type of 
heartbreak.
    Gun violence in our country remains persistently high, 
taking nearly 40,000 lives each year. Sixty percent of those 
deaths are suicide. Although no single intervention will serve 
as a panacea to the epidemic of gun violence, extreme risk 
laws, which help prevent lethal violence before it occurs, have 
the potential to save many lives and are gaining traction 
throughout the country. Enacted in blue and red States alike, 
and endorsed by both the Trump and Biden administrations, this 
policy provides a clear opportunity to find common ground in 
stemming this ongoing nationwide tragedy.
    In the months that followed the Sandy Hook shooting, the 
national dialogue around preventing gun violence was focused on 
mental illness. To determine whether this approach would be 
effective, I convened a group of the Nation's leading 
researchers to identify risk factors for violence, and to 
formulate evidence-based policy recommendations. When reviewing 
this research, this group, who became known as the Consortium 
for Risk-Based Firearm Policy, concluded that firearm 
prohibitions based only on mental illness diagnosis are not 
supported by research evidence and are harmfully stigmatizing.
    Instead, we identified behavioral risk factors for violence 
that are supported by research, including violent behavior, 
threats of violence, and risky alcohol use.
    We know that in many high-profile shootings and firearm 
suicides, family members were often the first to know their 
loved ones were in crisis. Unfortunately, there were few tools 
for family members and law enforcement to use during these 
moments.
    To address this gap, the consortium developed the modern-
day extreme risk protection order, based on long-standing 
domestic violence restraining orders found in every State as 
well as the established risk-based firearm removal laws in 
Connecticut and Indiana. Today a total of 19 States and DC have 
extreme risk laws on the books.
    There are usually two types of extreme risk protection 
orders: temporary ex parte orders and final orders. These 
processes have been found to be constitutional by courts across 
the country. In some cases, the temporary order, which 
typically lasts 14 days, provides enough time to mitigate risk, 
and it becomes unnecessary to go for a final order. 
Importantly, both temporary and final orders, which typically 
last up to 1 year, are civil and not criminal. They are time-
limited and ensure processes are in place for returning the 
respondent's firearms at the conclusion of the orders.
    Multiple studies of extreme risk laws have found that they 
are especially effective in preventing suicides, and new 
research suggests that they may help prevent mass violence as 
well, including school violence.
    However, extreme risk laws can reach their full potential 
only if they are implemented effectively and fairly. I have met 
with people around the country, hosting forums about extreme 
risk laws and learning from stakeholders putting them into 
practice. The use of those laws vary not only between States, 
but between cities and counties, too. These variations are 
typically a function of training and staff.
    Although extreme risk laws are a State-level policy, the 
Federal Government can play an important role by supplying 
resources to advance State implementation efforts. By 
supporting local jurisdictions to train law enforcement 
officers, judges, and clerks, the Federal Government can help 
to assure safe and equitable application of extreme risk laws, 
access to services for respondents, and proper reporting of 
records to the NICS system.
    Unfortunately, this month's mass shooting at the 
Indianapolis FedEx warehouse highlights the devastating effect 
of a failure to implement an extreme risk statute. Had an 
extreme risk order been obtained, eight families might not be 
grieving right now. We cannot allow these cases to fall through 
the cracks for lack of resources and training. Too many lives 
are at stake.
    Gun violence is preventable. While I am sure that every 
Member of this Committee does not agree with every nuance of 
every extreme risk law, I hope that we can agree that 
temporarily removing firearms from a person at high risk of 
violence is the right thing to do, and that we can do it in a 
way that enhances community safety while respecting 
constitutional rights.
    Thank you for this opportunity to testify. I look forward 
to your questions.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Horwitz appears as a 
submission for the record.]
    Chair Blumenthal. Thank you very much, Mr. Horwitz.
    I am going to begin with some questions. We are actually, I 
believe, in the middle of a vote, and so we may kind of tag-
team. We may have to take a recess briefly. But I will begin 
the questioning.
    Let me ask you, Mr. Horwitz, I don't know of any red flag 
or extreme risk law that has been struck down by any court 
across the country.
    Mr. Horwitz. You are correct.
    Chair Blumenthal. Why would you say that is, given all of 
the hullabaloo that we have heard about due process and 
constitutional rights?
    Mr. Horwitz. I would say that is because it is built on the 
same process as a domestic violence restraining order, which 
has been found again to be constitutional. It's a very similar 
situation. Instead of, for instance, you know, a spouse worried 
about the risk to them from another spouse, for instance, what 
happens in the situation where the spouse is a danger to 
themselves, right? It's the same risk, the firearm is in play, 
the same risk factors, the threats of violence. Judges have a 
good sense of how that works, and it is the same standard from 
State to State. I really think we built it on this domestic 
violence restraining order process, well established, all 50 
States, courts know how to use it. I think that is why they 
have been found to be constitutional.
    Chair Blumenthal. I have heard the argument made that red 
flag laws are unnecessary because we have domestic violence 
protections. Is that true?
    Mr. Horwitz. I think, you know, especially in the case of 
risk to self, I mean, that is a big issue where, you know, a 
domestic violence restraining order, you cannot--it's not 
available for someone who is at suicide--risk of suicide.
    Additionally, when your there--think about it is broader--
you know, here law enforcement can go and use a civil order in 
many situations. It is broader than a DV law, but built on the 
same process with the same protections.
    Chair Blumenthal. In fact, the target of a shooter may not 
be somebody at home. It could be a school. It could be someone 
at work. It could be a stranger who is stalked. It could be 
anyone.
    Mr. Horwitz. Right. When you look at the examples, you 
often see that the person who is at risk may not be in any 
relationship at all to the shooter. This gives that opportunity 
for law enforcement to intervene, and it gives them clear legal 
authority to intervene, which is very important.
    Chair Blumenthal. The claim has been made that the process 
for regaining a firearm is costly, it's burdensome. Is that 
customarily----
    Mr. Horwitz. When the order expires, the firearms get 
returned. The same this works--this is, again, a civil not 
criminal process. These are quick processes. Typically in the 
United States, we do not--you know, lawyers are not provided 
for protective orders, the same as DV laws.
    Chair Blumenthal. If the firearm is retained, the burden is 
on the prosecutor, or the official who wants it to be retained, 
to prove that there is some danger, some severe risk, and it is 
called ``extreme risk'' for a reason. There is extreme risk, 
and the burden is to present evidence, not just make the claim, 
correct?
    Mr. Horwitz. It is two stages. You have temporary, where 
you have to make the claim, and what we call ``permanent,'' 
although it is for a year, where you have to make that claim 
and you have to prove it twice in most cases. Oftentimes the 
burden of proof is higher the second time around.
    Chair Blumenthal. In fact, the burden is always on the 
prosecutor, and it often is----
    Mr. Horwitz. So just----
    Chair Blumenthal [continuing]. Higher.
