Posted on 04/25/2015 7:34:54 AM PDT by pabianice
Last week, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) brought renewed attention to the plight of a growing number of veterans who have been unjustly stripped of their Second Amendment rights. In an April 14 letter to Attorney General Eric Holder, Sen. Grassley takes the Department of Veterans Affairs to task for overreaching policies that have resulted in the names of well over 100,000 veterans and dependents being placed in the FBIs National Instance Criminal Background Check System (NICS) as prohibited from possessing firearms.
Federal agencies are required to forward information to the FBI about individuals who have been disqualified by agency action from legally possessing firearms. This includes information about disqualifying mental health adjudications and commitments. The VAs interpretation of what constitutes a disqualifying mental health adjudication, however, has resulted in widespread, unjustified deprivation of Second Amendment rights and Fifth Amendment due process rights.
As Grassleys letter points out, federal regulation allows the VA to determine whether its beneficiaries need a fiduciary to manage their benefits. Veterans who the agency determines need help administering their VA compensation are then labeled mental defectives and reported to NICS to be barred from firearm acquisition and possession, alongside the likes of felons, fugitives, and the dishonorably discharged. The process of assigning a fiduciary, however, does not require the VA to consider whether the veteran actually poses a danger to himself or others or is seriously functionally impaired in any other respect. Indeed, the VAs own website states, The determination that you are unable to manage your VA benefits does not affect your non-VA finances, or your right to vote or contract.
Needless to say, its completely untenable that Americas military men and women must choose between whats best for their medical care and financial management and the fundamental civil liberties their own service protects. The fact that a veterans spouse or other loved one is more financially astute or is simply more accustomed to maintaining the household finances is completely irrelevant to the veterans ability safely and responsibly to handle firearms. That the VA claims otherwise reveals nothing so much as its own systemic, institutional anti-gun bias and its distrust of the very people the agency serves.
For veterans who choose to contest the appointment of a fiduciary, VA procedure offers scant protection. Typically, deprivation of a fundamental constitutional right requires significant due process, as required by the Fifth Amendment (for example, a criminal trial). As Grassleys letter makes clear, the procedure VA employs falls well below acceptable due process standards and places the burden of proof upon the veteran to seek redress after the fact.
In an April 21 article for the Daily Caller, entitled, VA Sends Veterans Medical Info To FBI To Get Their Guns Taken Away, journalist Patrick Howley puts a human face on this tragedy. In one instance, disabled veteran Henry Wrobel was categorized as unable to handle his own finances, triggering the firearm prohibition. The VAs actions followed Wrobels conversation with a VA counselor during which he mentioned having recently opted to receive his benefits by direct deposit in an attempt to simplify his life. In another case, a Vietnam War widow receiving VA benefits was deprived of her right to bear arms after making a request to the VA for assistance in obtaining someone to help with her household chores after she suffered a mild stroke.
Beyond this matters constitutional concerns is that the VAs mental defective determination process and forwarding of records to NICS have contributed to a deep distrust of the agency among those it serves. Rumors abound regarding VA measures to strip gun rights from veterans, and current VA practices regarding fiduciary appointments, along with other highly suspect efforts, substantiate these concerns. Undoubtedly, some veterans have chosen to forego vital benefits and medical treatment, or have been less than candid with VA personnel, due to a fear of losing their Second Amendment rights.
NRA has long been aware of the ongoing abuses at the VA and has worked with our allies in Congress to find a remedy. Since the 112th Congress, NRA has sought to advance the Veterans Second Amendment Protection Act. This legislation would require a judicial finding that a person under the VAs care poses a danger to himself or others before the person could be considered to have been adjudicated as a mental defective and stripped of his or her firearm rights.
NRA appreciates Sen. Grassleys work in bringing attention to this shameful state of affairs. Moving forward, NRA will continue to pursue every avenue available to correct this injustice. That those who have fought and served to protect the rights of all Americans are especially vulnerable to losing their own rights, and that from the very agency they should most be able to trust, is nothing short of a national disgrace.
The Brownshirts don’t want the best trained among us to be armed.
This also applies to your personal physician.
Oh, the VA has decided who needs to take care of any money from the VA to Veterans.
It’s the VA management. And they will help the Veterans spend their money, too.
The problem with the VA isn’t just incompetence and laziness and Liberal politics. The management of the VA is filled with thieves. Thieves.
Grassley wrote an angry letter. Holder must be terrified. What a hero defends us!
Every little thing this regime does is designed to destroy America and nothing is done to stop it.
Obama did this to disenfranchise Veterans. Veterans are most likely conservative voters....
Again I shall say, and I am speaking only of my experience. I am a VN vet. rated at 100% disabled, P%T, for PTSD. I bought my last weapon maybe 3-4 years ago, and my purchases have never been rejected. Also I have 98% no complaints about the VA. I know of no one who has been adversely affected by their 100% PTSD rating. Again, these are my personal experiences. And future ones my well change. Prayers to all.
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