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First known petition under Colorado's new red flag law filed in Denver

Man relinquished two guns to police after suicidal statements
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DENVER — The first petition under Colorado's new red flag law was filed Thursday by a Denver police sergeant, and a hearing on the petition will be held on Jan. 16 under a new law that took effect Jan. 1.

The Denver Police Department has requested to keep ahold of two handguns it obtained during an investigation into a domestic violence incident that included suicidal statements from a man involved.

Denver Police Sgt. Troy Bisgard filed the petition on Thursday in Denver Probate Court. He has asked for the extreme risk protection order hearing after the department took custody of two semi-automatic handguns owned by a 26-year-old man. Scripps station KMGH in Denver chose not to use the man's name because the Denver District Attorney's Office has declined to file charges against him for the domestic violence incident.

Bisgard wrote in the petition that the original incident involving the man, his wife and her sister happened around 10:45 p.m. on Dec. 29 at the couple's apartment. During that incident, a caller said a man and his wife were arguing and the man was walking away from the apartment complex.

Police spotted the 26-year-old man at a nearby convenience store, and as they were patting him down, they discovered a loaded 9mm Glock handgun in his waistband. The man also had a cut above his eye, and he eventually told officers that his wife had hit him in the face with a bottle and that he had pushed her several times. He was noticeably intoxicated, according to Bisgard's petition, which also notes that the man did not have a permit to carry a concealed weapon.

Officers then talked to the man's wife and her sister back at the apartment. At one point, she admitted to throwing a bottle at her husband after he had locked her and her sister out of the apartment during an argument. She also alleged that her husband choked her and that her husband pointed a weapon in his wife and sister's direction. He said that "it was not for them, rather it was for himself," according to the petition.

The man told officers that he planned to "off" himself after the argument. Police took him to an area hospital for a mental health hold, but the hospital did not admit him because of his level of intoxication. He was taken into custody for investigation of assault.

The next day, the man's wife recounted the incident and the alleged choking, and he told officers again that he was "contemplating doing something bad to [himself]" after the altercation.

But he also told officers, according to the petition, that it was a "good thing they stopped me because it was not good." He also told officers he had a second handgun that he was willing to give to the police department.

A day later, on Dec. 31, the man gave the second gun, a .45 caliber Springfield semi-automatic, to the Denver District Attorney's Office after the Denver County Court issued a mandatory domestic violence protection order.

Bisgard wrote in the petition that he was seeking the extreme risk protection order because the man "made suicidal statements regarding a firearm to both the responding officers the night of the incident, Dec. 29, 2019, and the investigating detective, Dec. 31, 2019."

He also wrote that the District Attorney's Office has declined to press charges against the man or his wife. Thus, the department now must figure out whether to release his guns back to him despite his suicidal statements and is asking the probate court for direction.

Under the law, there will now be a hearing on Jan. 16 to determine whether to give the guns back to the man from the DPD Evidence room.

Court records show that the man has an attorney specializing in extreme risk protection orders.

The passage of the red flag law last year was one of the most controversial and monumental measures of last year's Colorado legislature. It passed a year after a similar measure failed during the 2018 legislature.

Under the law, a judge could place a temporary order for up to two weeks on the person until it is decided at a hearing whether a full protection order is necessary. A full protection order could be approved for up to 364 days.

This story was originally published by Blair Miller on KMGH in Denver.