Posted on 07/03/2012 6:04:38 AM PDT by marktwain
Sen. Richard Burr, R-NC, and Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., have again co-sponsored the Veterans Second Amendment Protection Act, a bill that will allow veterans to legally designate another person to handle their finances without being barred from owning firearms.
Right now, if a veteran legally designates another person to handle his or her affairs -- a standard bureaucratic procedure done by many veterans for many reasons -- the Department of Veterans Affairs classifies the veteran as "incapacitated" and notifies the FBIs National Instant Criminal Background Check System, or NICS.
The NICS then uses the VA's "incapacitated classification to prohibit the veteran, and everyone else in his or her household, from owning firearms.
"There are veterans, spouses, family members who are deprived of their Second Amendment rights based on an arbitrary decision by somebody at VA because they can't handle their own personal finances," Burr told the Associated Press on June 27. "These people are labeled as dangerous when it may be a physical disability that may not allow them to handle their personal finances."
The Veterans Second Amendment Protection Act would require that veterans be found to be a danger to themselves or others before losing their Second Amendment rights. In other words, no veteran should lose gun rights without an order by a judge, magistrate or other judicial authority.
The VA estimates that about 127,000 veterans have been put on the list because the department determined they couldn't handle their personal finances.
A similar bill has already passed the House of Representatives. In the Senate, the proposed Veterans Second Amendment Protection Act has been filed three times since 2007.
For more, go to:
Bill Defending Vets Gun Rights Filed - Again
Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee - Hearing
House passes Veterans Second Amendment Protection Act
Let's honor our veterans by protecting their Second Amendment rights
Veterans Second Amendment Protection Act
This is just wrong............
When my Son was stationed in Guam, he had wanted to give me Power of Attorney to handle his affairs.
Good thing he never got around to it.
WTF? One of the things we JAGs push on the deployment line (and hopefully WAY before) is the durable power of attorney, a document that designates a person who can act on the military member’s behalf while he/she is gone. The VA is WAAAAYYYY off the reservation on this.
Colonel, USAFR
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.