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A00544 Summary:

BILL NOA00544B
 
SAME ASSAME AS S01985-A
 
SPONSORPaulin
 
COSPNSRSeawright, McMahon, Levenberg, Jacobson, Griffin, Sayegh, Shimsky, Otis
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd 140.10, CP L
 
Requires police officers to take temporary custody of firearms for not less than one hundred twenty hours when responding to reports of family violence.
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A00544 Memo:

NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A544B      Revised 06/11/25
 
SPONSOR: Paulin
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the criminal procedure law, in relation to requiring police officers to take temporary custody of firearms when responding to reports of family violence   PURPOSE: Requires police officers to take temporary custody of firearms in certain instances when responding to reports of family violence   SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS: Section 1. Paragraph (a) of subdivision 6 of section 140.10 of the CPL is amended to require police officers to take custody of a firearm, rifle, electronic dart gun, electronic stun gun, disguised gun, imitation weapon, shotgun, antique firearm, black powder rifle, black powder shotgun, or muzzle-loading firearm that is found in plain sight or pursuant to a lawful search. if: (A) the victim responds affirmative- ly to suspect threats questions in the DIR; (B) the victim responds affirmatively to lethality assessment questions in the DIR; (C) such officer has a reasonable belief that it is necessary to protect the victim or other persons present, preventing the risk of further violence or threat. Paragraph (c) of subdivision 6 of section 140.10 of the CPL provides that not less than one hundred twenty hours after effecting such seizure, and in the absence of (i) an order of prohibiting the owner from possessing such a weapon and/or license, or (ii) or pending crimi- nal charge or conviction which prohibits such owner for possessing such a weapon and/or license, and upon a written finding that there is no legal impediment to the owner's possession of such a weapon and/or license, the court or, if no court is involved, licensing authority or custodian of the weapon shall direct return of a weapon not otherwise disposed of or in accordance with subdivision one of section 400.05 of the penal law and/or such license taken into custody pursuant to this section. Section 2 provides the effective date.   DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ORIGINAL AND AMENDED VERSION: The B print would amend the CPL to require law enforcement take tempo- rary custody of any firearm that is in plain sight or discovered if circumstances described are present including responses to the NYS standardized domestic incident report form (DIR).   JUSTIFICATION: Each month, an average of 76 women are shot and killed by an intimate partner. Possession of firearms within the home increases the risk of a domestic violence homicide by 500%, making it five times more likely that an abuser with a firearm will kill their partner. It has been prov- en that one of the most dangerous times for victims of DV is immediately following a police encounter. Accordingly, The Safe Homes Act of 2020 provides police officers answering a domestic violence call with the option to remove any firearms in plain sight or discovered pursuant to a consensual or other lawful search. This legislation provides further protection for victims by mandating that police officers seize firearms in plain sight or found pursuant to a lawful search when responding to a domestic violence call where the victim responds affirmatively to any of the suspect threat or lethality assessment questions on the NY standard- ized Domestic Incident Report, or where the responding officer has a reasonable belief that it is necessary to protect the victim or other persons present, or to prevent risk of further violence or threat. The intent of this legislation is to provide clear guidelines under which police officers must seize firearms when responding to a family offense. The bill further extends the time that a firearm is held in custody from 48 to 120 hours. This allows courts time to determine next steps without the increased risk of a firearm being returned to the home a mere two days after a domestic violence call. Firearms must be returned within 120 hours unless there is an order of protection, an extreme risk order protection order, or other court order in place which would prohibit the individual from possessing any such weapon and/or license, or any pend- ing criminal charges or convictions which would prohibit the return of their weapon and/or license. There is an inextricable link between domestic violence and gun violence. In 2021, of the domestic violence homicides reported in New York, a firearm was used in 24% of DV homicides in New York City and 45% of DV homicides outside of New York City. The removal - even temporarily - of a firearm reduces the risk of injury or death by eliminating the threat of a lethal weapon from an already volatile situation.   LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: A.5455 of 2021 and 2022, advanced to third reading. Same as 5.5026 of 2021 and 2022, referred to codes. A.2413 of 2023 and 2024, referred to codes. Same as 5.2102 of 2023 and 2024, passed Senate.   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS: None to the State.   EFFECTIVE DATE: This act shall take effect immediately.
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