Florida “Red Flag” Abuse – Florida Man’s Rights Virtually Disappear

Opinion

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Florida “Red Flag” Abuse – Florida Man’s Rights Virtually Disappear IMG NRA-ILA

Fairfax, VA – -(Ammoland.com)- President Biden and his Attorney General, Merrick Garland, have championed “red flag” laws that authorize courts to temporarily prohibit individuals from possessing or accessing guns based on unproven and uncorroborated allegations by family members, coworkers, law enforcement officers or others. A key feature of these laws is an initial order that is imposed “ex parte” – without notice to the affected person, where he or she has no opportunity to attend or contest the allegations.

The model legislation prepared by the Biden Administration authorizes such an initial order, together with a concurrently-issued warrant “authorizing a law enforcement agency to search the person of the respondent and any such place for firearms and to seize any firearm.” The gun ban and confiscation remain in place until a second court hearing (for a final order) occurs, which may be weeks later. Only with respect to this hearing does the person have the right to due process – to advance notice of the hearing, and to appear, challenge the basis for the order, and present their own evidence.

The NRA, as have other critics, has voiced concerns over the lack of due process, impact on civil liberties, the flimsy standards, and a process that is slanted towards the issuance of an order. Supporters dismiss these concerns; after all, the ex parte order (and concomitant loss of gun rights and personal property) is technically temporary, and the lack of notice and an opportunity to appear are rectified during a later hearing on notice.

A recent case in Florida illustrates one of the many issues with these orders.

On May 31, 2020, officers of the Lakeland, Florida police department petitioned for a “risk protection order” under that state’s “red flag” law against E.P. Officers took E.P. into custody and seized his firearms and ammunition. The ex parte order served on E.P. instructed him that the hearing on the final risk protection order (RPO) was scheduled for June 12, 2020, at 2:00 p.m. “in the court facility located at 255 N. Broadway Ave., Bartow, FL.” This date, time, and place were confirmed on June 3 by the police department’s attorney, and again in a court notice issued prior to June 12.

E.P. presented himself at the appointed date and place at 1:30 p.m. and waited until 3:00 o’clock. He testified that “he was not let into the courtroom, nor was he aware that the hearing would take place virtually or how to attend.” In fact, the hearing was held as a remote video conferencing event, without notice of this change to E.P. At that hearing, the court determined, incorrectly, that E.P. had “elected not to attend” and entered an RPO against him. E.P was prohibited from having custody or control of, or purchasing, possessing, receiving, or attempting to purchase or receive, a firearm or ammunition for up to a year, and was required to surrender any guns or ammunition not already in the custody of the police to law enforcement.

This isn’t too surprising. Florida news sources analyzing RPO cases in two Florida counties found that such petitions were overwhelmingly likely to result in an order against a defendant, with judges granting the orders in 90% of all cases. Fewer than two in ten respondents had been represented by counsel – these proceedings are civil in nature, so respondents aren’t eligible for assistance from public defense lawyers.

E.P. appealed the order against him on the basis that it was made without giving him an opportunity to appear or notice that the proceedings would take place by means other than those designated in the court’s official documents. The state law, Fla. Stat. Ann. § 790.401(3)(a) and (b), mandates that a court “must issue a notice of hearing” to the affected person, and may issue a final order “[u]pon notice and a hearing on the matter.”

It was not until August 13, 2021, that the court’s order was invalidated.

A unanimous panel of the appellate court ruled that E.P.’s due process rights were violated by the failure to notify him that the final hearing would take place virtually instead of in the court facility listed in the ex parte order.

Citing Florida caselaw, the court observed that “[p]rocedural due process requires both fair notice and a real opportunity to be heard … at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner.” The lack of proper notice deprived E.P. of his right to be heard and accordingly, the order “must be reversed.”

The case highlights the weakness of a model predicated on the presumption that persons named in a petition are dangerous, and that it is therefore appropriate to strip them of their rights and property without notice or a meaningful opportunity to respond until after the fact. E.P. was obligated to spend time and money to undo the trial court’s blunder and even so, there is no indication in the case report that he had his property or his gun rights restored prior to the appellate court ruling.

