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N.C. lets mentally ill avoid gun list

State doesn't report those committed

- Staff Writers

Published: Thu, Apr. 26, 2007 12:00AM

Modified Thu, Apr. 26, 2007 05:36AM

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Thousands of people involuntarily committed to psychiatric institutions by North Carolina courts aren't in a national database aimed at preventing gun sales to people with dangerous mental illnesses.

Although it is a felony to knowingly sell a gun to anyone so troubled, North Carolina court clerks keep commitment records under wraps because of privacy provisions in state mental health statutes. That means they don't show up in the FBI-run National Instant Criminal Background Check System that gun dealers and law enforcement use to determine whether a customer can legally purchase a firearm.

"We have no authority or directive to report this information to anybody," said Dick Ellis, spokesman for the N.C. Administrative Office of the Courts, which oversees courthouse operations. "Unless we're told directly to do so, we don't give our records over to anybody."

BACKGROUND CHECKS AND DENIALS

Between its creation in 1998 and 2005, the National Instant Criminal Background Check System database has compiled more than 3.96 million records related to the 10 categories that prohibit a person from legally purchasing a firearm, including criminal convictions, dishonorable discharge from the military and being judged a "mental defective" by a court. Of that total, 234,628 are 'mental defective' records.

8.95 MILLION: the number of background checks conducted in 2005

473,433: denials from 1998 to 2005 for all reasons

235,533: denials to convicted felons from 1998 to 2005

60,237: denials to those with misdemeanor domestic violence convictions, 1998 to 2005

21,381: denials for other reasons, including illegal aliens, 'mental defectives' and dishonorable discharges

SOURCE: FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION 2005 REPORT ON NICS

After last week's killing spree at Virginia Tech University by student Seung-Hui Cho, the availability on the NICS database of involuntary commitment orders and other court rulings related to mental health has become a major issue. Privacy concerns are pitted against public safety fears.

Despite a 2005 court declaration that Cho was a danger to himself, he was able to legally purchase two handguns he used to kill 32 people and himself at Virginia Tech. A Virginia judge ordered Cho to undergo a mental health evaluation, but the ruling didn't show up on the background check.

Federal law prohibits gun sales to people who fall into 10 categories, including felons, illegal immigrants, subjects of domestic violence restraining orders and anyone committed to a mental institution or ruled "mentally defective."

But the 10-year-old background check system depends on states to forward information, particularly court orders related to mental health. In the year ending last July, there were 56,124 confidential special proceedings in North Carolina courts. Those included involuntary and voluntary commitments to mental institutions but also hearings to suspend the licenses of attorneys, according to records with the N.C. Administrative Office of the Courts.

Experts say legislators have created exemptions to the mental health privacy provisions, including a requirement that courts report commitments for substance abuse to the Department of Motor Vehicles. Unless legislators provide a similar exemption for the database, court clerks won't give up those records, Ellis said.

Two ways to get in

As a result of this cloak of privacy, North Carolina mental health filings to the NICS database fall primarily under two categories, said John Aldridge, special deputy attorney general and leading authority on state firearms law. Both depend on the diligence of the local official in charge of the records.

One is an open court result in a criminal case, such as being found not guilty by reason of insanity. The other is a record of being turned down by a sheriff for a pistol-purchase permit or concealed-carry permit.

North Carolina sheriffs, who are responsible for background checks on applicants for both permits, can check commitment records on concealed carry permits because applicants waive their privacy rights. They aren't allowed to check commitment records for pistol purchases but may learn of such orders by other means and deny permits.

It's also up to sheriffs to decide whether to forward permit denials to the NICS database. So far, North Carolina sheriffs have forwarded 319 mental-health-related denials since the database was created in 1998, Aldridge said.

Staff writer Jim Nesbitt can be reached at (919) 829-8955 or jim.nesbitt@newsobserver.com.

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