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Herschel Walker’s candidacy for Senate in Georgia last year, when he lost to Raphael Warnock, was always a joke. Walker failed not solely because Warnock was a better candidate, but also because Walker was a first ballot buffoon, and lied with the same kind of ease he did when running over SEC defensive backs.

There are numerous examples of how bad he was but one of the best was when Walker showed up to a debate with a ridiculous special deputy badge to try and boost his law enforcement credentials. It was one of the most farcical moments of the campaign. It was one of the most farcical moments of any campaign.

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Tee Higgins hoped he and Damar Hamlin were on a path to reunite. They went completely off-road together.

Hamlin appeared in an Instagram post Thursday with Cincinnati Bengals starting wide receivers Higgins, Ja’Marr Chase and Tyler Boyd.

‘Hot Boyz,’ read the caption on Boyd’s Instagram photo of the four players in front of a Cam-Am side-by-side vehicle in a desert.

Hamlin, a Buffalo Bills safety, went into cardiac arrest caused by commotio cordis after he tackled Higgins during a Monday Night Football game on Jan. 2. Hamlin’s heartbeat was restored by team trainers and paramedics on the field and he was transported to University of Cincinnati Medical Center.

Higgins was reportedly distraught in the locker room and spoke with Hamlin’s mother while Hamlin was hospitalized. Higgins tweeted support for Hamlin two hours after the game was postponed.

Hamlin was released a week later and attended the AFC Championship Game between the Bills and Bengals, which Cincinnati won, 27-10.

‘I’m pretty sure we’re just going to chop it up, laughs and giggles and just be happy to see him,’ Higgins told reporters in January about potentially connecting with Hamlin at the playoff game.

Bills general manager Brandon Beane announced last month that Hamlin has been medically cleared to return to on-field activities. Hamlin said he intends to resume his NFL career.

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For the first time since filing a lawsuit April 19 alleging negligence, loss of consortium – or familial relation impacts – sexual assault, battery and false imprisonment against their former university, basketball coaches and teammates, former New Mexico State players Deuce Benjamin and Shakiru Odunewu returned to the campus of New Mexico State University in Las Cruces.

The New Mexico State Board of Regents, former head coach Greg Heiar, former assistant coach Dominique Taylor and former players DeShawndre Washington, Doctor Bradley and Kim Aiken Jr., were named as defendants in the lawsuit.

In the suit, Benjamin and Odunewu alleged that they were sexually assaulted by three teammates and that despite reporting it to coaching staff nothing was done.

Both players have since entered the transfer portal with hopes of continuing their basketball careers elsewhere.

‘My life has not been easy ever since those events happened,’ said Benjamin. ‘First it hurts and then it changes you. There is a part of me that hasn’t been the same now and I want people to know that.

‘All you can do is weather the storm and stay positive through this whole process. I’m proud of myself that I survived those days when I felt I couldn’t. Pain makes you stronger and I’m still fixing myself every day. Regardless if the plan changes, I stay loyal to my purpose and my purpose is to play at a Division I school and to represent my city and the state of New Mexico.’

Benjamin was a target of abuse by three teammates, according to the lawsuit, which began in the summer of 2022 and escalated until February 2023.

Odunewu redshirted last season, but signed to play under former head coach Chris Jans. According to the lawsuit, Washington, Bradley and Aiken began to ‘degrade’ Odunewu in the summer of 2022 through unwanted touching and cruel comments in the locker room.

A second assault on Odunewu, the lawsuit alleged, occurred during a bus ride on Nov. 12, 2022 and involved Aiken, Bradley, and Washington.

According to the lawsuit the three forced Odunewu ‘onto the floor in the back of the bus. Aiken and Bradley pinned him down and pulled his pants and underwear down to his ankles. … They slapped his bare buttocks and he felt fingers inserted into his anus while his scrotum was simultaneously squeezed.’

According to the court documents, Heiar and the coaching staff were present on the bus, though seated at the front. In response to the assault taking place, one of the coaches turned around and yelled out, “Stop playing around,’ the lawsuit alleged.

Heiar and Taylor were alerted to behavior when Odunewu officially reported it, and the lawsuit alleged Odunewu also asked Taylor to intervene. According to the court documents, ‘Taylor laughed in his face and said, ‘What do you want me to do?”

