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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Spin Control

Inslee signs Sheena Henderson Law

OLYMPIA -- Gov. Jay Inslee shakes hands with Gary Kennison before signing a bill carrying the name of his daughter Sheena Henderson, who was killed in a murder-suicide last summer. The bill requires police to notify worried family members before returning firearms seized from a person suspected of suicidal tendencies or domestic violence. (Jim Camden/Spokesman-Review)
OLYMPIA -- Gov. Jay Inslee shakes hands with Gary Kennison before signing a bill carrying the name of his daughter Sheena Henderson, who was killed in a murder-suicide last summer. The bill requires police to notify worried family members before returning firearms seized from a person suspected of suicidal tendencies or domestic violence. (Jim Camden/Spokesman-Review)

OLYMPIA – The family and friends of a Spokane woman killed by her estranged husband in a murder-suicide last summer, watched Tuesday as the bill they hope will prevent similar tragedies was signed into law.

The Sheena Henderson Law will require police agencies in Washington to notify worried family members before releasing guns seized in cases of domestic violence or suicide prevention. It’s a common-sense measure that “will make communities safer and give families peace of mind,” Gov. Jay Inslee said.

Sheena’s estranged husband Christopher Henderson had his guns seized by Spokane police after an unsuccessful suicide attempt last summer. He was later evaluated as a potential suicide threat last July but eventually cleared and released by Spokane Valley officers. The next day he went to the Spokane Police Department and retrieved his guns, then went to Deaconess Hospital where Sheena worked, where he fatally shot her before killing himself.

Gary Kennison, Sheena’s father, has said if the family knew Christopher had his guns back, she wouldn’t have gone to work that day. She would have accompanied Gary to the courthouse where he was filing a restraining order against Christopher for her.

The notification bill had smooth sailing in the Legislature after the National Rifle Association added its support, Kennison said. It passed both chambers overwhelmingly.

But another proposal the family is supporting, which is named for both Sheena and Christopher, would allow law enforcement officers to alert mental health experts about a suspected suicide attempt, even if that person doesn’t meet the criteria for protective custody It stalled in the Legislature and may be dead for the year. Sheena’s family and friends will be back to push for it next year, he said.

“Sometimes you have to take baby steps,” Kennison said. “We’re out to save lives.”

 



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