    Mr. Horwitz. I am sorry.
    Chair Blumenthal. Let me just ask Ms. Wyatt, because you 
have a unit consisting of law enforcement, prosecutors, a court 
advocate, a problem solver, a court coordinator, a paralegal, a 
data technician, and a program manager who all assess the 
danger before you even go to get a warrant that separates 
someone from a firearm. You are extremely cautious and 
demanding of yourselves before you exercise that power. Is that 
correct?
    Ms. Wyatt. That is correct, and we are carefully vetting 
those cases, typically with law enforcement as well. And so, we 
are going through to make sure, one, ethically, legally it 
meets the standard for an extreme risk protection order in our 
State, so we are going to have to petition the court to be able 
to prove that that individual is a significant danger to 
themselves or others. Then there is a series of factors that we 
are basing that off of, and that typically involves a threat of 
self-harm or threats to others. You are absolutely right that 
there are many different layers built into the process, and as 
you can see, we have a population of 2.2 million people, and we 
filed last year--or assisted filing with law enforcement and 
families--79 ERPOs. I believe that is less than 0.002 percent 
of the population. We are very specific and targeted about our 
program.
    Chair Blumenthal. It takes resources to run that kind of 
unit, and that is exactly the kind of resources and support we 
would try to provide through this legislation for State 
statutes. Again, we are not talking about a Federal mandate. It 
is State statutes that would be supported and encouraged and 
incentivized.
    Mr. Bencomo, let me just finish with a quick question to 
you. In your experience, I think that a very substantial 
proportion of victims of suicide are, in fact, veterans. Why is 
that?
    Mr. Bencomo. There is--this is a personal thought, that 
there is a stigma within the veterans community to seek mental 
health. We are trained warriors for this country. We are 
strong, we are patriotic, we have a job to do. At times, we 
cannot allow some of our personal emotions to get in the way, 
and that carries on once we leave service. It is a very strong 
and power defense for us, and that is probably one of the 
reasons why many of us will not seek mental health when we are 
asked to or need to.
    Chair Blumenthal. Often the effect of going to court in a 
red flag case has the effect of persuading a veteran to seek 
help. Is that correct?
    Mr. Bencomo. I would say if they were required by the 
court, then, yes, they would have to--by the nature of the 
case, would have to then seek some type of mental counseling.
    Chair Blumenthal. Thank you. Senator Cruz.
    Senator Cruz. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I will note, Mr. 
Chairman, I was remiss at the outset of this hearing in not 
congratulating you on being Chairman of this Committee. I had 
the pleasure of being Chairman of this Committee--Subcommittee 
for the past couple of Congresses, and it is a terrific 
Committee with, I think, the best jurisdiction in the entire 
Senate. I look forward to serving with you as Ranking Member on 
the Committee.
    Chair Blumenthal. Thank you.
    Senator Cruz. Mr. Kopel, the last time you and I spoke, I 
asked you what the minimum protections that an extreme risk law 
should have to ensure that it comports with due process. You 
responded that laws should not allow ex parte proceedings 
except on a finding of necessity, that laws should use a clear 
and convincing standard throughout, and that respondents should 
have a right to counsel and the right to cross-examination.
    Do any of the laws currently on the books meet all of these 
criteria?
    Mr. Kopel. Not in--there is no one State that has all of--
State that has all of them. In several States, you can pick 
things from several States that are good on a particular item, 
but no State law has the full scope of what I would say is fair 
for due process. As Senator Blumenthal and Mr. Horwitz 
discussed, there have not been very many constitutional 
challenges on this, but the ones that have, have been not very 
successful, have failed, and partly because they were very 
broad kind of facial attacks.
    The bigger picture is courts are not always our leaders in 
protecting due process. Civil asset forfeiture, I think, is now 
something that people say went way too far and has been 
performed by statute. But judicially, there was very little 
that ever got done about that, and most of the challenges 
failed. There is the, kind of, most minimal level of due 
process the courts will enforce, and then there can be higher, 
better standards that legislatures insist on.
    Senator Cruz. President Biden instructed the Department of 
Justice to develop a model red flag law for the States. The 
last time you were here, we discussed the fact that Giffords, a 
progressive gun control organization, blocked the drafting of a 
model red flag law by the Uniform Law Commission because they 
insisted on their own more extreme model. I am concerned that 
the Department of Justice will put out a model law that is, 
more or less, the same as Giffords' extreme model.
    Can you tell us, in your judgment, what that model looks 
like, and why it is so extreme?
    Mr. Kopel. It is a model that, on the one hand, doesn't 
view the temporary, whether for 2 weeks or even a mistaken 
thing for much longer, deprivation of the right to arms as a 
significant harm. Its premise is somewhat unbalanced in how it 
weighs things. It is--ultimately it's something that is based 
on one side of the issue, you know, which is understandable. 
You know, that is the faction that won the election and 
controls the Presidency. What was going on in the Uniform Law 
Commission was to take into account both points of view. For 
example, one group in the Commission was the International 
Association of Chiefs of Police, which is a very--has been for 
decades a very pro-gun control organization. On the other hand 
was the National Sheriffs Association, which is definitely not 
absolutist against gun control but is more typically skeptical.
    If you had both of those perspectives, I think that would 
lead to a more balanced, fair, and accurate process, because I 
think we--there is agreement that there are some people from 
whom guns should be taken away for public safety, and also 
there has to be recognition that sometimes mistakes happen and 
people are improperly deprived, and we want to get a process 
that has the highest possible feasible level of accuracy.
    Senator Cruz. President Biden has nominated David Chipman, 
who is a senior policy adviser for Giffords, to be the Director 
of the ATF. I understand that you have a bit of history with 
Mr. Chipman regarding red flag laws and that he seemed not to 
have great concern about law-abiding citizens having their 
right to self-defense stripped away. Could you give us some 
background on what happened with Mr. Chipman?
    Mr. Kopel. Sure. He was on the Commission, a member of the 
study--Uniform Law Commissioners' study committee with me. As 
you mentioned, I brought up the problem of we want to make sure 
we do not disarm innocent people, even on a temporary basis, 
because that creates danger for them, and then his response 
was, ``Well, people can just buy a replica gun,'' and maybe if 
they are a great actor they can scare people away with a 
replica gun, but that is not really an effective alternative to 
an actual firearm for lawful self-defense.
    In another part of the discussion, I said--I brought up the 
point about no-knocks, and in general, we--of course, no-knocks 
are necessary in some situations, but we want to have them used 
when they are necessary, and not just routinely. We have seen 
lots of situations, outside of red flags, where no-knocks just 
get carried out kind of in a reckless way because the local 
SWAT team does not have anything else to do that day.