‘Last year I was a redshirt with Coach Jans and the culture was different,’ Odunewu said on Wednesday. ‘Nothing like this would ever happen. There was discipline, there was an authority figure. It’s just sad to see … I was born and raised in a very strong Islamic household … When this was going on, I didn’t want to come out because I was scared if I did come out, I was going to tarnish and mess up the people who were involved and their careers.

‘It’s just sad that my college experience had to go like this. I really feel bad for Deuce. This is his hometown and he was born and raised here. His dad is a Aggie legend and he comes here and has to deal with this nonsense. I hope me and Deuce will have the strength to move past this.’

Odunewu and Benjamin also detailed an incident where the three players who harassed them also pulled down the pants of an assistant coach in public.

‘After the [game] at UTEP, when we lost, they pantsed one of the assistants,’ Benjamin told ESPN. He said assistant had his pants pulled down while he slept on the bus, and another was able to discourage the three players by yelling. ‘[Other coaches acted] like they didn’t see it,’ Benjamin said.

Benjamin also told ESPN that pulling down another player’s pants was part of a common pregame ritual. He said one player was ordered by Washington to pull down his shorts for good luck prior to the team running on the court for a game.

‘We know the vast majority of civil cases settle,’ said Joleen Youngers, attorney for Deuce and William Benjamin. ‘We are preparing the case to go to trial. If there is the opportunity for a good settlement that matters to these young men that helps right some wrongs, we are open to it. If we were able to resolve the case sooner and get these guys out on the basketball court, that would probably be the very best thing for them.’

Attorneys claim complaints were not addressed

William Benjamin, father of Deuce Benjamin and also a party in the lawsuit, was recently inducted to the New Mexico State Athletics Hall of Fame and is a longtime coach at Las Cruces High School.

Attorneys for the Benjamins stated in a press conference Wednesday that school coaches and administration were made aware of the allegations before authorities were notified and a lawsuit was filed.

William Benjamin hoped for accountability, something he said was promised by New Mexico State athletics Director Mario Moccia in a February press conference after the school fired Heiar and cancelled the season.

‘Nobody has a crystal ball and and nobody bats .1,000, but we still hold people accountable for their actions; for what they do and do not do,’ said William Benjamin, mirroring Moccia’s comments at the time regarding his decision to hire Greg Heiar.

In its only response to the lawsuit, the University stated that a task force would be convened to ‘facilitate implementation of preventive measures whose purpose is to identify and extinguish any opportunity for this to occur in the future.’

On Wednesday, New Mexico State also released a two-page summary of its third-party investigation by Greenberg Traurig into the hazing allegations.

According to the executive summary, ‘Our investigation focused on a programmatic review of New Mexico State’s anti-hazing policies and procedures. Based on that review, we make certain recommendations below. GT was not retained toinvestigate the 2023 allegations themselves.’

Among the recommendations were the addition of training for students and employees and ‘Investigation of and Response to Hazing Allegations by OIE (Office of Institutional Equity), DOS (Dean of Students), and/or Other Departments.’

Youngers said that Tuesday was the first time Odunewu had been contacted by New Mexico State and Deuce Benjamin has not been contacted by the school.

However, it’s unclear if all current student athletes are aware of such processes as incidents occurred as early as last summer and through February, according to the lawsuit.

Odunewu’s attorney, Ramez Shamieh, said New Mexico State general counsel Roy Collins ‘had no clue in February what this was about,’ during a Zoom Call. ‘I think that gives you a good idea how the school is operating.’

New Mexico State University has since been assigned Las Cruces attorney Blaine Mynatt through the state’s Risk Management Division to represent the university in the lawsuit.

‘I don’t believe (student athletes) felt they would be supported,’ Youngers said. ‘Particularly after some overtures were mad and nothing changes. What we see all too often with business and government entities and schools, who have great policies and procedures and they are window dressing or lip service. Because if people don’t know about them or feel they have the power to access them, it doesn’t matter.’

William Benjamin addresses son’s interaction with current coach Jason Hooten

Deuce Benjamin reported an interaction with current New Mexico State coach Jason Hooten, who was introduced to replace Heiar on March 26.

According to the lawsuit and a April 18 post on his social media Deuce Benjamin said, ‘Coach Hooten recently informed me that it would be in my best interest to continue my education and basketball career elsewhere.’

