Maine
Voters Approve ‘Red Flag’ Gun Law
The law
is set to take effect in January, allowing families to directly seek a judge’s
order removing weapons from a relative shown to be dangerous.
Jenna
Russell
By Jenna
Russell
Nov. 4,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/04/us/maine-ballot-red-flag-law.html
Voters in
Maine approved a “red flag” law on Tuesday, according to The Associated Press,
giving families the option to petition a judge to order weapons removed
temporarily from a troubled relative.
The
ballot measure, known as Question 2, passed two years after a gunman in
Lewiston used an assault rifle to kill 18 people at a bar and a bowling alley.
It was the worst mass shooting in Maine history.
Both
supporters and opponents ran forceful campaigns, in a state with a strong
hunting tradition and high rates of gun ownership. The opponents included Gov.
Janet Mills, who argued that such a law would create confusion and put family
members “on the front lines of a dangerous situation.”
Maine
already had a “yellow flag” law, which allows law enforcement officers to ask a
judge to order weapons removed from a person found to be a danger. But the law
requires that the person be taken into custody and undergo a mental health
evaluation before the police can seek such an order.
In the
wake of the Lewiston shooting, legislators made changes to the yellow flag law
that they said had made it easier to use. Maine police agencies have used it
much more frequently over the last two years.
But many
people in the state remained convinced that giving families the power to seek
court intervention might have prevented the mass shooting. The new law,
expected to take effect in January, will not require that a person’s mental
health be evaluated before firearms are seized. About 20 states have similar
laws.
Last
year, family members of the Lewiston gunman, Robert R. Card II, testified
before a state commission about their repeated efforts to get him help as his
mental health deteriorated in the months before he opened fire at the bar and
the bowling alley. Mr. Card was found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound
two days later.
“It’s on
all of us to make sure the next time we need to get help for someone, we do
better,” Cara Lamb, Mr. Card’s ex-wife, said at a hearing.
Relatives
sought help from law enforcement officers and from Mr. Card’s Army Reserve
supervisors. The Army sent him for a mental health evaluation and treatment,
but no one removed his weapons, even after he had made explicit threats.
Following a failed attempt at intervention, the local sheriff’s department
asked his family to take away his firearms — a request that the state
commission called an “abdication” of responsibility.
Anne
Jordan, a former state commissioner of public safety who led the commission
that reviewed the shooting, said the law would be an important tool for
preventing suicides. Maine has one of the highest suicide rates in the eastern
United States.
Arthur
Barnard, whose son, Artie Strout, 42, was among Mr. Card’s victims, said the
new law would give families a needed “shortcut to a judge.” He was playing pool
with his son that night and had left the bar minutes before the shooting
started.
“Something
has to change,” Mr. Barnard said. “There were so many red flags in this case,
for so long. Who knows better than family if someone is not doing well?”
Jenna
Russell is the lead reporter covering New England for The Times. She is based
near Boston.


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