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The “red flag” law will allow a judge to approve an order to allow law enforcement to temporarily seize guns from a person deemed a threat to themself or others
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Some Michigan officials are mentioning ghost guns as a possible target for new legislation in the coming months
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Church leaders running a gun buy-back program want the State to stop selling to disposal companies after finding the guns weren’t destroyed, but instead re-sold in parts
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Today in federal court in Grand Rapids, U.S. attorneys brought new charges against three people in the case of the Lansing man police say left a loaded gun in a car with a two-year-old. That child died of a gunshot wound.
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All guns except one were recovered and two men were arrested last Friday, a day after the heist at Dunham’s Sports near Benton Harbor.
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Judge Robert Redford ruled that the House violated the Open Meetings Act by limiting testimony on bills that would expand background checks, implement so-called red-flag laws and mandate safe storage in homes when children are present
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One of the bills was finalized by the House vote and will go to Governor Gretchen Whitmer. The rest of the bills will go the Michigan Senate.
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A state House committee has approved legislation that would prohibit people convicted of many misdemeanor domestic violence crimes from possessing guns.The bills now go to the House floor.
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Operation Safe Neighborhoods involves the Michigan Department of Corrections working with local law enforcement to conduct compliance checks on people under state supervision.
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Critics of the package say its definition of domestic violence misdemeanors is too broad