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WV Court System Focuses On Disarming Domestic Violence

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Tuesday, September 15, 2009   

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - A meeting of police, court officials and victim's advocates from across the state this week will work on enforcement of a law designed to keep firearms out of domestic violence situations.

On Wednesday and Thursday, the West Virginia Supreme Court will be holding a state-wide summit on firearms and domestic violence protective orders. Lisa Tackett, director of family court services for the state Supreme Court, says the purpose is to help courts, law enforcement and victim's advocates design better procedures for making sure guns are not around during family crises.

Such crises, she says, are often volatile.

"A lot of things happen very quickly, and a victim would be much more protected if the respondent didn't have the gun right there."

Tackett says it's against the law for the subject of a domestic violence order, known as a respondent, to have a gun, but that law sometimes goes unenforced.

She says that, if a respondent does not want to have a gun confiscated by the government, one under-used provision of the law allows for the surrender of it to a third party for safe-keeping.

"A respondent could transfer his weapons to a brother, a friend, a father, instead of law enforcement having to go in and take possession."

Some gun rights groups have opposed the law as an infringement on the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, but most gun owners recognize its necessity. Tackett says the summit should help make sure local authorities have working protocols in place to deal with the issue.


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