    Mr. Chipman's response was, ``Do not tell the police how to 
do their job.'' I guess as a constitutional law professor--and 
my dad was in the State legislature as a Democratic liberal 
representative from northeast Denver for 22 years--we tell 
police how to do their jobs all the time. That is what the 
Fourth Amendment to the Constitution does, the Fifth Amendment 
does that, and so do all kinds of statutes we have in this 
country.
    Senator Cruz. Thank you, Mr. Kopel.
    A final question, Ms. Goeser. Thank you for appearing 
today. Thank you for telling the story of the horrific murder 
of your husband, and thank you for using the pain and horror of 
that crime, using it to try to protect others who might be 
victims of violent crime in the future. Your husband was 
murdered in a gun-free zone, and you followed the law. You did 
not have your firearm. You were not able to protect yourself or 
protect him. That is a familiar pattern with gun control 
efforts, and many of the mass murders we have seen have 
occurred, similarly, in so-called gun-free zones.
    Are you concerned that the same will be true with red flag 
laws, that law-abiding citizens could have their firearms 
confiscated, particularly when they are vulnerable to 
criminals, but the criminals will refuse to turn over their 
weapons, and the result will be other potential victims of 
crime being left vulnerable to violence?
    Ms. Goeser. Yes, absolutely. I am very concerned about 
that. Of course, there are people who can abuse red flag laws. 
You know, there are people that can abuse existing laws, too, 
but, you know, at least with the Baker Act--different States 
call it different things, but we pretty much have an option 
that is the Baker Act. They call it different things in 
different States, but it exists all over the Nation. Every 
State has a similar law to the Baker Act, and they offer 
protections. You know, I don't have $10,000 in my savings 
account to cover legal fees if someone flagged me for some 
reason. You know, it is pretty scary that someone could knock 
on your door, law enforcement knock on your door at 5 a.m. and 
say, ``Hey, we are taking your guns,'' and you have no idea 
why. You don't know why, what is going on. I need to be able to 
protect myself. I just think due process is so important. 
Mental health experts should always be involved. That should be 
mandatory. If we are talking about mental health, mental health 
experts should absolutely be involved in that due process. And 
I believe due process needs to come first.
    Look, if someone is truly dangerous, if they are truly 
dangerous, they need to be confined to a mental health 
facility. I mean, so you take someone's gun away. They are 
still dangerous. That is how I feel.
    Senator Cruz. Thank you.
    Chair Blumenthal. Thanks, Senator Cruz. Senator Whitehouse.
    Senator Whitehouse. Thank you, Senator Blumenthal, for this 
hearing and for your long-long-time passion and leadership for 
protecting our people from the scourge of gun violence.
    Mr. Horwitz, we passed a red flag law in Rhode Island. It 
went into effect in June of 2018, and the last report I have 
ends with that as of November 2019. In that period, State and 
local police in Rhode Island invoked that law 33 times. In one 
of our municipalities, Cranston, police petitioned for red flag 
orders eight times, just in one city. In one case, police 
seized weapons and obtained an order to help a worker who had 
made comments he had a desire to kill certain coworkers and had 
boasted about his firearms.
    Is that experience in Rhode Island consistent with what you 
see around the country in terms of the laws being made 
effective?
    Mr. Horwitz. I think it is. I mean, I think we are seeing 
it used very judiciously. I think we are not seeing, you know, 
millions of these being done. I think, you know, in Virginia, 
where I am very familiar, I think there is under 70 or so in 
the first year. I think it's very consistent with what we are 
seeing around the country.
    You know, California, in the first couple years, saw under 
400 in such a big State, but they are very important. They are 
based on someone's--you know, on the risk of individuals, and I 
think that is why you don't--they are not used for mass--like 
for lots of people across a wide spectrum. They are 
individualized attempts to identify people who are at a risk, 
an elevated risk of violence, and I think that is why they are 
important, that is why they are constitutional, and that is why 
they are effective.
    Senator Whitehouse. Ms. Wyatt, those of us who have sat in 
a prosecutor's chair and had to make the decisions that you 
have to make are familiar with a whole variety of legal 
procedures that help protect people from threats of violence, 
whether it is restraining orders, protective orders. They are 
particularly common in the domestic violence arena. In your 
view, are the protections involved in the red flag laws 
consistent with those for other types of safety orders that law 
enforcement commonly obtains?
    Ms. Wyatt. Thank you for the question. Yes, you are exactly 
correct in that extreme risk protection orders follow the 
process similar to domestic violence protection orders or 
sexual assault or anti-harassment orders, meaning that each 
phase comes before a judicial officer. A family member cannot 
walk down the street and get an ERPO on their own, nor can law 
enforcement. They have to sign and fill out a detailed 
petition, sign under penalty of perjury, and then it is 
submitted to the court, just like any other civil order would 
be, and the court is making a determination if there--in our 
State if there is reasonable cause that the individual is a 
significant danger to themselves or others. There is a similar 
process with other civil protection orders as well, and then 
the individual subject to the order has to be served, because 
that individual needs a chance to be able to come to court, to 
have their own witnesses, to be able to tell the court either 
they are in favor of the order or they are going to challenge 
that order. Each phase and each step involves judicial 
oversight.
    Senator Whitehouse. In particular, Ms. Wyatt, do you think 
just as a matter of good practice it would be advisable to have 
domestic violence victims or those who have a restraining order 
protecting them from another individual be advised when that 
individual, their assailant or the threat to them, acquires or 
tries to acquire a weapon, a firearm specifically?
    Ms. Wyatt. Yes, and our unit specifically addresses not 
only extreme risk protection orders, but, of course, also 
domestic violence protection orders. Because the lethality is 
so high at the moment that those victims are petitioning for 
separation or petitioning the court for a domestic violence 
protection order, it is critically important that we follow up 
and enforce court orders when they are ordered to surrender 
weapons, like in our domestic violence cases or ERPO. Our own 
State has a system set up to notify if somebody is subject to 
an order and somebody attempts to purchase or we get 
notification from our State patrol, and it goes to local law 
enforcement as well as our unit, and then we have victim 
advocates that are reaching out to the victims as well, to make 
sure that they know that there was either an attempted purchase 
or if a firearm was actually delivered, then we are going to be 
following up with local and Federal authorities if we believe 
that firearm was given to somebody who should not have it.
    Senator Whitehouse. If I could ask one more question of Mr. 
Bencomo.
    Chair Blumenthal. Sure.
    Senator Whitehouse. I think it's human experience that 
powerful emotions can pass through human beings--anger, rage, 
jealousy--and that the decision-making during that period, when 
you are in the grip of a fierce emotion, can be compromised, 
and that people act out in unfortunate ways in that moment, and 
make decisions, sometimes, that have irrevocable consequences 
for the rest of their lives.
