Abuse victims say gun surrender laws save lives. Will the Supreme Court agree?

Janet Paulsen shows a photo of some of the dozens of guns that police seized from her estranged husband days before he ambushed her at their home in 2015. Paulsen still lives in the home in Acworth, Ga., Monday, Aug. 7, 2023. “Every step of the way it seemed like his rights were more important … than mine and my children’s,” she says. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

As Janet Paulsen prepared to leave her husband, who had become increasingly volatile over their 15-year marriage, she slipped down to his gun safes one night while he slept to try to change the combination locks.

“There were 74 firearms in my house,” said Paulsen, who was stunned by how many guns she found, but could not figure out how to change the codes. “When I went to get my protection order, I brought pictures of all of those firearms with me.”

Georgia, where she lives, is not among the 21 states with gun surrender laws that can force people to relinquish their weapons while they are deemed a risk to themselves or others. So Paulsen’s husband, whom she accused of threatening and erratic behavior, was only ordered to stay away from her and their 13-year-old twin boys until a court hearing.