The case is E.P. v. Lakeland Police Dept., No. 2D20-2121, 2021 WL 3573015 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. Aug. 13, 2021).


About NRA-ILA:

Established in 1975, the Institute for Legislative Action (ILA) is the “lobbying” arm of the National Rifle Association of America. ILA is responsible for preserving the right of all law-abiding individuals in the legislative, political, and legal arenas, to purchase, possess and use firearms for legitimate purposes as guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Visit: www.nra.org

National Rifle Association Institute For Legislative Action (NRA-ILA)

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Russn8r

You NRA hypocrites endorsed Carolyn McCarthy’s confiscation law that turned countless veterans into ‘prohibited persons’ – no ‘adjudication’ let alone the only true due process for taking away liberty – Fair Trial By Jury Of Peers. You scored the vote A+ & graded accordingly, later pretending to be shocked, SHOCKED, that it was ‘abused’ to crap on rights! Adding insult to injury, you ran ads on veteran sites to sucker them out of cash to “fix” the problem you created – like a “protection” racket, but the vics really think you’re protecting them. You winked at Lautenberg, which lets judges… Read more »

Last edited 3 years ago by Russn8r
TexDad

Dear NRA,

You’ve endorsed red flag laws. You are not the good guys here.

– Life Member

Deplorable Bill

Tyranny under color of law. There are laws that enslave mankind and there are laws that set men free. Red flag “laws” are of the enslavement type. Somewhere in the constitution it mentions unlawful search and/or seizure is, indeed unconstitutional. There will come a day when the “authorities” try to pull this cr@p and the target is going to defend himself. I hope it makes the news so everyone in the same zip code can go help him. There truly was a time when the N R A was a righteous idea, sadly, because of their approval of tyrannical red… Read more »

Jaque

IT WAS THE NRA WHO CHAMPIONED RED FLAG LAWS. DID THEY NOT KNOW THE ABUSES THAT WOULD TAKE PLACE, LIKE IN EVERY LAW THAT EXISTS ? I AM A LIFE (ENDOWMENT) MEMBER AND NOT PLEASED THAT THE NRA LEADERSHIP HAS TREATED MEMBERS LIKE ENDLESS MONEY POTS AS THEY MISUSE (WASTE) MEMBERS FUNDS AS A USELESS BOARD RUBBER STAMPED THE LEADERSHIPS PLANS WITHOUT READING THEM.

IS THE ILA STILL EFFECTIVE IN ITS MISSION ? I AM NOT CONVINCED IT IS. CONVINCE ME

Stag

Funny how these anti-2A laws that the NRA called for and endorsed are resulting in violations of people’s rights.

https://youtu.be/A8ijtVkTCCQ

hoss

Makes a body wonder where DeSantis is in all this?

John Dow

Red flag laws have nothing to do with safety of the victim or society. If that was the purpose, they’d put the person in confinement, not his/her firearms.

If the popo took your guns and you really did mean to harm someone, you still have a myriad of lethal tools available – automobiles, kinves, clubs, gasoline, rope, etc. etc.

It’s just another means to harass gun owners, pure and simple.

Pa John

Here is a DuckDuckGo search for “psych hold laws”: https://duckduckgo.com/?q=psych+hold+laws&atb=v256-1&ia=web EVERY STATE IN THE UNION already has some form of these “involuntary psych hold” laws on the books, for dealing with people with very apparent psychological problems who may be a danger to themselves and/or others. In most states this amounts to 72 hours that someone can be involuntarily held for “psychological observation” in some local hospital psych ward, but this time limit varies a bit in some states. This is NOT the same as being “committed to a mental institution” as the person is only being “involuntarily held for… Read more »

swmft

time to start filing red flag complaints against judges and police

Jose

It would be nice if JB & MG apply these reds laws to Chicago crime infected areas and stop abusing law abiding citizens..