Politics
Grassley demands data from VA regarding veterans’ Second Amendment rights
Veterans assigned fiduciary can end up in national criminal background check system
May 7, 2022 4:40pm
Updated: May 8, 2022 1:58pm
Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley this week demanded data from the Department of Veterans Affairs regarding how many U.S. veterans have been placed on the national criminal background check system, a signifier which could result in a loss of Second Amendment rights for any veterans on the list.
Grassley in a letter to VA Secretary Dennis McDonough noted that “placement on the National Instant Criminal Background Check System … effectively precludes ownership and possession of firearms,” and that many veterans end up on the list as “mentally defective” due to their being assigned a fiduciary, or financial overseer.
“I take the fundamental nature of the Second Amendment very seriously,” Grassley wrote, “and when our veterans’ right to own and possess firearms is at issue, the government must ensure that constitutional due process is followed.”
Grassley in the letter demanded that McDonough supply comprehensive VA-related NICS data for five years from 2017-2021.
The senator has been pursuing this issue for several years. In 2018 he noted that “veterans are losing their Second Amendment rights because they have someone managing their checkbook.”