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Chris Murphy said most counties refuse to enforce gun laws. What’s on paper isn’t always reality.
If Your Time is short
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In 2018, cities and counties started to respond to a wave of state-proposed gun restrictions with Second Amendment sanctuary resolutions.
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The resolutions vary in wording, but generally state that the jurisdiction supports gun rights. Some resolutions say the county won’t direct funding to enforce laws that leaders feel violate the Second Amendment.
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The Associated Press found that about 2,000 local jurisdictions have passed such resolutions, which accounts for about 60% of U.S. counties. Although they carry no legal weight, journalists and researchers have found that jurisdictions with these resolutions complied less with “red flag” laws than areas without them.
The suspect in a mass shooting at a LGBTQ nightclub in Colorado Springs, Colorado, had previously made threats to use weapons, but local law enforcement did not pursue removing them under the state’s red flag law.
Officials in El Paso County, which includes Colorado Springs, had lobbied against the state creating a red flag law, which lets people petition a civil court to temporarily remove another person’s firearms. The county in 2019 passed a resolution declaring themselves a "Second Amendment preservation county" and pledged not to spend money to "initiate unconstitutional seizures."
U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., a prominent supporter of federal gun restrictions, called out El Paso County and other places with these resolutions during an interview about the nightclub shooting on CNN.
"The majority of counties in this country have declared that they are not going to enforce state and federal gun laws," Murphy said Nov. 27 on CNN’s "State of the Union." "They have decided that they are going to essentially refuse to implement laws that are on the books. That is a growing problem in this country. ….60 percent of counties in this country are refusing to implement the nation's gun laws."
We wanted to know more about these counties and fact-check whether Murphy’s statistic was accurate. The number refers to the percentage of counties that have sanctuary policies, and by that metric it checks out.
There is no universally understood definition of a so-called Second Amendment sanctuary, said Allison Anderman, senior counsel at Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence.
These broad policies about upholding the Second Amendment vary in each city, county or state. Some resolutions state that the jurisdiction won’t spend money to enforce what their officials deem unconstitutional gun laws.
Some experts have said these resolutions are merely symbolic. But there is some evidence that Second Amendment sanctuary areas use the state’s red flag laws less than other jurisdictions.
Gun rights supporters demonstrate Jan. 20, 2020, in front of the state Capitol in Richmond, Va. (AP)
Nineteen states and Washington, D.C., have red flag laws. They are a relatively new phenomenon, with Connecticut passing the first such law in 1999. Colorado’s law, which went into effect in 2020, allows law enforcement, family or household members to file a petition asking a court to take away gun rights from a person who poses a significant risk to themselves or others.
Despite polls showing strong support for these policies, The Associated Press found that laws faced a backlash by politicians who passed "Second Amendment sanctuary" policies in about 2,000 counties. That number reflects about 60% of the nation’s counties, and was the source for Murphy’s statistic.
We found one other source that backs up this figure from the website SanctuaryCounties.com, which compiles updates on these laws and says it is dedicated to "law abiding, Constitution loving citizens who refuse to simply give up their Second Amendment rights."
The term "sanctuary" borrows from the sanctuary city policies that restrict state or local police from assisting federal immigration officers. Bryan Kibler, the former top prosecutor in Effingham County, Illinois, has been credited with devising the idea for Second Amendment sanctuaries. (Kibler is now a judge.)
"We wanted to ... get across that our Second Amendment rights are slowly being stripped away," Kibler told the AP in 2018.
Research suggests sanctuary counties employ red flag laws less often than counties without these resolutions.
According to AP, 37 sanctuary counties in Colorado issued just 45 gun surrender orders over two years.
Researchers from the University of Colorado compared the use of the state’s red flag law in 2020 in counties with and without these policies. Of the 37 "sanctuary" counties, 24% had at least one petition filed, versus 48% of counties without these resolutions.
Second Amendment counties may create a chilling effect on filing petitions, they wrote, because people may incorrectly think the red flag laws are illegal.
One of the researchers, Firearm Injury Prevention Initiative director Emmy Betz, said more study is needed. Her work covered a small sample and only one year of data.
"There’s active research now trying to understand how resolutions (or other geographic differences) may influence police/prosecution prioritization, but I don’t think we have a firm answer on that question right now," Betz told PolitiFact.