The interaction was also mentioned in a recent letter from Higher Education Department Cabinet Secretary Stephanie Rodriguez, who directed university leadership to take immediate action to address mounting concerns, including another investigation into the interaction that Rodriguez said could, ‘constitute retaliation against a local, home grown athlete and New Mexican for the act of coming forward with legitimate concerns and allegations of abuse and hazing.’

William Benjamin said he met with Hooten following his introductory press conference, and was under the impression that he would be able to speak again with the new coach regarding his son’s future with the program.

‘I thought me being an alumni, Hall of Fame, and a person in the community, I would get that conversation and I never did,’ William Benjamin said. ‘(Hooten) saw my son practicing in the gym and spoke to him without me being present and basically informed him that it would be in his best interest to go make a name for himself someplace else.

‘I would have thought he (Hooten) would have stuck with us having a conversation as a family and him saying the same thing would have been fine. I wish I would have been present for that conversation, but unfortunately I wasn’t.’

William Benjamin said that players who could be victims of assault, should be treated differently than a player who may or may not be involved with the program under a new coach.

‘I don’t think you are supposed to press the reset button and lump the victims in with everybody you are getting rid of,’ William Benjamin said. ‘I think that the victims deserve a little bit more sympathy and empathy for the situation.

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The National Border Patrol Council (NBPC) mocked Vice President Kamala Harris on Friday, calling her a ‘clown’ as Title 42’s expiration date looms.

‘In 6 days the massive crush of illegal aliens coming through our border will make the last 2 years look like amateur hour,’ the Border Patrol Union wrote in a Twitter post.

Title 42, a Trump-era policy that allows the swift expulsion of illegal immigrants from the U.S., will expire on May 11 and tens of thousands of migrants are expected to seek entrance into America after it is lifted. 

‘Biden doesn’t have one clue about how to contain what he’s unleashed. He has a clown running DHS and a worse clown as VP. Watch what happens,’ NBPC said in an effort to draw attention to the ongoing crisis at the southern border.

Harris, who was appointed to lead efforts at the southern border as the Border Czar, has only visited the southern border once since taking office in 2021, despite the ongoing migrant surge into the U.S.

Customs and Border Protection (CBP) sources revealed that they had encountered over 8,000 migrants a day border-wide in the first few days of May. However, the Department of Homeland Security warns that this number could nearly double after Title 42 expires, reaching up to 14,000 migrant encounters a day.

As concerns grow over the multitude of individuals expected to enter the U.S. after the policy ends, President Joe Biden ordered 1,500 active duty troops to guard the southern border.

Fox News’ Adam Shaw and Griff Jenkins contributed to this report.

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Former Attorney General Bill Barr said Friday that former President Donald Trump’s presidency would be a ‘horror show’ if he were re-elected because his former boss lacks the ‘discipline’ as well as the ‘ability for strategic thinking’ needed to get things done.

‘It is a horror show, you know, when… he’s left to his own devices,’ Barr said in remarks at the City Club of Cleveland in Ohio on Friday.

‘If you believe in his policies, what he’s advertising is his policies, he’s the last person who could actually execute them and achieve them,’ Barr said to a reporter who asked if Trump is fit to be president again.

The reporter noted that some voters say they want Trump re-elected for his policies and are willing to overlook his mistakes as president in his last term.

‘He does not have the discipline,’ Barr replied. ‘He does not have the ability for strategic thinking and linear thinking or setting priorities or how to get things done in the system.’

‘And, and so you may want his policies. But Trump will not deliver Trump policies,’ Barr said.

‘He will deliver chaos, and if anything lead to a backlash that will set his policies much further back than they otherwise would be.’

According to recent Fox News polling, Trump is the favored candidate for the Republicans in 2024, even ahead of popular Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who has yet to announce his candidacy but is widely rumored to be considering a run.

Barr served as attorney general under Trump from 2019 to 2020. He was also attorney general during the George H. W. Bush administration.

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Gov. Tony Evers ordered a special election Friday to fill an open Assembly seat representing Milwaukee’s northern suburbs.

Republican Dan Knodl represented the 24th Assembly District from 2009 until last month, when he won a special election to fill a state Senate seat left vacant after longtime Republican incumbent Alberta Darling retired in November.

