
Psychiatr News February 1, 2008
Volume 43, Number 3, page 1
© 2008 American Psychiatric Association
People With Mental Illness Target of New Gun Law
Rich Daly
Some psychiatrists fear that the law will further stigmatize people with
mental illness and divert attention away from the need for a broader law that
would result in a real reduction of gun-related violence.
Supporters of a new gun-control law claim it might have prevented the
deaths of 32 people last year in a massacre at Virginia Tech carried out by a
student who was mentally ill. Some psychiatrists, however, say the law falls
short as a meaningful way to reduce gun violence.
The debate stems from President George W. Bush's signing of a measure in
January intended to prevent people with serious mental illness from buying
guns.
The legislation (HR 2640), sponsored by Rep. Carolyn McCarthy (D-N.Y.),
authorizes up to $1.3 billion in state grants to improve the tracking and
reporting of individuals who are legally barred from gun purchases, including
those involuntarily confined to a psychiatric hospital. (McCarthy's husband
was killed by a mentally ill gunman who went on a rampage on a suburban
commuter train 14 years ago.)
Paul Appelbaum, M.D., a professor of psychiatry at Columbia University and
chair of APA's Council on Psychiatry and Law, said that a fully funded
Virginia background check that looked for involuntary psychiatric care before
the gun sales to the Tech shooter and the reporting of his outpatient care by
state officials might have kept him from buying his weapons.
"But he could have easily gotten them through other means,"
such as private sales and gun-show sales, which are unregulated by the
background-check system, said Appelbaum, a former APA president.
The rare bipartisan bill—first introduced five years
ago—advanced relatively quickly in the wake of the Virginia Tech
killings.
Supporters of the law, including the sponsor of the Senate version, Sen.
Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), said they were disappointed that the legislation did
not advance until after the Virginia Tech shootings last April. "Had it
become law earlier, it may well have saved the lives of 32 students who were
killed at Virginia Tech by another mentally ill gunman," Schumer
said.
The Virginia Tech shooter had been ordered by a court to undergo outpatient
mental health treatment, which under federal law disqualified him from buying
the two handguns he owned. But his name was never entered into the National
Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS).
The enthusiastic embrace of the new law by both gun-rights supporters and
gun-control advocates, Appelbaum said, gave the appearance of wanting to
distract the public from the broader gun-control legislation that is needed to
produce a real reduction in gun violence.
Enhancing background surveillance of people with mental illness focuses
disproportionate resources on a population that commits only 3 percent to 5
percent of gun violence, he said. The characteristics that research has linked
more closely to gun-related crimes are gun ownership, gang membership, and
drug dealing.
Previously enacted federal law prohibits the purchase of firearms by those
who have been "adjudicated mentally defective" or "committed
to a mental health institution." Also forbidden to purchase guns are
people who are subject to a restraining order related to domestic violence,
people under indictment or convicted of a felony, fugitives from justice, and
users of or those addicted to controlled substances.
"They are lumping people who have received mental health care in with
criminals," said Steven Hoge, M.D., director of the Division of Forensic
Psychiatry at Bellevue Hospital Center in New York and a member of APA's
Council on Psychiatry and Law.
Hoge said that policymakers should focus their efforts on keeping guns from
those with characteristics conclusively linked to gun violence. He added that
several states allow clinicians and family members to petition to have guns
removed from people both with and without mental illness who are displaying
violent behavior.
"There is no simple answer" when searching for ways to prevent
gun violence, said Howard Zonana, M.D., a professor of psychiatry and a
clinical adjunct professor of law at Yale University. "It needs multiple
approaches."
APA joined the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) in expressing
concerns about the vague and insulting terms for people with mental illness in
previously enacted gun-control legislation. However, they commended the
authors of the measure for directing the attorney general to work with states,
local law enforcement, and "the mental health community" to
establish regulations to protect the privacy of information provided to the
NICS.
Supporters of the new law say that it will fund the addition of millions of
mental health records to the NICS, thus increasing the chances that guns will
be kept from seriously mentally ill people. However, 17 states provide no
mental health records to the background-check system, according to the Justice
Department. Some states refuse to submit mental health records to federal
authorities because their attorneys general have concluded that doing so would
violate federal privacy laws.
The bill's sponsors sought to address privacy concerns raised by mental
health advocates by modifying it to include more precise language to define
which mental health records states should report to the NICS. It also would
allow people to petition for restoration of gun-ownership rights.
Although the protective impact of the law may be unclear, the impact on the
public's perception of people with mental illness is obvious to
psychiatrists.
"My concern is that this is one more brick in the wall of stigma
erected around people with mental illness," Appelbaum said.
The Council on Psychiatry and Law is preparing a position paper on the law,
which it expects to release this summer.
The text of the NICS Improvement Amendments Act of 2007 can be
accessed at
<http://thomas.loc.gov>
by searching on the bill number, HR 2640.
Get information about faster international access.
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