A state senator has submitted a bill that would make it easier for someone who has recovered from a mental illness to carry a firearm.
Senate Bill 288, sponsored by Sen. Bill Cook, R-Beaufort, also would more narrowly restrict the types of mental incompetency findings that must be reported to the National Instant Criminal Background Check system. If the law is passed, it would become effective Oct. 1.
Adults that have been determined
to lack the capacity to manage their own affairs “due to marked
subnormal intelligence, mental illness or incompetency” are not allowed
by law to own a firearm.
The bill would allow individuals
to petition for removal from mental incompetency/disability listings
attached to the national criminal background check.
More @ News & Record
THIS IS THE URL OF MY COMMENT AT THE "NEWS AND RECORD" WEB SITE, WHICH IS TOO LONG TO BE ACCEPTED HERE:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.news-record.com/news/north_carolina/n-c-bill-would-ease-gun-restrictions-for-recovered-mental/article_7164f221-7d6f-5ed5-b3f6-e543b9e8f099.html
makes sense to me. Unless a person is so incapacitated that they require a guardian, they still have the right of self preservation and the right to access themeans to do so.
ReplyDeleteif the condition is temporary, the restrictions ought to be temporary as well.
Agreed.
DeleteHow is one to know the mentally ill have recovered; there is no diagnostic test to
ReplyDeleteprove such. And, psychiatrists are jack-asses. Just one trigger can regenerate
the mental illness.
Flip a coin these days, I guess.
Delete