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Colorado Lawmakers Give Final Approval To Extreme Risk Bill

The Colorado House of Representatives weighs bills on Monday. Lawmakers will soon debate proposals that aim to stop surprise medical billing.
Scott Franz
/
Capitol Coverage
The Colorado House of Representatives weighs bills on Monday. Lawmakers will soon debate proposals that aim to stop surprise medical billing.

The Colorado Legislature has given final approval to a bill that will allow police officers to temporarily take guns away from people who are deemed to be a risk to themselves or others.

Gov. Jared Polis is expected to sign the extreme risk protection order bill into law.

The legislation is very personal for state Rep. Tom Sullivan, whose son, Alex, was murdered in the Aurora theater shooting in 2012.

Moments after the gun control bill passed its final vote in the House on Monday morning, Sullivan said it was an important milestone.

“It’s just the next step of the forward journey that the parent of a murdered child I think goes through,” Sullivan said. “It will save lives. At the core of everything that we do down here, our core issue is to save lives and make people’s lives better. And this law will do that.”

“We have to continue the march on this,” Sullivan added.

Meanwhile, some of the state’s sheriffs are indicating they won’t enforce the law.

Weld County Sheriff Steve Reams recently told CNN he’d rather spend time in his own jail than carry out a judge’s order to take someone’s gun.

“The bill violates the Fourth, the Fifth, the Sixth, the Eighth (and) the Fourteenth Amendment,” he said referring to the amendments that guarantee rights to privacy, jury trials and due process. “It’s just a very poorly-written bill.”

But Sullivan, who sponsored the bill, questioned how it could be considered unconstitutional when more than a dozen other states have adopted similar laws.

“It’s a little confusing to me,” Sullivan said. “I’m not really sure where they’re coming from. Our attorney general (Phil Weiser) says it’s constitutional….This is now the law of the land.”

Capitol Coverage is a collaborative public policy reporting project, providing news and analysis to communities across Colorado for more than a decade. Eleven public radio stations participate in Capitol Coverage from throughout Colorado.

Copyright 2019 KUNC

Scott Franz is a government watchdog reporter and photographer from Steamboat Springs. He spent the last seven years covering politics and government for the Steamboat Pilot & Today, a daily newspaper in northwest Colorado. His reporting in Steamboat stopped a police station from being built in a city park, saved a historic barn from being destroyed and helped a small town pastor quickly find a kidney donor. His favorite workday in Steamboat was Tuesday, when he could spend many of his mornings skiing untracked powder and his evenings covering city council meetings. Scott received his journalism degree from the University of Colorado at Boulder. He is an outdoorsman who spends at least 20 nights a year in a tent. He spoke his first word, 'outside', as a toddler in Edmonds, Washington. Scott visits the Great Sand Dunes, his favorite Colorado backpacking destination, twice a year. Scott's reporting is part of Capitol Coverage, a collaborative public policy reporting project, providing news and analysis to communities across Colorado for more than a decade. Fifteen public radio stations participate in Capitol Coverage from throughout Colorado.