S-478-119
Committee on Veterans' Affairs. Hearings held. Hearings printed: S.Hrg. 119-35.
Sponsored by John Kennedy (R-LA)
What it does
This bill would prohibit the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) from sending a veteran's personal information to the Department of Justice for use in the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) solely because the VA has assigned a fiduciary — a third party to manage their benefits — on their behalf. Under current law, such a fiduciary assignment can trigger a NICS report that bars the veteran from purchasing firearms. This bill would require a judge, magistrate, or other judicial authority to first find that the veteran is a danger to themselves or others before any such report could be transmitted.
Who benefits
Veterans who have been assigned VA fiduciaries due to mental health conditions, traumatic brain injuries, or other service-related disabilities — estimated at roughly 170,000 individuals currently reported to NICS under this mechanism. Veterans who were reported in the past and seek to have their firearm rights restored. Veterans' advocacy organizations that have argued the current system conflates financial incapacity with dangerousness. Firearms retailers who may see a modest increase in eligible buyers among the veteran population.
Who is hurt
Family members or caregivers of veterans with serious mental health conditions who may have concerns about firearm access. Domestic violence prevention advocates who argue that removing automatic reporting weakens a safeguard. Law enforcement agencies that rely on NICS data for background checks. Gun violence prevention organizations that view the current reporting mechanism as an important safety tool. Courts and judicial systems that would bear the administrative burden of conducting individual dangerousness hearings for each affected veteran.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current system strips veterans of a constitutional right based solely on a financial management determination — not any finding of violence or danger — and that this conflation is both legally flawed and deeply unfair to those who served. They contend that approximately 170,000 veterans have been reported to NICS without any individualized judicial review, and that the VA's own fiduciary process was designed to protect financial assets, not assess public safety risk. They further argue that requiring a judicial finding of dangerousness before reporting aligns the VA process with the due process protections the Supreme Court recognized in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld (2004), ensuring veterans receive meaningful review before losing a constitutional right.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that removing automatic NICS reporting for veterans with fiduciaries would create a gap in the background check system for a population that, by definition, has been determined to need assistance managing their own affairs — a finding that may correlate with elevated risk. They contend that requiring a separate judicial dangerousness hearing for each of the roughly 170,000 affected veterans would impose significant costs on courts and could leave many cases unreviewed in practice, effectively restoring firearm access by default. They further argue that the bill prioritizes gun access over the safety of veterans themselves, their families, and the public, and that existing VA and NICS appeal processes already provide a path for veterans to contest their reported status.
Constitutional context
The Second Amendment is directly implicated, as the bill addresses the conditions under which veterans may be barred from purchasing firearms. Under New York State Rifle & Pistol Ass'n v. Bruen (2022), firearms regulations must be grounded in the historical tradition of firearms regulation, and the constitutionality of mental-health-based disqualifications without individualized judicial review is an area of active litigation. The Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause is also relevant, as the current automatic reporting mechanism removes a constitutional right without a prior hearing or judicial finding.
Checks and balances
The bill shifts authority away from the executive branch (VA and DOJ) and toward the judicial branch, requiring a court order before the VA can transmit information to NICS; the check on this new requirement is that courts retain discretion to make dangerousness findings, and Congress retains authority to modify the standard in the future.
Historical precedent
A nearly identical bill, the Veterans 2nd Amendment Protection Act, passed the House multiple times in prior Congresses (e.g., 115th Congress) but did not advance to enactment, indicating sustained but unresolved legislative debate on this specific mechanism.