HB 1763

  • Virginia House Bill
  • 2019 Regular Session
  • Introduced in House Dec 21, 2018
  • House
  • Senate
  • Governor

Firearms; removal from persons posing substantial risk of injury to himself, etc., penalties.

Bill Subjects

Appropriations Weapons

Abstract

Creates a procedure by which any attorney for the Commonwealth or any law-enforcement officer may apply to a general district court, circuit court, or juvenile and domestic relations district court judge or magistrate for an emergency substantial risk order to prohibit a person who poses a substantial risk of injury to himself or others from purchasing, possessing, or transporting a firearm. If an emergency substantial risk order is issued, a judge or magistrate may issue a warrant to remove firearms from such person. An emergency substantial risk warrant shall expire on the fourteenth day following issuance of the order. The bill requires a court hearing in the circuit court for the jurisdiction where the person subject to the order resides within 14 days from issuance of an emergency substantial risk order to determine whether a substantial risk order should be issued. Seized firearms shall be retained by a law-enforcement agency for the duration of an emergency substantial risk order or a substantial risk order or, with court approval, may be transferred to a third party 21 years of age or older chosen by the person from whom they were seized. The bill allows the complainant of the original warrant to file a motion for a hearing to extend the substantial risk order prior to its expiration. The court may extend the order for a period not longer than 180 days. The bill provides that persons who are subject to a substantial risk order, until such order has been dissolved by a court, are guilty of a Class 1 misdemeanor for purchasing, possessing, or transporting a firearm; are disqualified from having a concealed handgun permit; and may not be employed by a licensed firearms dealer. The bill also provides that a person who transfers a firearm to a person he knows has been served with a warrant or who is the subject of an order is guilty of a Class 4 felony.

Bill Sponsors (8)

Votes


Actions


Feb 05, 2019

House

Left in Militia, Police and Public Safety

Jan 15, 2019

House

Assigned MPPS sub: Subcommittee #1

Jan 14, 2019

House

Referred from Courts of Justice by voice vote

House

Referred to Committee on Militia, Police and Public Safety

Dec 21, 2018

House

Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/09/19 19102819D

House

Referred to Committee for Courts of Justice

Bill Text

Bill Text Versions Format
House: Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/09/19 19102819D HTML

Related Documents

Document Format
No related documents.

Sources

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