Senate passes gun restrictions for convicted abusers, stalkers

The measure now goes to Gov. Mark Dayton for a signature, making Minnesota the third state to adopt such a measure this year.

May 6, 2014 at 2:59AM
Bree Adams, Domestic Violence advocate for Saint Paul Intervention, spoke before the committee Tuesday, March 25, 2014, at the State Office in St. Paul, MN. Seated next to her is Rep. Dan Schoen (DFL), author of the bill.
Bree Adams, Domestic Violence advocate for Saint Paul Intervention, spoke before the committee Tuesday, March 25, 2014, at the State Office in St. Paul, MN. Seated next to her is Rep. Dan Schoen (DFL), author of the bill. (Dml - Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Minnesota is on the verge of prohibiting anyone convicted of domestic abuse or stalking from possessing firearms, putting the state at the forefront of a national push for more restrictive gun measures for abusers.

With an strong bipartisan vote, the Minnesota Senate voted 60-4 to prevent anyone convicted of child or domestic abuse from possessing rifles or handguns. Anyone subjected to an order for protection can lose possession of firearms, if ordered by a judge.

The measure is widely heralded as a significant step in preventing domestic violence and a significant step on a gun issue that have historically been enormously divisive around the Capitol.

"This is going to do a great job of protecting not only the women and the children in these families, but also future generations," said Diane Sellgren, a survivor of domestic abuse involving firearms. "It is a very significant step. It is telling people it is not OK to threaten people with a gun."

The measure has already passed the House and now goes to DFL Gov. Mark Dayton for a signature. Minnesota would join Wisconsin and Washington State to pass the measure this year.

"It's very commendable that there is broad bipartisan support and that organizations in the past that might have opposed something like that are supportive," said Dayton, a devoted gun owner. "It recognizes that people are at serious life risk in those situations."

Legislators have been working for months to craft a measure that would both be effective and address powerful gun-rights group that have successfully killed several more restrictive measures in past years.

"Today's passage in the Senate was a big step toward keeping Minnesota children and families safer," said Sen. Ron Latz, DFL-St. Louis Park and chief sponsor of the measure. "Law enforcement, mayors, gun owners and legislators on both sides of the aisle came together to pass this bill, because we can all agree that it will help keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people and save lives."

about the writer

about the writer

Baird Helgeson

Deputy editor

Baird Helgeson is deputy local editor at the Star Tribune. He helps supervise coverage of local news. Before becoming an editor, he was an award-winning reporter who covered state government and politics. He has worked for news organizations in Minnesota, Florida and North Dakota.

See Moreicon