    Given that aspect of human nature, is it conceivable that 
the subject of a restraining order, the person who is told they 
have to take a pause on having their firearm, is actually the 
real beneficiary of that restraint?
    Mr. Bencomo. A simple response would be yes.
    Senator Whitehouse. Yes. It just seems that way. You lose 
your access to your firearm for a week or two, and you are 
spared a lifetime of guilt and remorse, and the horrible memory 
of having acted on something when you were in a fit of emotion. 
It seems that way to me, anyway. Thank you.
    Mr. Bencomo. Thank you.
    Chair Blumenthal. Thanks, Senator Whitehouse.
    I am going to call on Senator Lee. I am going to vote. If I 
am not back by the time he is finished with his questioning, he 
is going to call a brief recess. I will be back, and we can 
resume then. Thanks, Senator Lee.
    Senator Lee [presiding]. Thanks so much, Mr. Chairman. I 
really appreciate you accommodating me in that regard.
    Thanks to each of you for being here today. You know, the 
Second Amendment guarantees our right to keep and bear arms. 
This was a right that our Founding Fathers deemed fundamental, 
so much so that they added it to the text of the original 
Constitution, and it's not only the Second Amendment that is at 
stake when we talk about things like this. There is also the 
concept of due process.
    The Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause, of course, 
provides that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or 
property without due process of law. That requirement is, of 
course, made applicable to the States through the 14th 
Amendment.
    You see, our freedom isn't free. Whenever Government acts, 
it does so, inevitably, at the expense of individual liberty. 
That is where Government has to get its power. We need 
Government, and just the same we need Government to respect 
boundaries on its own authority.
    I certainly agree that we should take steps, wherever 
possible, to make sure that people who shouldn't have guns 
don't have them, in particular, those who are legally 
prohibited from having them, because they were adjudicated as 
mentally unfit to do so, or they have been convicted of a 
crime. These restrictions are consistent with our system of 
laws, and they can be applied in a manner that does not offend 
our constitutional rights.
    Ms. Goeser, I am very touched by your testimony. As I read 
through your written testimony, I could not help but notice 
that, as you were talking about difficult things and the 
difficult circumstance in which you had to witness your own 
husband's murder, even while you had a firearm and had access 
to it, but you chose to comply with the law, your assailant did 
not. I think you summarized it extremely well with just a few 
words: ``I obeyed that gun control law; my stalker did not.''
    I do not think I have found any one sentence that better 
summarizes the need to respect the Second Amendment, the need 
to protect due process, and also the dilemma that we face and 
that we have to take into account whenever we choose to enact 
laws infringing upon those rights.
    It sounds to me like you would likely agree with the 
proposition that it is not a cost-free action for the 
Government to take, that in the name of protecting people from 
the horrors of gun violence, Government can also inflict 
violence. Would you care to elaborate on that based on your 
experience?
    Ms. Goeser. I think that there are some laws that are 
created that just--they have unintended consequences. I think 
some of these gun control laws were created thinking that, you 
know, we are going to protect people. Unfortunately, it can 
make some people out there vulnerable, so that they cannot 
protect themselves and their loved ones. You know, I do not 
want dangerous people to have access to guns, but you know 
what? I do not want them to have access to a vehicle or a knife 
or a baseball bat or a pressure cooker. I mean, if they are 
truly dangerous--of course, I want everyone to have due 
process. I believe murderers deserve due process, and victims 
as well. That is what is so great about our country, that we do 
have due process and we do have a Constitution. I do not want 
to live anywhere else. I love America, and I love that about 
America.
    Senator Lee. Yet it is sometimes suggested, and we have 
heard it suggested even just in the last few moments, that the 
worst that can happen if you take somebody's gun away without 
due process is that they have to go without it for a few days, 
or for a couple of weeks. Yet your circumstances would seem to 
suggest that that is not true, that that is not the full extent 
of the downside of that, that there is more cost. Sometimes, 
that cost is borne not just in an inconvenience, but in someone 
being left vulnerable.
    Ms. Goeser. Yes, absolutely. In my case it would have 
compounded the problem. Of course, I was depressed. Who 
wouldn't be? Of course, I had nightmares. Who wouldn't after 
going through that? To take away my basic human right of self-
defense on top of all of that would just be devastating for 
someone like me.
    Senator Lee. Sometimes people will argue due process is 
great and everything, but with respect to the bad folks, we 
cannot give them due process. Isn't that the problem with due 
process itself? I mean, if we are going to respect due process, 
aren't we agreeing, up front, that due process needs to be up 
front? It is not really due process if it is only after the 
fact. Is that right?
    Ms. Goeser. That is right. I understand it can be very 
scary. I mean, I get it. I get it. I am a victim of a violent 
crime. But like I said, if you truly believe that someone is a 
danger, they should be confined to a mental facility. They 
should have due process, and that is why I support the Baker 
Act and similar laws that already exist all across the Nation. 
Every State has a similar law to that, because it includes due 
process. Your legal fees are covered. They are not under red 
flag laws. You know, I do not have $10,000 to cover legal fees. 
It can be very, very expensive. With the Baker Act and similar 
laws, mental health experts are involved. That is not always 
the case with red flag laws, and I think that is very important 
that mental health experts be involved in that due process.
    Senator Lee. Mr. Kopel, does lack of notice and due process 
that sometimes might go along with gun confiscation orders, 
doesn't this have some potential to increase the risk of harm, 
both to law enforcement officers executing the orders and to 
those who are subject to those orders?
    Mr. Kopel. Sure. I mean, imagine a situation where 
officers--there is an ex parte order that has been issued, and, 
you know, maybe it is on weak evidence and the guy is really 
not dangerous, but the confiscation order is served by the 
police showing up at somebody's house at 5 o'clock in the 
morning. You know, normally a homeowner might think it was a 
burglary and--because he has no idea that anybody is coming to 
take his guns. There is also a broader problem in the--how it 
erodes trust between law enforcement and the public, and this 
was talked about in one of the Connecticut studies that is 
quoted in my written testimony.
    When you have somebody whose guns are taken away and 
confiscated, the police show up, you know, never heard of 
anything going on against me, but now here is a cop coming to 
take my guns, as the--some Connecticut State Police officers 
have reported, these are often the guys who think of themselves 
as the most pro-cop. You know, they are the ones who were on 
``Back the Blue,'' on the side of law enforcement, understand 
it is a tough job. Then all of a sudden the guys they thought 
were their friends are there to take away their property, when 
it is a complete surprise to the person, and then maybe a few 
weeks later the person hires a lawyer, goes into court, they 
get their guns back. But in the meantime, it has been a very 
humiliating process for the wrongly accused individual. Law 
enforcement, whom I have often represented in amicus briefs in 
courts and elsewhere, are so dependent on the cooperation and 
good will of the public. You know, that is the American model. 