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KUSA-TV, an NBC affiliate in Colorado, found that 53 petitions were filed in El Paso County, and judges approved 12 removal orders over the last nearly three years. The sheriff who opposed the state law filed no petitions.
Shawn Fields, a law professor at Campbell University who wrote an article about sanctuaries for Northwestern University Law Review, cautioned that correlation does not necessarily equal causation.
"Most (Second Amendment) sanctuary resolutions are merely symbolic in nature and have no enforcement mechanisms contained within them," Fields told PolitiFact. "It is possible the existence of the resolutions are influencing police and prosecutor discretion in enforcing red flag laws. But it is equally possible that the resolutions themselves are merely reflections of a community already deeply skeptical about these types of firearms regulations, which may include police and prosecutors de-prioritizing their enforcement."
The newness of these sanctuary resolutions, combined with the pandemic’s potential effect on enforcement for a year and a half, means we have had very little time to assess the impact of these resolutions, Fields said.
In this July 9, 2019, file photo, Moms Demanding Action line up during a rally at the State Capitol in Richmond, Va. Gov. Ralph Northam called a special session of the General Assembly to consider gun legislation in light of the Virginia Beach shootings. (AP)
We found other jurisdictions with sanctuary resolutions that still enforce gun laws.
Virginia Beach City Council passed a resolution in 2020 declaring itself a "Second Amendment Constitutional City."
Virginia Beach Sheriff Ken Stolle told PolitiFact that he strongly supports the Second Amendment but opposed the resolution. It wouldn’t affect law enforcement officials, he said, because they are guided by the U.S. Constitution, the Virginia Constitution and state laws.
"Courts have the obligation of interpreting the law, not the sheriff," said Stolle, a Republican, attorney and former state senator. "My job is to enforce the law."
In 2020, Virginia passed a red flag law. The Virginia Beach office of the commonwealth attorney told us that it has filed 27 red flag cases. And the police department regularly arrests people involved in gun crimes.
Polk County, Florida, also passed a sanctuary resolution in 2020. Sheriff Grady Judd is one of the state’s most prominent Republican supporters of red flag laws. WINK News, a PolitiFact partner, found that Polk County has had more risk-protection orders, which red flag laws allow law enforcement to seek, than anywhere else in the state over the past four years — about 1,300.
Some statewide resolutions suggest noncompliance with future laws.
"The White House and U.S. Congress have announced their intention to pursue measures that would infringe on the right to keep and bear arms," reads Nebraska's Second Amendment sanctuary proclamation. "Nebraska will stand up against federal overreach and attempts to regulate gun ownership."
How do these resolutions hold up legally?
A county cannot refuse to enforce laws, and the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution requires that federal law take precedence over state and local law.
Brady: United Against Gun Violence, which works to reduce gun violence, says courts have yet to take up a case that would answer whether the symbolic policies have any legal standing.
But the vast majority of sheriffs are independently elected, so they have autonomy to set and enforce policy, said political scientist Emily Farris of Texas Christian University. Farris helped oversee a survey of American sheriffs and found about 38% opposed a requirement to confiscate firearms from people who pose a public safety risk.
Murphy said "60 percent of counties in this country are refusing to implement the nation's gun laws."
Murphy’s statistic reflects an Associated Press analysis that found 2,000 counties have passed "Second Amendment sanctuary" policies pledging to not enforce some gun restrictions passed by their states. This represents about 60% of the nation’s 3,000 counties.
But the resolutions do not necessarily mean that the jurisdiction doesn’t enforce gun laws — much less federal laws that take precedence over state and local laws. In some instances, counties with such resolutions are less likely to use the state’s red flag law. More research is warranted, experts say.
We rate this statement Half True.
RELATED: Ask PolitiFact: What are red flag gun laws and do they keep people safe?
