"Dangerous People or Dangerous Weapons: Access to Firearms for Persons
with Mental Illness"  
JAMA, Vol. 305, p. 2108, 2011
Georgetown Public Law Research Paper No. 11-70

LAWRENCE O. GOSTIN, Georgetown University Law Center - O'Neill Institute
for National and Global Health Law
Email: [email protected]
KATHERINE L. RECORD, Georgetown University - The O'Neill Institute for
National and Global Health Law
Email: [email protected]

The recent attempted assassination of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords has once
again focused the nation’s attention on the danger of the wide
availability of firearms. The Supreme Court has ruled that gun
restrictions may only be imposed on those deemed “prohibited persons”
under the Gun Control Act of 1968. Although some are easily identifiable
(e.g., children, convicted felons), one widely inclusive group is not –
the mentally ill.

The current system designed to bar the mentally ill from purchasing or
possessing firearms is ineffectual due to a lack of reporting and the
existence of loopholes. What’s more, no state has developed the capacity
to remove firearms from gun owners deemed dangerous post-purchase. As
the nation has seen time and time again, categorical gun restrictions do
not systematically keep firearms out of the hands of dangerous mentally
ill persons. Moreover, these restrictions infringe on individual rights.
Attempts to forecast violence not only frequently fail, but also force
patients to disclose health status on purchasing forms, thereby
compromising confidentiality designed to foster candidacy in seeking
treatment.

The Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Second Amendment requires that
Congress and the states regulate people, not arms. We argue that such an
approach will always be problematic – both for the public and
individuals. Nonetheless, we suggest four legal changes that the Court
would likely uphold, and that may reduce dangerous use of firearms: (1)
ban large-sized ammunition magazines, (2) withhold state funding for
incomplete reporting or inadequate privacy protections, (3) ensure more
rapid and reliable background checks, and (4) close purchasing
loopholes. 

"May" means that Constitutional rights can be restricted on the basis of
mere speculation (a JAMA speciality with regard to firearms) so long as
your "heart is pure." Another crock from the Obamacare people.

Professor Joseph Olson, J.D., LL.M.         o-  651-523-2142  
Hamline University School of Law             f-   651-523-2236
St. Paul, MN  55113-1235                        c-  612-865-7956
[email protected]                               
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