We are not policing from above like in some other less free 
countries.
    When these are done wrongfully, they really break that 
relationship and bond between the public and law enforcement 
that is necessary to successful law enforcement and public 
safety.
    Senator Lee. Mr. Kopel, there are a number of us, myself 
included, who have formed sort of a bipartisan coalition 
raising concerns in a related area of civil asset forfeiture, 
where in areas outside of firearms, we have raised concerns 
with law enforcement being able to take people's property first 
and then ask questions later, to take first and then provide 
some sort of process later.
    Due process, of course, has a higher expectation than that, 
does it not? Do you see the--tell me what you think about the 
parallel between this and that. In other words, if one is 
concerned about the potential for abuse, and the actuality of 
abuse, in the civil asset forfeiture arena, how could one not 
see something similar when it extends to the Second Amendment?
    Mr. Kopel. It is the same kind--a similar kind of 
situation, and both have good intentions of trying to deal with 
a serious problem. Here gun crime and civil asset forfeiture, 
it had always existed in kind of a minor way, but it really got 
ramped up in a huge way in the 1970s and 1980s because of the 
drug war. Of course, drug abuse can be very harmful not only to 
an individual but to society more broadly, and so the idea was, 
well, we need these tools to fight the drug lords and all this. 
What happened was there were a lot of people whose property got 
taken who were not Colombian drug lords or anything like that, 
and it was widely abused, and, sadly, the courts in their view 
of what the minimum--what the Constitution requires as a 
minimum for due process generally said that is fine. I would 
urge especially this Committee, of all Committees in the United 
States, which is charged with defending the Constitution, that 
one of the reasons courts often defer to legislative judgments 
is they presume, just like Chief Justice Marshall said in 
McCulloch v. Maryland, that the legislature itself already 
seriously thought about constitutional rights and values. I 
think legislators can and should go above whatever minimal 
level the judiciary will enforce in terms of the protection of 
people's procedural rights.
    Senator Lee. Insofar as we are talking about due process 
that is freestanding here, which I think we have agreed that 
there is, certainly a right does not lose protection by 
becoming a hybrid right. In other words, if you already have a 
freestanding, independent due process right protected by the 
Fifth Amendment or the 14th Amendment's Due Process Clause, you 
certainly do not see that, any justification for diluting that 
right, merely because you have added the Second Amendment into 
the equation by virtue of its involvement in the firearms 
arena.
    Mr. Kopel. Right. Yes, at least as a policy matter, you 
would think due process would be all the stronger there. Of 
course, the analogy is, I am sure you know, in the first 
Supreme Court's free exercise of religion jurisprudence, 
sometimes that free exercise of religion gets stronger 
protection when it is a hybrid in conjunction with the exercise 
of some other right.
    Senator Lee. Right, right. I have never quite understood 
the hybrid rights doctrine in the First Amendment context 
beyond what you just described, which is that it certainly does 
not get weaker when you compound one right with another. I 
would maintain that is no less true here.
    Consistent with the directive I was given from the Chairman 
when he left to go vote, I hereby recess this hearing of the 
Subcommittee subject to the call of the Chair, who will be back 
momentarily. Thank you.
    [Whereupon the hearing was recessed and reconvened.]
    Chair Blumenthal. We are back. We are going to be joined 
shortly by Senator Graham and Senator Cruz at least, and 
perhaps others. I will yield to Senator Graham when he arrives, 
but I have a few questions in the meantime.
    First, let me ask the panel, because I was not here, 
whether everyone got a chance to respond to Senator Lee's 
questions or if there is anything else you would like to say 
while we are waiting for others to come back. Mr. Horwitz?
    Mr. Horwitz. If I were available, I think it is important 
to make the case that in these situations I am--we were talking 
about a lot about civil asset forfeiture. I am not an expert in 
that law at all, so I cannot claim to that. I do know that the 
due process protections in ERPO laws are very similar to other 
civil orders, especially domestic violence orders, but also in 
cases--some cases of civil commitment, as well as in child 
endangerment situations where there is an urgency to act. So, I 
don't know that the analogy is exactly perfect for civil asset 
forfeiture, because so I think what we are talking about here 
is danger to persons. I think the analogy is a little 
different. When you think about due process protections that 
have been upheld, you can see that in numerous--numerous other 
fields, the type of arrangement that is built here is available 
in other fields, and so I think we tried to build this with 
that in mind.
    I--one of the things you think about Indiana's original 
law, you know, in that law, firearm removal has been upheld 
even without a hearing, a temporary hearing to begin with. When 
we built sort of what we see--Indiana and Connecticut were the 
first, and as we built the laws moving forward, we wanted to 
add that hearing at the beginning, so that no firearm was ever 
removed without a judge looking at least as the ex parte--
looking at the evidence.
    I think there is more protection here than people--than 
some folks have looked at through this, and I think it is in 
line with what we have seen in long-standing domestic violence 
protection orders.
    Chair Blumenthal. As I mentioned, I will yield to Senator 
Graham whenever he is ready to go.
    Senator Graham. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Yes, thank you 
very much. Very good hearing. Appreciate it.
    Mr. Kopel, is that right? Are you still with us?
    Mr. Kopel. Yes, I hope so.
    Senator Graham. Okay. I enjoyed our last engagement where 
we were trying to find a way, on the front end and the back end 
to give adequate due process, but also address the problem. I 
think Indiana's situation is a good one. Ms.--Goeser? Is that 
right?
    Ms. Goeser. Goeser.
    Senator Graham. Your story made me think about, you know, 
we want to make sure we are thinking this thing through and not 
go too far with it. But I have just come to believe, Mr. 
Chairman, like you have, that States who have adopted these 
laws probably are on the right track. The Cruz situation in 
Parkland, 30 visits by the police, every warning sign known to 
mankind, and they were powerless. Governor Scott, working with 
the State House, passed a Florida version of the red flag laws. 
Indiana was one of the first ones to do this, and the situation 
for the young man who had the shotgun taken because of his 
mental health status, but there was no implementation, is 
something that I am sure we do not want to have happen again.
    Mr. Kopel, when it comes time to write a grant program, 
let's say, incentivizing States to go down this road on the due 
process front, you are advocating that there be a civil cause 
of action, in case somebody is accused wrongfully or 
maliciously, that they can actually have recourse against their 
accuser. Is that right?
    Mr. Kopel. Yes. Not a mistaken accusation because everybody 
makes mistakes, including me, as we discussed earlier in this 
hearing, but a knowing false and malicious accusation.
    Senator Graham. Got you. I talked with the Chairman about 
that. That makes sense to me that if somebody is trying to ruin 
your life and accuse you of something you are not, then you 
will have redress. I like that. The ex parte nature of the 
hearing, the initial determination by the judge to act, what 
kind of standard would you suggest we create there?