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Our Sources
CNN, State of the Union transcript, Nov. 27, 2022
Sen. Chris Murphy, Murphy on ‘State of the Union’: we need to have a conversation about the 60 percent of counties refusing to implement gun safety laws, Nov. 27, 2022
The Trace, Second Amendment Sanctuaries, Explained, Jan. 14, 2020
The Trace, In Colorado Springs, local officials resisted the state’s red flag law, Nov. 21, 2022
Quinnipiac, Nearly 3 out of 4 support eaising legal age to buy any gun, Quinnipiac University national poll finds; support for assault weapons ban hits a low, June 8, 2022
KUSA-TV, Gov. Polis calls for expansion of red flag law after Club Q shooting, Nov. 28, 2022
The Marshall Project, Does your sheriff think he’s more powerful than the president? Oct. 18, 2022
National Rifle Association, NRA's Statement on Second Amendment Sanctuaries, Dec. 6, 2019
Poynter, 19 states have red flag laws, but they are rarely used to stop gun violence, Nov. 28, 2022
Tacticalgear.com, Second Amendment sanctuary reviewed: Every U.S. state and county, accessed Nov. 28, 2022
The Associated Press, Red flag laws get little use as shootings, gun deaths soar, Sept. 2, 2022
The Associated Press, Gay club shooting suspect evaded Colorado’s red flag gun law, Nov. 21, 2022
News-Press NOW, Missouri county passes law allowing arrest of federal agents, April 1, 2022
The Gazette, El Paso County declared 'Second Amendment preservation county' as Legislature weighs red flag gun bill, March 13, 2019
CNN, Virginia governor signs background checks, ‘red flag’ and other gun control bills into law, April 10, 2020
WRIC-TV, Virginia’s red flag law has been used hundreds of times since taking effect, June 14, 2022
Virginian-Pilot, State-level efforts have moved officials to act on guns, June 12, 2022
Sanctuarycounties.com, 1,965 American Counties are now Second Amendment sanctuaries, Sept. 29, 2021
Sanctuarycounties.com, El Paso County CO, Pro-Second Amendment Resolution approved, March 12, 2019
KOAA-TV, Sheriff Elder explains opposition to the red flag bill, March 7, 2019
Sanctuarycounties.com, Polk County FL, commissioners vote to become ‘Second Amendment Sanctuary’ Jan. 21, 2020
WINK-TV, Florida red flag law eyed amid gun debate, June 4, 2022
Virginia Beach City Council, Meeting minutes, Jan. 6, 2020
Virginia Beach Police Chief Paul Neudigate, Tweets about gun-related crimes, November 2022
Brady United, What are so-called Second Amendment sanctuaries?
CBS, Virginia Beach passes resolution to make itself a Second Amendment sanctuary, Jan. 7, 2020
Everytown for Gun Safety, Everytown For Gun Safety Support Fund and Moms Demand Action urge Sheriffs’ Association, Association Of Counties, others to condemn ‘Second Amendment sanctuary’ resolutions, Dec. 19, 2019
Sen. Chris Murphy’s office, Statement to PolitiFact, Nov. 28, 2022
Email interview, Allison Anderman, senior counsel and director of local policy at Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, Nov. 28, 2022
Email interview, Alex Reuss, a spokesperson for Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts, Nov. 30, 2022
Email interview, Macie Allen, Virginia Beach Office of the Commonwealth's Attorney spokesperson, Nov. 30, 2022
Telephone interview, Virginia Beach Sheriff Ken Stolle, Nov. 30, 2022
Email interview, Emily Farris, Texas Christian University associate professor of political science, Nov. 29, 2022
Email interview, Emmy Betz, University of Colorado School of Medicine professor and director of the Firearm Injury Prevention Initiative, Nov. 30, 2022
Email interview, Shawn Fields, Campbell University law professor, Dec. 1, 2022
Northwestern University Law Review, Second Amendment Sanctuaries, accessed Nov. 30, 2022
Tampa Bay Times, Hernando County is a 'Second Amendment sanctuary,' commissioners declare, Dec. 18, 2019
WFTS-TV, Polk County commissioners vote to become 'Second Amendment Sanctuary,' Jan. 22, 2020
Panama City News Herald, Walton votes to support 2nd Amendment resolutions, Dec. 18, 2019
WPTV, Indian River County becomes 'Second Amendment sanctuary,' July 13, 2021
Texas Legislature, HB 2622, accessed Nov. 29, 2022
Office of Governor Pete Ricketts, Gov. Ricketts designates Nebraska as a "Second Amendment sanctuary state," April 14, 2022
Tweet, Nov. 27, 2022
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Chris Murphy said most counties refuse to enforce gun laws. What’s on paper isn’t always reality.
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