Utah Code § 53-5a-502

Voluntary commitment of a firearm by cohabitant -- Law enforcement to hold
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firearm.
(1)
(a) A cohabitant or owner cohabitant may voluntarily commit a firearm to a law enforcement
agency or request that a law enforcement officer receive a firearm for safekeeping if the
owner cohabitant or cohabitant believes that the owner cohabitant or another cohabitant with
access to the firearm is an immediate threat to:
(i) a cohabitant;
(ii) the owner cohabitant; or
(iii) another individual.
(b) Except as provided in Subsection (2), if the owner of a firearm requests return of the firearm
in person at the law enforcement agency's office, the law enforcement agency:
(i) may not hold the firearm under this section; and
(ii) shall return the firearm to the owner.
(2) A law enforcement agency may not return a firearm to an owner under Subsection (1)(b) if the
owner of the firearm:
(a) is a restricted person under Section 76-11-302 or 76-11-303; or
(b)
(i) has been arrested and booked into a county jail on a class A misdemeanor or felony
domestic violence offense;
(ii) has had a court:

(A) review the probable cause statement detailing the incident leading to the owner's arrest;
and
(B) determine that probable cause existed for the arrest; and
(iii) is subject to a jail release agreement or a jail release court order arising out of the domestic
violence offense.
(3) Unless a firearm is an illegal firearm subject to Section 53-5a-503, a law enforcement agency
that receives a firearm in accordance with this chapter shall:
(a) record:
(i) the owner cohabitant's name, address, and phone number;
(ii) the firearm serial number and the make and model of each firearm committed; and
(iii) the date that the firearm was voluntarily committed;
(b) require the cohabitant to sign a document attesting that the cohabitant resides in the home;
(c) hold the firearm in safe custody:
(i) for 60 days after the day on which the firearm is voluntarily committed; or
(ii)
(A) for an owner described in Subsection (2)(b), during the time the jail release agreement or
jail release court order is in effect; and
(B) for 60 days after the day on which the jail release agreement or jail release court order
expires; and
(d) upon proof of identification, return the firearm to:
(i)
(A) the owner cohabitant after the expiration of the 60-day period; or
(B) if the owner cohabitant requests return of the firearm before the expiration of the 60-day
period, at the time of the request; or
(ii) an owner other than the owner cohabitant in accordance with Section 53-5a-503.
(4) The law enforcement agency shall hold the firearm for an additional 60 days:
(a) if the initial 60-day period expires; and
(b) the cohabitant or owner cohabitant requests that the law enforcement agency hold the firearm
for an additional 60 days.
(5) A law enforcement agency may not request or require that the owner cohabitant provide the
name or other information of the cohabitant who poses an immediate threat or any other
cohabitant.
(6)
(a) Notwithstanding an ordinance or policy to the contrary adopted in accordance with Section
63G-2-701, but subject to Subsection (7), a law enforcement agency shall destroy a record
created under Subsection (3), Subsection 53-5a-503(3)(b)(iii), or any other record created
in the application of this chapter immediately, if practicable, but no later than five days after
immediately upon the:
(i) return of a firearm in accordance with Subsection (3)(d); or
(ii) disposal of the firearm in accordance with Section 53-5a-503.
(b) A record described in Subsection (6)(a) is a private record under Section 63G-2-302 until the
record is destroyed in accordance with Subsection (6)(a).
(7)
(a) Beginning on July 1, 2026, a law enforcement agency shall, in an anonymized and aggregate
manner, collect and annually, on or before July 1 of 2027 and 2028, report to the State
Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice:
(i) the total number of requests for firearm safekeeping received by the law enforcement agency
under this section during the previous 12-month period;

(ii) the total number of firearms received under Subsection (7)(a)(i) during the previous 12-
month period; and
(iii) the number of firearms received under Subsection (7)(a)(ii) that:
(A) were returned under Subsection (6)(a)(i) during the previous 12-month period;
(B) were disposed of under Subsection (6)(a)(ii) during the previous 12-month period; and
(C) remain in possession of the law enforcement agency under this section at the end of the
previous 12-month period.
(b) The State Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice shall:
(i) compile the data submitted under Subsection (7)(a); and
(ii) annually on or before October 1 of 2027 and 2028, submit a report containing the data
described in Subsection (7)(b)(i) to the Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice Interim
Committee.
(8) Unless otherwise provided, the provisions of Title 77, Chapter 11d, Lost or Mislaid Property, do
not apply to a firearm received by a law enforcement agency in accordance with this part.
(9) A law enforcement agency shall adopt a policy for the safekeeping of a firearm held in
accordance with this part.
(10) The department shall:
(a) create a pamphlet to be distributed by a law enforcement officer under Section 77-36-2.1
that includes information about a cohabitant's or owner cohabitant's ability to have the owner
cohabitant's firearm committed to a law enforcement agency for safekeeping in accordance
with this section;
(b) survey all law enforcement agencies in the state and publish a publicly searchable registry
that will allow the public to see whether each law enforcement agency is or is not available to
receive a voluntarily committed firearm in accordance with this section;
(c) subject to available funding, create and implement a marketing plan to educate law
enforcement agencies and the public regarding the options available under this chapter; and
(d) notify all law enforcement agencies in the state regarding the aggregate data collection
requirement under Subsection (7).

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