Lawfully execute everyone: nobody to commit crime!
Throw everyone in a rubber padded room: nobody can commit suicide!
Nerve-staple all citizens: no more unhappy thoughts!
Circumstances and Outcomes of a Firearm Seizure Law: Marion County, Indiana, 2006-2013.
Parker GF1.
Abstract
Indiana statute allows police to seize firearms without a warrant if the officer believes a person meets the law's definition of "dangerous." Review of the use of this law in Marion County (Indianapolis), Indiana, showed that prosecutors filed petitions in court to retain weapons seized by police under this law 404 times between 2006 and 2013. Police removed weapons from people due to identification of a risk of suicide (68%) or violence (21%), or the presence of psychosis (16%). The firearm seizures occurred in the context of domestic disputes in 28% of cases and intoxication was noted in 26% of cases. There were significant demographic differences in the circumstances of firearm seizures and the firearms seized. The seized firearms were retained by the court at the initial hearing in 63% of cases; this retention was closely linked to the defendant's failure to appear at the hearing. The court dismissed 29% of cases at the initial hearing, closely linked to the defendant's presence at the hearing. In subsequent hearings of cases not dismissed, the court ordered the destruction of the firearms in 72% of cases, all when the individual did not appear in court, and dismissed 24% of the cases, all when the individual was present at the hearing. Overall, the Indiana law removed weapons from a small number of people, most of whom did not seek return of their weapons. The firearm seizure law thus functioned as a months-long cooling-off period for those who did seek the return of their guns.
So... exactly what Brown County's sheriff should have done the half-hundred times they had the opportunity. Amazing what police can do when they're not deliberately cooking the books on their arrest rates through ommission to appease political ambitions.