NRA Supports Senator Cornyn’s Bill to Halt Obama NICS Abuses
On August 5th, U.S. Senator John Cornyn
(R-TX) introduced S. 2002, a bill to protect the Second Amendment
rights of law-abiding citizens from continued bureaucratic abuse by the
Obama Administration. As we reported on July 18th, Obama’s latest gun grabbing ploy
was to forward all individuals receiving Social Security Administration
(SSA) benefits through a representative payee to the National Instant
Criminal Background Check System (NICS) as “prohibited persons” under
federal firearms law. This is estimated to impact over 4 million Americans.
But this approach is nothing new to Obama bureaucrats. In
fact, stripping Second Amendment rights by administrative fiat has
become Obama’s favored tactic in the face of Congress’ refusal to pass
gun control. As we’ve previously reported,
the Veterans Administration (VA) was the first to develop an
administrative mechanism to forward records to NICS without due process
protections in place. The VA is doing so for those veterans who have a fiduciary assigned to their account. This
is being done without any adjudication or finding that such veterans
pose a danger to the community, but simply because they need help
managing their financial affairs.
While Obama may relish the ease by which his
pencil-pushers can deprive American citizens of constitutional
protections, the NRA has pressed Congress for legislation to end this
abuse. Senator Cornyn
answered our call by introducing S. 2002, a bill that provides critical
protections needed in the face of Obama’s bureaucratic onslaught.
The bill clarifies that an “adjudication” under the Gun
Control Act’s (GCA) mental health provisions will require due process
protections, including a full hearing in which an individual has notice,
the opportunity to participate, and the right to counsel. Moreover,
the findings of such a process are clearly specified and focus on
adjudications that involve individuals that are a danger to themselves
or others.
Importantly, the bill removes the category “lacks the
ability to contract or manage affairs” as relevant to the determination
of a prohibited person under the GCA. This provision was the hook used by the VA and SSA, and presumably being considered by other federal agencies under Obama’s directive, to sweep broad swaths of the American public into NICS.
For veterans, the bill even provides additional protections. It
requires notification to veterans who have been submitted to NICS under
the “fiduciary” program and an opportunity to have their individual
case reviewed by a board established for this purpose. The
standard is exactly where it should be, requiring the new board to find
the veteran is actually a danger to themselves or others to justify
retaining their record in NICS. In all cases, the board’s decision will be subject to court review.
The bill would also significantly expand avenues of relief
from firearm prohibitions for others, including those who have their
record expunged, those who are no longer subject to an order for
treatment, and those who have been granted relief by a state program. The
bill further requires the Attorney General to remove from NICS the
record of any person who would not be considered prohibited under the
new requirements of the bill.
The states will be encouraged to submit records with a
“carrot and stick” approach where the states can maximize grant
allocations by forwarding 90% or more of disqualifying mental health
records within 18 months of the bill’s passage. Importantly, the bill’s safeguards provide the standards by which records can be transmitted. Only those mental health adjudications which comply with the new due process protections are to be forwarded.
In summary, this bill would protect millions of
law-abiding citizens from bureaucratic abuse by the Obama
Administration, while ensuring only relevant records that comply with
the new due process safeguards are entered into NICS.
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