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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Bill advances that would allow notification when seized guns returned

OLYMPIA – Family members could be warned before police return guns to a person who had them seized by law enforcement, under a bill approved unanimously Friday by the Senate.

Known as the Sheena Henderson Act for a woman fatally shot by her husband at Deaconess Hospital last summer, the bill is designed to let family members request to be notified before a person with a history of mental health or domestic violence gets guns back that were seized by police.

The proposal is one of two bills written in response to the shooting that made progress in the Legislature on Friday.

Sen. Andy Billig, D-Spokane, said Henderson’s family told legislators in hearings over the bill that if she had known her husband Chris had retrieved his guns from police, she would have taken extra precautions and would be alive today. A few weeks before the shooting, Chris Henderson had his guns seized when police intervened in a suicide attempt. But after being referred to law enforcement for another mental health incident and later released, he went to the Spokane police station and got the weapons back.

The next day he went to Deaconess where his wife worked, killed her and then himself.

“This is a notification bill. It is not what anybody could call a gun control bill,” Sen. Mike Padden, R-Spokane Valley, said.