    Mr. Kopel. I would say start with the Federal Rules of 
Civil Procedure, which generally disfavor ex parte decisions 
but allow a judge to issue orders ex parte on a guided set of 
facts and findings about necessity. Particularly, why is the 
other person not here in court? Why didn't this person have 
notice? Sometimes, the person seeking a temporary restraining 
order can give a good answer to that, and sometimes not. I am 
sure----
    Senator Graham. The preference would be in live testimony 
so the judge could ask questions, but what standard would you 
impose?
    Mr. Kopel. The same as Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59.
    Senator Graham. Okay. All right.
    Mr. Kopel. On which I am not an expert.
    Senator Graham. No, I got you, but you have got to pick a 
standard. That seems to be a good one to me. The time period 
between the initial determination and a full-blown hearing, 
what would you recommend?
    Mr. Kopel. I would suggest we talk to prosecutors, 
including some of the witnesses here who have experience with 
this, and say, What is a realistic time period? On the one 
hand, we want to be expeditious. On the other hand, maybe there 
is some time needed to get evidence.
    Senator Graham. Okay. All right. Based on your research, of 
the existing State laws, which one do you think has done the 
best job of threading this needle, and why? Which ones do you 
have the most concern about, and why?
    Mr. Kopel. Vermont may be best overall, although 
Connecticut has some good features in it, too, especially the 
requirement that law enforcement investigate the situation on 
their own before filing a request for a petition.
    Colorado, with its providing for defenders, defense lawyers 
in this case, I think is a very strong model and not only helps 
the individual but I think also may function as a deterrent to 
potential abuses. On the other side, I would say Massachusetts 
has some of the weakest standards for due process.
    In New Jersey, actually once you have got--the person 
actually gets an in-person hearing and there is a confiscation 
order, it has the effect of being permanent, preventing the 
person from ever owning a gun again unless they come back into 
court and prove that they are not a danger. I think the model 
Mr. Horwitz's organization has talked about where the order 
automatically terminates after a certain period of time--it can 
be renewed upon further proof about the individual at that new 
time--is the better way to go.
    Senator Graham. Okay. We will just sum it up here. I do not 
want to go over. Basically you believe the most 
constitutionally sound way to do this would be not a Federal 
law, but some grant program that would emphasize adequate and 
robust due process. Is that fair to say?
    Mr. Kopel. Yes, and I think that the States and localities 
have the resources to do this in a way that the Federal 
Marshals and others just do not have the manpower for, among 
other reasons.
    Senator Graham. Thank you.
    Chair Blumenthal. Thanks, Senator Graham.
    Senator Cruz, did you have other questions?
    Senator Cruz. No.
    Chair Blumenthal. Mr. Bencomo, you are a gun owner 
yourself. I am going to assume you are a law-abiding one. Has 
Colorado's law been tied to mass confiscation of firearms from 
gun owners like yourself?
    Mr. Bencomo. First of all, I am definitely a responsible 
gun owner, so thank you. From what we know from today, 
obviously I am not a scholar or a lawyer or an attorney, we 
have not seen mass confiscations.
    One area that we could do an improvement, I was glad to 
hear that we hit the high marks on a good--that we are a good 
role model. Not only do we have defense lawyers, I would love 
to see Federal funding so that we can assure that there are 
PSAs, public safety announcements, and education for additional 
responsible gun owners of Colorado.
    Chair Blumenthal. Are you familiar with instances where it 
has been used to retaliate against people or, vindictively, by 
family members or business associates against each other?
    Mr. Bencomo. I am not.
    Chair Blumenthal. It has been about a year since Colorado's 
law has been in effect, correct?
    Mr. Bencomo. That is correct.
    Chair Blumenthal. Notwithstanding that some counties have 
declared themselves to be Second Amendment sanctuaries and some 
sheriffs have announced plans to block the law from being used, 
I understand quite a few have reversed their opposition after 
seeing how the law is actually put into effect. Is that 
correct?
    Mr. Bencomo. That is correct, and those citations are 
listed in my written testimony. I would not be able to speak to 
them today, but they are listed.
    Chair Blumenthal. I thank you for coming here and talking 
about how it has saved veterans' lives, because they are at 
risk of suicide, and this law obviously has worked effectively 
to protect them.
    Mr. Horwitz, Mr. Kopel referred to your statute as one that 
seems to have been framed to meet the due process standard, and 
that it is based on the best examples of laws throughout the 
country. He alluded to the resources necessary to implement 
such a law. Would a law from Congress that provided those 
resources and training encourage States to adopt the best kind 
of standards as you have advocated?
    Mr. Horwitz. I think the Federal Government could do a lot 
to encourage the proper standards for these laws. I do think we 
have seen--and Kim Wyatt is the best example of what her unit 
does, but where there is robust funding, you will see all sorts 
of services for getting these done--but also for the 
respondents and the petitioners. What you do not see is that, 
for instance, outside of King County where Ms. Wyatt works, the 
implementation is really different. What we are seeking is 
those Federal resources to make sure that the same processes 
that we have seen work in Washington--King County--can go in 
every county that needs this.
    I will say that suicide--and, you know, from my testimony 
you know that I care a lot about this. Some of the highest 
suicide rates are in rural counties who are least able to 
afford the types of training, the types of investments that 
other counties have done. I think as a suicide prevention tool, 
I think the Federal Government has a big role to play in 
providing that technical assistance, that training, and the 
resources to really develop a process so things do not fall 
through the cracks. There are also the types of services that 
would make this really work.
    Chair Blumenthal. We have been talking a little bit about 
the protective orders, domestic violence protective orders. 
They impose restraints on constitutional rights, do they not?
    Mr. Horwitz. They certainly do, well beyond what an extreme 
risk protection order does. Domestic violence restraining 
orders can often keep you from your bank account, from your 
kids, from your home, and in some States even on a temporary 
basis your firearm. What we are talking about here is just one 
slice of that, but based on the same standard, it is a very 
surgical type of tool here, and that is the point of this. I 
was glad to see Mr. Kopel talking about ways that we could 
agree on this, because I do think we can do that. I think we 
can get there. I think we can make this tool safe to use around 
the country. I think we can meet, come to the middle, and find 
agreement and make sure that we are saving lives.
    Chair Blumenthal. I was encouraged as well, quite honestly, 
by his statement to that effect, and I thank him for his 
testimony today but also his candor in describing what he knows 
and what he does not know, because not all of us are experts on 
all the facets of these laws. But just from a constitutional 
standpoint, the restraints on liberty involved in domestic 
violence orders, in fact, they are called ``restraining 
orders'' because they restrict liberty. The civil commitment 
statute, which takes away----
    Mr. Horwitz. Right.
