Well, I'm not trying to argue with you, but I think that in this political climate, with this administration, and this ATF, (particularly in light of the recent Aurora theater shooting) I wouldn't be so sure how "they" interpret that, because, at least in California, a 5150 hold is NOT voluntary. The legal instrument of 5150 means that it doesn't matter what the patient's opinion is—he/she has no say in the matter of their case disposition. And if that 72 involuntary hold is extended to 15 days, that is not voluntary either. "Voluntary" means that the subject patient asked to be hospitalized without ever having had an involuntary hold placed on them. But as I said in my previous post, I don't know for sure what Texas law says about this.....only that I assume something similar. Speaking purely philosophically, I view depriving a citizen of their freedom without due process—as in a chance to confront one's accuser with an advocate defending you—is terribly wrong. I think we can make a case for 72 hour holds in the event of a psychotic crisis, but converting that to 15 days without the patient's consent and without a courtroom hearing and the involvement of a judge and jury is wrong because it is too easy for "powers that be" to abuse it without consequence.Jumping Frog wrote:TAM, the ATF does not classify a 72-hour observation as an involuntary comittment for federal firearm disability purposes. Read the FAQ that I linked above.
Also, as someone who has worked in healthcare, I am more than aware that even an involuntary commission doesn't necessarily mean that a person is permanently "crazy" or that—at least from a moral/ethical perspective, regardless of what the law says—such a person ought to be barred by law from ever owning a firearm again. Mental illness, or at lease some manifestations of it, can be cured. In my humble opinion, if a person had been hospitalized and successfully treated for some kind of schizophrenic episode or suicidal tendencies when they were 21, and then had subsequently lived for decades after without any recurrence, then a law which disarms that person is a immoral law.
That's just my opinion......but that doesn't mean that some liberal psychiatrist who hates guns and who is employed by a government agency is going to agree with me; and it certainly doesn't mean that the congress critters who wrote the law knew a darn thing about psychiatry when they wrote it. And that is the spirit behind what I posted to the OP. Personally, I have no problem with him/her having a firearm, or carrying it, and I would encourage it. I'm just not so sanguine about what government will do about it.
But that's just my opinion, and it's worth about what it cost to read it.