Dayton Daily News

VA halts taking away gun rights from veterans

- By Linda F. Hersey Stars and Stripes

A new ban that has stopped the Department of Veterans Affairs from taking away the gun rights of veterans who are found to be incapable of managing their own financial affairs will expire in six months, VA officials said.

The VA in March ended its weekly practice of submitting the names of veterans appointed fiduciarie­s to handle their VA disability benefits to the FBI’s national background check database.

The database contains informatio­n on people prohibited from buying or receiving firearms. Inclusion in the database legally disqualifi­es veterans from owning, possessing or buying firearms from licensed dealers.

The VA’s Veterans Benefits Administra­tion, which disperses monthly benefit payments to veterans, has been required by federal law upon the VA’s appointmen­t of a fiduciary to manage a veteran’s benefits to submit the veteran’s name to the FBI’s National Instant

Background Check System, or NICS, as ineligible to own or possess firearms, according to the agency.

The new temporary provision does not overturn current law but essentiall­y blocks VA from adding the names of veterans appointed fiduciarie­s to “the FBI-prohibited persons database in the NICS system,” said Aidan Johnston, director of federal affairs for the Gunowners of America, a nonprofit lobbying organizati­on with two million members.

Terrence Hayes, the VA press secretary, said the provision restricts VA from “using appropriat­ed funds” to make reports to the NICS system without a court order or ruling.

The provision had bipartisan support, including from Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee Chairman Jon Tester, D-Mont., who for several years sought to overturn the practice by the Veterans Benefits Administra­tion to notify the NICS system of veterans appointed fiduciarie­s.

Tester said he knew of veterans who refused to apply for or collect VA benefits because they were worried about losing their gun rights. He said the law has punished people who receive VA benefits but need help managing their money.

The new legislatio­n does not amend the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act, which authorizes the VA to report the names of “incompeten­t beneficiar­ies” to the FBI database that gun dealers check before selling firearms. Passage of the Brady Act in 1993 led to the establishm­ent of the national background check system for firearm licensees. Since 1998, the VA has reported veterans appointed fiduciarie­s to the NICS database.

But the new policy, while temporary, means only those veterans declared by a court or magistrate as mentally incompeten­t and an imminent danger to themselves or others will be reported to the NICS system and legally lose their right to buy, possess or own a firearm.

Navy veteran Abraham Conrique, an 82-year-old, part-time cab driver in Maryland, said he understand­s there are situations when a veteran should not have access to a gun, given his own personal history of service-related mental health problems.

“I never had a court hearing over my mental health. But I’m smart enough to know that I shouldn’t have firearms with my level of PTSD. Some veterans need those restrictio­ns,” said Conrique, who referred to his own diagnoses in 2020 for post-traumatic stress disorder.

But only a judge should have the power to make that decision, said Conrique, a petty officer second class during the Vietnam War, with deployment­s in Vietnam and Japan.

The policy was adopted as an amendment to the Consolidat­ed Appropriat­ions Act of 2024, signed into law last month. But it has an expiration date of Sept. 30, which is the end of fiscal 2024, said Kathleen McCarthy, communicat­ions director for the

House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs.

“I will note that we are working on a permanent solution to this issue,” she said. “Anything that’s included in an appropriat­ions bill is only authorized for that fiscal year, so next year the policy would need to be included in the appropriat­ions bill for the following fiscal year and so on.”

The temporary provision is also limited in scope. It does not restore gun rights to veterans appointed fiduciarie­s prior to March 2024.

The Veterans of Foreign Wars, Disabled American Veterans and American Legion have expressed support for legislatio­n to end permanentl­y the VA practice of submitting the names of veterans to the FBI’s database.

Patrick Murray, the VFW’s national legislativ­e director, said at a hearing last month of the Senate and House Veterans’ Affairs committees that a VA administra­tor “should not be the person who removes the constituti­onal right to gun ownership. That is for a judge or magistrate to decide.”

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK / AP FILE ?? Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee Chairman Jon Tester, D-Mont., says some veterans have refused to apply for or collect VA benefits because they are worried about losing their gun rights.
ANDREW HARNIK / AP FILE Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee Chairman Jon Tester, D-Mont., says some veterans have refused to apply for or collect VA benefits because they are worried about losing their gun rights.

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