Evers issued an executive order setting a special election for Knodl’s seat on July 18, with a primary set for June 20 if necessary. Candidates could begin circulating nomination papers Friday. They must turn them in to the state elections commission by May 23.

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Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, facing a potentially historic migrant surge once the Title 42 public health order ends in less than a week, made a final plea for migrants not to attempt to cross into the U.S. illegally — telling them they are being ‘deceived’ by smugglers.

‘The border is not open,’ Mayorkas said. ‘It has not been open, and it will not be open subsequent to May 11th. And the smugglers who exploit vulnerable migrants are spreading misinformation. They are spreading false information, lies in a way to lure vulnerable people to the southern border and those individuals will only be returned.’

Mayorkas spoke in Brownsville, Texas alongside Border Patrol Chief Raul Ortiz just days before the Title 42 order will expire on Thursday.  The public health order was implemented in March 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and millions of migrants have been rapidly expelled back to Mexico under the order for public health reasons. In March, 46% of all encounters resulted in a Title 42 expulsion.

With the order ending, there are widespread fears of a new border surge as migrants, believing they are more likely to be released into the U.S., flood to the border — with numbers already growing in areas like near Brownsville, where authorities are seeing a surge in Venezuelan single adults.

On Friday, Mayorkas said he ‘[does] not want to understate the severity of the challenge we expect to encounter.’

But he continued his claim that migrants who enter the U.S. illegally will be removed from the country, and pleaded with them not to try.

‘To the individuals themselves, who are thinking of migrating: Do not believe the smugglers. Please access the official government publications. Please access the official government Information on the Department of Homeland Security website for accurate information,’ he said.

‘Because you are being deceived, and you are risking your lives and your life savings only to meet a consequence that you do not expect at our southern border,’ he said.

The administration has been ramping up its preparations, including deployment of 1,500 troops to the southern border this week — as well as the establishment of migrant processing centers across Latin America and other agreements with Mexico to take back non-Mexican illegal immigrants.

The administration is also putting into place an asylum rule that, in theory, would make migrants ineligible for asylum if they cross the border illegally and fail to claim asylum at a country through which they have already traveled. However, Mayorkas has stressed that the ‘presumption of ineligibility’ is rebuttable — suggesting that the exemptions could be used liberally.

The DHS chief announced the distribution of an additional $332 million in funding to NGOs and local governments to aid migrants released from custody. 

Mayorkas also highlighted what DHS intends to be a greater use of penalties under the traditional Title 8 authorities to expel migrants who enter illegally — which include a five-year re-entry bar and criminal prosecution. 

So the consequence is going to be more severe. And what we will do, what we will do is remove individuals who do not qualify for relief under the standard that will be set by the rule that we will have finalized by May 11th,’ he said.

‘We have a plan, we are executing on that plan,’ he said, before repeating his calls for Congress to take action on fixing what he has called a ‘broken’ immigration system.

So far, Mayorkas has not assured lawmakers on the Hill. Multiple Republican senators have called on President Biden to reverse course on Title 42, while a bipartisan coalition of senators introduced legislation to grant DHS a Title 42-esque authority for two years.

Meanwhile, agents are already seeing a surge at the border, with CBP sources telling Fox News that they have seen 8,000 encounters a day in the first days of May — even before the order has lifted.

Fox News’ Griff Jenkins contributed to this report.

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A first-term Democratic congressman representing Wall Street has become one of Congress’s most prolific stock traders, and recently sold shares in a troubled California bank just days before the stock plummeted in value.

Rep. Dan Goldman, who represents a congressional district that includes Lower Manhattan’s Financial District in New York City, sold up to $15,000 in shares of PacWest Bancorp on March 6, according to his financial disclosures. The sale came just two days before the stock of the Beverly Hills-based bank holding company plummeted in value as investors fled from small and mid-sized banks amid news of Silicon Valley Bank’s pending failure. 

PacWest’s stock was valued at $27.40 when Goldman sold his shares but dropped to about $5.75 as of Friday, entering a freefall after Silicon Valley Bank collapsed on March 10.

‘The timing doesn’t look good, and that’s for sure,’ Dylan Hedtler-Gaudette of the Project on Government Oversight told the Washington Examiner. ‘It’s just another reason why the practice of members of Congress trading stocks is so problematic.’