    Chair Blumenthal [continuing]. Somebody's liberty, there 
are all kinds of ways in which those fundamental liberties are 
impinged to keep society safe, and they establish procedures to 
do it so that those orders are fact-based, and a burden of 
showing those facts are put on the person who would seek to 
take away that liberty or any other rights. That basic concept 
is what we have here, and the idea that an order expires if it 
is unchallenged or unverified within a period of time and a 
firearm is then returned certainly is a source of protection, 
is it not?
    Mr. Horwitz. It is. As Mr. Kopel said, we really believe 
that at the end of the order, the firearm should be returned. 
It should not be a complicated process. There are options to 
renew, but at the same burden as the original. It doesn't--the 
burden should not shift from the petitioner in those 
circumstances. If there is a renewal petition made, it should 
again be on the petitioner to plead the elements of the 
statute.
    Chair Blumenthal. In a certain sense, we can actually not 
only encourage States to adopt these kinds of statutes, but 
also elevate the level, the quality of those statutes, if we 
offer incentives for them to do it in the form of grants and 
other support.
    Mr. Horwitz. Right. I mean, as Senator Cruz said, the 
States are all over--you know, are the laboratories of 
democracy, and there are different processes in different 
States, and I think you are starting to see some, you know, 
coalescing around some of the best practices there, and 
hopefully, the Federal funding can really improve that and make 
that--continue to make that process, that coalescing develop so 
that the law--we learn from what the best practices are, we 
learn from people like Kim Wyatt what really works, and that we 
end up developing a program that saves lives across the 
country.
    Chair Blumenthal. I think, Ms. Wyatt, I asked you earlier 
about the importance of resources to your unit, and you have a 
very well-staffed unit with experts and prosecutors and so 
forth, which has costs. Could you talk a little bit about the 
value that Federal resources would have to help you implement 
the best practices of that unit?
    Ms. Wyatt. Sure. Just to give a little context, you know, 
we are evolving as our unit has grown since January 2018. Last 
year, in 2020, we had 73 law enforcement petitions, ERPOs, and 
6 were from families. We realize on a daily basis the need to 
educate the public and educate the community, from faith 
leaders to school officials, therapists, medical providers, law 
enforcement throughout the whole State, and Federal authorities 
or Federal law enforcement as well. There is a need overall to 
educate the public because if you have a law and nobody knows 
about it, then it's not doing any of us any good. That would be 
the number one thing, is to get public education out. Then the 
second thing that I think is really critically important is to 
have funding for individuals who are implementing ERPO laws in 
their State, or to be able to create a model policy for law 
enforcement so law enforcement understands how we are supposed 
to serve these orders, which are very similar to other civil 
protection orders. Once we created a model policy and assisted 
law enforcement in our county, we had much more buy-in from our 
local law enforcement because it was this tangible, attainable 
task.
    I would suggest doing some of those things, but education 
is the number one thing. Then the second is to bring all the 
system players together, so that folks from the clerk's office 
where the orders will be filed to victim advocates who may be 
reaching out to families to also guide their loved one who is 
in crisis to get some resources, I think that is critically 
important. One area where we lack in our State is the need to 
have some money for individuals that are subject to the ERPO 
who need a behavioral health evaluation. Funding is needed to 
be able to guide those individuals to get that evaluation if it 
is court-ordered and to be able to get them some help once they 
have been subject to one of these orders. I think that is 
critically important.
    Chair Blumenthal. Thank you very much.
    I am going to yield to Senator Cruz. I have a few final 
questions, but in case he has to leave, I will yield.
    Senator Cruz. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I have got a couple 
of questions. Let me start with Mr. Kopel.
    Mr. Kopel, since you testified 2 years ago, additional 
States have enacted red flag laws, and multiple States have 
amended their laws, and it seems that they have all amended 
them in the direction of providing less protection of due 
process and less protection of Second Amendment rights. For 
example, California amended its law to allow a disgruntled 
coworker to initiate the process for confiscating a fellow 
coworker's firearm.
    Do you agree that the trend is for these laws to get 
broader and broader and less and less protective of fundamental 
rights? If so, why do you think this is happening?
    Mr. Kopel. Because maybe it is the slippery slope that 
always happens on all kinds of laws. As people get it enacted 
in one way and say look at how narrow it is, and then when it 
is there, then they start thinking of ways how to broaden it 
further and further. Again, I think Connecticut has the right 
approach on saying anybody who has got a concern about someone 
else can come to a law enforcement officer, a peace officer, or 
a State's attorney and bring that problem forward. But they 
cannot--just because you had a fight with a guy at work, you 
cannot file a petition yourself against that individual. Law 
enforcement is supposed to do its own independent 
investigation, and that seems the best way to start off the 
process at the beginning with the higher quality of information 
to give to the judge.
    Senator Cruz. Thank you for that, and I think that is a 
very good point. As we discussed earlier, I am a strong 
believer in federalism, and right now 19 States and the 
District of Columbia have red flag laws, and there is not much 
quality evidence about their effectiveness or lack thereof, 
although there is some good evidence demonstrating that they 
have a very high error rate. Could you give a bit more color on 
what the evidence and the data shows about these laws?
    Mr. Kopel. For a lot of folks, the RAND Corporation's 
continuing project on assessing--doing a meta-study of all the 
social science on the gun issue has found some things, 
particular gun controls to be effective, and in their 
evaluation of this, their view was none of the studies that 
exist so far meet our standards for data quality and 
persuasiveness, so there is nothing there from RAND's point of 
view. But even beyond that, I do not know of any study that has 
ever said there is a statistically noticeable change in crime 
or mass shootings, along with other crimes.
    But I would also say that you do not have to--a law does 
not have to be proven to have a statistically significant 
effect to be beneficial. If you reduce homicide by half of a 
percent in a State, that may be, statisticians may not be able 
to see that and know that there is a cause and effect. But that 
is still a beneficial thing to do.
    The suicide data is mixed. One study said that it went 
down--firearm suicide declined in Indiana and was replaced by 
other methods. Another study found in Connecticut, actually, 
firearm suicide did decline, but deaths by other methods went 
up.
    On that, it is really important to know that there are lots 
of nearly as lethal substitutes for firearms, such as hanging, 
that have very high mortality rates as well. The theory that 
for every 10 or 20 of these confiscation orders that gets 
issued, 1 suicide was prevented, is really just a hypothetical 
extrapolation, and it makes the mistake of saying that every 
form of self-harm was a suicide attempt. You know, a teenage 
girl who cuts her arm is not trying to commit suicide. She is 
certainly indicating she has got a serious problem. That 10- or 
20-to-1 figure is not supportable because it assumes that every 
form of self-harm is an intentional suicide, which is 
definitely not true.
    Senator Cruz. Thank you.
