Doc Nonverbal
Member
Hello all,
The way I understand the ATF Form 4473 restrictions related to being "mentally defective", if a person is committed to an institution for being a danger to self, danger to others, or gravely disabled, that individual is forbidden from purchasing firearms.
My question is whether the person is still entered into the NICS database if he/she signs into the facility on a voluntary basis.
I used to work as a Behavioral Healthcare Clinical Case Manager for a Blue Cross / Blue Shield plan. It was the policy of the company that they would not pay for court-ordered treatment. This applied to court-ordered domestic violence anger-management and parenting training and also to psychiatric commitments.
Psychiatric facilities had a vested interest in getting patients to sign in on a voluntary basis so they could bill the patient's insurance company. This was with the understanding that if the patient left AMA that the attending Psychiatrist could re-commit them and potentially ship them off to the State hospital to serve their time there.
My thought is that if a person is committed, regardless of whether they sign into a facility on a voluntary basis, they should have their information submitted to NICS. This otherwise sounds (at least to me) like a "loophole" in the mental health system reporting.
Does anyone know how this works?
Thanks,
David
The way I understand the ATF Form 4473 restrictions related to being "mentally defective", if a person is committed to an institution for being a danger to self, danger to others, or gravely disabled, that individual is forbidden from purchasing firearms.
My question is whether the person is still entered into the NICS database if he/she signs into the facility on a voluntary basis.
I used to work as a Behavioral Healthcare Clinical Case Manager for a Blue Cross / Blue Shield plan. It was the policy of the company that they would not pay for court-ordered treatment. This applied to court-ordered domestic violence anger-management and parenting training and also to psychiatric commitments.
Psychiatric facilities had a vested interest in getting patients to sign in on a voluntary basis so they could bill the patient's insurance company. This was with the understanding that if the patient left AMA that the attending Psychiatrist could re-commit them and potentially ship them off to the State hospital to serve their time there.
My thought is that if a person is committed, regardless of whether they sign into a facility on a voluntary basis, they should have their information submitted to NICS. This otherwise sounds (at least to me) like a "loophole" in the mental health system reporting.
Does anyone know how this works?
Thanks,
David