The PacWest trade is one of hundreds that Goldman has made during his short time in Congress, where he has quickly becoming one of the most prolific stock traders. Goldman made more than 500 trades worth between $10 million and nearly $31 million since being sworn in as a congressman in January, his disclosure forms reveal.

Goldman, a multimillionaire and heir to the Levi Straus & Co. fortune, sits on the Committee on Homeland Security and the Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government. While in those positions, he bought up to $50,000 in Northrop Grumman, one of the country’s biggest defense contractors, as well as up to $15,000 each in weapons manufacturers Raytheon Technologies and L3 Harris Technologies.

Goldman’s office told Fox News Digital that the congressman doesn’t manage his own stock trades and backs legislation to ban federal lawmakers from trading stocks.

‘Congressman Goldman is not involved in trading stocks in his portfolio, which is managed entirely by an investment adviser, with whom he has had no discussions about any stock trades since entering Congress,’ said Goldman spokesperson Simone Kanter. ‘The congressman supports legislation to prohibit members of Congress from trading stocks and immediately initiated the complicated process of entering into a blind trust upon entering Congress.’

Goldman is hardly alone in trading stocks as a member of Congress, even if he’s doing so at a higher rate.

Last Friday, Rep. Lois Frankel, D-Fla., disclosed that she sold up to $15,000 in shares of First Republic Bank stock on March 16, and then bought up to $15,000 in JPMorgan stock shares on March 22. The congresswoman told the Daily Caller that her ‘account is managed independently by a money manager who buys and sells stocks at his discretion.’

Stock trading is a bipartisan pastime in Congress not just confined to Democrats. Rep. John Curtis, R-Utah, sold up to $15,000 in First Republic Bank shares on March 16, when shares traded around $34 per share. They now sit at $0.35 per share.

Perhaps the member of Congress most notorious for her stock activity is Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., who’s been long criticized for her husband’s profitable trades in companies she has worked to subsidize.

Critics argue that lawmakers can use their positions in Congress to profit from insider trading, in part since they have the ability to influence policies that can help or hurt certain companies and industries. Goldman’s frequent stock trading and close proximity to Wall Street may make him especially susceptible to such criticism.

Members of Congress are increasingly supporting legislation banning lawmakers from trading stocks. Last month, senators introduced a bill that would prohibit Congress from buying or selling stocks and mandate divestment or holdings to be placed into a blind trust.

The issue of banning stock trading has created unusual alliances in Congress. Earlier this week, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., teamed up to introduce legislation that would similarly ban lawmakers, their spouses, and dependents from trading stocks.

‘AOC is wrong a lot, she’d probably say the same thing about me, but she’s not corrupt,’ said Gaetz. ‘And I will work with anyone and everyone to ensure that Congress is not so compromised.’

Members of Congress reportedly traded $788 million worth of securities last year. According to an analysis by the popular stock-trading news site Unusual Whales, many lawmakers beat the stock market on total returns, despite Wall Street suffering its worst year since 2008.

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A historical marker in Concord, New Hampshire, dedicated to former U.S. Communist Party chairwoman Elizabeth Gurley Flynn has come under Republican scrutiny for its potential connotations.Department of Natural and Cultural Resources Commissioner Sarah Stewart claims that such markers are not necessarily meant to be commemorative, but instead to illustrate broad historical significance. Stewart noted that ‘many potentially controversial’ markers appear throughout the Granite State.’We are the ‘Live Free or Die’ state,’ Republican Executive Councilman Joe Kenney said. ‘How can we possibly promote her propaganda, which still exists now through this sign in downtown Concord?’

A historical marker dedicated to a New Hampshire labor activist who championed women’s rights and was a founder of the American Civil Liberties Union — but who also joined the Communist Party and was sent to prison — has draw objections from Republican officials and scrutiny from the governor.

Known as ‘The Rebel Girl’ for her fiery speeches, Elizabeth Gurley Flynn was born in Concord in 1890. A green and white Historical Highway Marker dedicated to her, one of 278 across the state, was unveiled Monday near her birthplace.

In addition to her rights activism, the marker also says she joined the Communist Party in 1936 and was sent to prison in 1951. She was one of many party members prosecuted ‘under the notorious Smith Act,’ the marker says, which forbade any attempts to advocate, abet or teach the violent destruction of the U.S. government.

Flynn later chaired the Communist Party of the United States and she died in Moscow during a visit in 1964, at age 74. She was cremated, and her ashes were taken on a ‘flower-decked bier’ to Red Square during a funeral tribute, according to Associated Press accounts at the time.