    Ms. Goeser, in your opening testimony, you testified that 
red flag laws can have a chilling effect that can cause victims 
to fear losing their rights if they seek help by talking with 
friends or family or psychologists. Can you elaborate on that 
concern, please?
    Ms. Goeser. Sure. I think that when people fear that--you 
know, someone may be very, very, very depressed and still be 
concerned for their own safety, which I am sure to some people 
that does not make sense. But when people are concerned that 
they are going to lose their rights, they bottle up, like they 
are not going to want to share their feelings. I just think 
it's best that these people be able to get, you know, mental 
health help, and if they feel intimidated, if they feel like 
they might lose their rights, it can actually have the opposite 
effect from what you want.
    Senator Cruz. Advocates for red flag laws often focus on 
the benefit of removing a firearm from a potentially dangerous 
person, and there is no doubt that with someone with serious 
mental illness or an intent to do real harm, that that can be a 
very real benefit. But they also diminish the harm of removing 
a firearm from someone who might be a victim of violence, for 
whom that firearm might be the difference between surviving a 
violent attack and not surviving a violent attack. Do you agree 
with that?
    Ms. Goeser. Yes, I have got to tell you this: I think--and 
I have gotten to know a lot of victims. I actually brought my 
friend Amanda Collins-Johnson with me. She is sitting just 
behind me here. She was brutally raped on her college campus. 
It was, of course, a gun-free zone, and it was in the student 
parking garage. She had her permit to carry, but because she 
was obeying that gun control law, she left her gun at home. She 
wasn't allowed to have it on campus. That is where a serial 
rapist found her on her way to her car in the student parking 
garage, and he brutally raped her, right there in the garage. I 
have gotten to know a lot of other victims, and they all want 
the ability to protect themselves. We also fear that--you know, 
some of our attackers are going to be released. You know, 
people seem to think that if you do a horrible violent crime, 
that you are just going to be in prison forever. That is not 
true. Murderers, really horrible people that do very violent 
things, they are let out of prison every day in this country, 
unfortunately. That is very scary for us, and victims want to 
be able to protect themselves.
    Here is a scenario perhaps you have not thought of, which 
absolutely terrifies me. When my stalker, my husband's 
murderer, is released one day, what would prevent him from 
taking out a red flag on me to purposefully disarm me, so that 
he can harm me? That is terrifying. That is just something to 
think about.
    Senator Cruz. Thank you, Ms. Collins-Johnson, for having 
the courage to be here and allowing your story to be told. Ms. 
Goeser, thank you for speaking on her behalf, and on behalf of 
so many victims of violence.
    Ms. Goeser. Thank you.
    Chair Blumenthal. Thank you. Thank you, Senator Cruz.
    You know, I am struck, as we come to the end of this 
hearing, by the points of agreement, perhaps unintentional. Ms. 
Goeser, your point about people who have mental illness perhaps 
being reluctant to talk to friends or professionals is exactly 
the point that Senator Durbin made. I do not know whether you 
recall, but he said people should not be separated from 
firearms simply because they have a mental illness. It is 
dangerousness, it is risk, it is potential harm to others. That 
murderer would have no basis, none, for going to a judge and 
saying Nikki Goeser is dangerous, a risk of harm to anyone. On 
the contrary.
    Likewise, Senator Cruz and I are both federalists. I was a 
State attorney general for way longer than I have been a United 
States Senator. I believe in States' rights to enforce their 
own laws, indeed, to make their own laws, and that is the whole 
purpose of our proposed red flag statute, not only to encourage 
States to make their own laws, but to make them better, so when 
they do pass their laws, they look--thanks to Mr. Kopel for his 
compliment to Connecticut--more like Connecticut than, say, one 
of the other States that he found less protective of 
constitutional rights. If they are going to be laboratories of 
democracy, better to elevate the results of those laboratories 
than let them, kind of, muddle along and fail to protect the 
rights of American citizens.
    I think there is a lot here where we have common ground, as 
long as we do not become distracted. I understand your point 
about gun-free zones, about permitting the most heinous kind of 
law breakers, perhaps, to go free and threaten others. We ought 
to prevent that. But we are talking here about a more narrowly 
crafted law with a more narrow purpose that can be surrounded 
by all kinds of protections relating to what has to be proved 
in the way of factual evidence, the standard that has to be 
met, not just probable cause, the protections for individuals--
you know, you could say that someone who is unable to afford an 
attorney has to be provided with one. I am just thinking out 
loud here. But my hope is that we can go forward and, sort of, 
focus on the common ground because if we do want States to be 
the laboratories of democracy, better to make them good 
laboratories and protective of constitutional rights than allow 
them to just go forward without encouragement to adopt higher 
standards.
    You know, I think Mr. Kopel has been very frank on the 
issue of whether there are authoritative studies. A lot of the 
evidence here is anecdotal. It relies on common sense, that if 
somebody says, ``I am going to shoot people in Parkland, I am 
going to kill students,'' and as Senator Graham has said, the 
shooter practically took out an ad in the newspaper and said, 
``I am dangerous,'' that it makes sense to give the police--and 
I take his point about the police, which is in the Connecticut 
statute--the authority to make their case, maybe screened by a 
prosecutor, as happens in the State of Washington. We have 
heard Ms. Wyatt describe that procedure, with all kinds of 
protections and bells and whistles, rather than allowing that 
shooter to just go ahead. I think I am determined to try to 
seize that common ground and make the case that we can work 
together on these kinds of statutes.
    I am willing to hear from any of the witnesses who want to 
make any sort of final remarks, or Senator Cruz if he has 
anything. Mr. Horwitz?
    Mr. Horwitz. I just want to thank everybody from the 
Committee, Mr. Chairman, the Ranking Member, for giving us a 
fair undertaking. I really believe that we can reach an 
agreement here. I think it is important to save lives. I think 
we can protect due process, we can protect constitutional 
rights, and save lives. For everybody on this panel, I think we 
want to come together, and that is what we want to do, is save 
lives. I hope the Members of this Committee can hear what we 
have taken today, craft something that really works, and save 
lives. Thank you for this time. I'm deeply appreciative of 
being here today, and, for this very serious consideration.
    Chair Blumenthal. Thank you. Thank you to all the 
witnesses. Thanks to Senator Cruz and all the colleagues who 
appeared here.
    The record will remain open for 1 week, and anyone with 
questions can submit them. We appreciate your being here today. 
Thank you very much. Hearing is closed.
    [Gavel is tapped.]
    [Whereupon, at 5:04 p.m., the hearing was adjourned.]
    [Additional material submitted for the record follows.]

                            A P P E N D I X

Miscellaneous submissions:

 National Coalition Against Domestic Violence Statement dated 
    April 28, 2021................................................    93

 Sandy Hook Promise, Testimony of Nicole Hockley..................    98
 
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