Bill seeks to protect gun ownership for vets

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  • KevinB

    Active Member
    Dec 4, 2008
    370
    Germantown
    As posted in NavyTimes:

    Sens. Richard Burr, R-N.C., and Jim Webb, D-Va., have joined forces to try to prevent veterans from losing the right to own a gun if a fiduciary is appointed to handle their finances.

    Burr and Webb, both members of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, are trying to carve out a loophole for veterans in the Federal Gun Control Act that prohibits the sale of firearms to people who are, in the words of the law, “adjudicated as a mental defective.”

    According to Burr, the names of about 116,000 veterans have been turned over to the FBI since 1999 because the Veterans Affairs Department assigned a fiduciary to manage their benefits. That is not the same thing as being a danger to themselves or others, Burr said in a statement included in Monday’s Congressional Record when he introduced a bill, S 669, to prevent the VA from reporting the names of veteran to the FBI.

    “VA focuses on whether or not benefits paid by VA will be spent in the manner in which they were intended,” Burr said. “Nothing involved with VA’s appointment of a fiduciary even gets at the question of whether an individual is a danger to themselves or others, or whether the person should own a firearm.”

    The bill, the Veterans Second Amendment Protection Act, was referred to the veterans committee for consideration.

    Veterans are not the only ones affected, he said. A surviving spouse or child of a veteran might also have a fiduciary appointed if VA is concerned about their financial responsibility. In the case of a child, their name could be permanently on the list unless they petition for its removal, he said. “This makes no sense.”

    Burr said the law is unfair because while the names of veterans and people receiving veterans benefits are reported to the FBI for inclusion in the National Instant Criminal Background Check System used by gun shop owners to screen buyers, the Social Security Administration is not required to turn over the names of any Social Security recipients who have someone appointed to handle their finances.

    Burr said he isn’t trying to put guns in the hands of dangerous people but wants veterans treated fairly.

    Webb is the only Democratic cosponsor of the bill, which has 14 Republican cosponsors. The American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars and other major veterans groups support the bill.
     

    Absolut_Nick

    Pro Gun Liberal
    Feb 17, 2009
    313
    County Balto
    Bravo to Sen Webb. This is some serious horseshit. Attacking the liberties of veterans, those men and women who shed blood to ****in protect those liberties!
     

    ezliving

    Besieger
    Oct 9, 2008
    4,590
    Undisclosed Secure Location
    Bill grants gun rights to mentally deficient vets

    By: Shawn Flynn

    CHARLOTTE – A controversial new law could allow veterans and their families deemed mentally deficient to purchase guns.
    Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., introduced the Veterans Second Amendment Protection Act, which would rewrite a current law placing veterans or family members who require someone to take care of their finances on a national do not sell list for guns.
    "I am concerned that government employees can so easily take away a veteran's right to bear arms," Burr said.
    Former veteran and current gun salesman Roger Ayscue calls this a sticky situation – one where he sees both sides.
    "While every person has the right to have a gun, every person doesn't need to have a gun," Ayscue said. "The guy that can't balance his checkbook, the guy can't schedule his own medication, doesn't need a shotgun."
    Many gun control groups agree.
    "When someone looks at the exact language, I think they would be shocked," Paul Helmke, with the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, said. "Basically, he's saying if you're mentally incapacitated or even in a coma, you have the right to own a gun. This is serious."
    On the other hand, Ayscue said many veterans can get caught up in the language of the bill.
    The U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs said they've placed 116,000 names on the do not sell list over the past decade.
    "To blanket say that this guy, because of post traumatic stress disorder is not capable of owning a gun – I think that's wrong," Ayscue said.

    Video on link

    http://www.news14.com/content/local...ights-to-mentally-deficient-vets/Default.aspx
     

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