Republican Gov. Chris Sununu is calling for a review of the state’s historical marker program.

‘This is a devout communist,’ said Joseph Kenney, a Republican member of the Executive Council, at a regular meeting Wednesday. ‘We are the ‘Live Free or Die’ state. How can we possibly promote her propaganda, which still exists now through this sign in downtown Concord?’

David Wheeler, a Republican who’s also part of a five-member Executive Council that votes on state contracts and Sununu’s department appointees, said he wanted the council to have more oversight of the historical marker process.

Sarah Stewart, the commissioner for the Department of Natural and Cultural Resources, said at the meeting that the marker program is very popular ‘because it’s initiated at the local level. There is no state top-down effort to populate the state with historical highway markers.’

There are ‘many potentially controversial’ markers, Stewart said. ‘The purpose of them is not to commemorate heroes. The purpose is to provide a snapshot that the local community feels is of historic value.’

Any person, municipality or agency can suggest a marker as long as they get 20 signatures from New Hampshire residents. Supporters must draft the marker’s text and provide footnotes and copies of supporting documentation, according to the state Division of Historical Resources. The division and a historical resources advisory group evaluate the criteria.

The sign was approved last year by the Concord City Council following a recommendation from the marker program, which is jointly administered by the Historical Resources Division and the Transportation Department. It currently stands at the edge of a parking lot near the county courthouse.

Flynn is ‘one of the most significant radical leaders of the twentieth century,’ the marker’s supporters said in a letter to City Council last year. The sign also notes Flynn’s support for women’s voting rights and for access to birth control.

Historical markers run the gamut, telling stories about the last living Revolutionary War soldier, poets and painters who lived nearby, long-lost villages and contemporary sports figures.

‘We’re going to review the whole process,’ Sununu said at Wednesday’s meeting.

‘I completely agree with the sentiment here,’ the governor said, adding, ‘It’s the state marker. You can’t say we don’t have any responsibility in terms of what it says and where it goes.’

Stewart, the natural and cultural resources commissioner, sent a letter Thursday to Concord’s mayor saying the city can ‘reevaluate your approval of this marker,’ New Hampshire Public Radio reported. Mayor Jim Bouley did not immediately respond to a phone message seeking comment Friday.

One marker from 2011 that was brought up during Wednesday’s meeting celebrates the 50th anniversary of the ‘Betty and Barney Hill incident,’ during which the couple reported a close encounter with a UFO. Their experience was described in a best-selling book, a television movie, and numerous speaking engagements.

‘The UFO one I’m gonna live with,’ said Kenney, the Executive Council member. ‘That’s a funny story.’

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The Vermont Legislature on Friday passed a bill that would impose a 72-hour waiting period for all firearm purchases, which lawmakers claim will help stem suicides and impulsive violent acts.The bill would also expand the reach of the state’s ‘red flag’ laws, formally referred to as extreme risk protection orders, and creates a criminal charge for negligent firearms storage.Republican Gov. Phil Scott ‘has significant concerns about the constitutionality’ of the waiting period, a point often echoed by opponents of the legislation.

The Vermont Legislature on Friday passed a bill that requires a 72-hour waiting period for the purchase of guns and includes other provisions aimed at reducing suicides and community violence.

The Vermont House concurred with a Senate amendment by a vote of 106 to 34. But Republican Gov. Phil Scott ‘has significant concerns about the constitutionality of the waiting period provision,’ his spokesman Jason Maulucci said Friday.

The legislation also creates a crime of negligent firearms storage and expands the state’s extreme risk protection orders so that a state’s attorney, the attorney general’s office or a family or household member may ask a court to prohibit a person from purchasing, possessing or receiving a dangerous weapon.

Supporters say it’s time to take action against gun violence and the rate of suicide in Vermont, which is higher than the national rate.

Opponents say the bill violates the Second Amendment of the Constitution.

According to the bill, more than 700 Vermonters died of gunshots from 2011 to 2020 and 88% of those deaths were suicides. In 2021, the state’s suicide rate was 20.3 per 100,000 people, compared to a national rate of 14 per 100,000, the bill states. Children in a home with a firearm are more than four times more likely to die by suicide than those in a home without one, the legislature states.

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