Hunter Biden's Lawyers Say the Gun Ban He Violated Is Unconstitutional, Widely Flouted, and Rarely Enforced
The president's son is seeking dismissal of three felony charges based on his illegal 2018 firearm purchase.

Hunter Biden's lawyers this week asked a federal judge in Delaware to dismiss the three gun charges against him, all of which are based on his purchase of a revolver in 2018, when he was a crack cocaine user. They claim the president's son is a victim of "selective and vindictive prosecution" driven by political pressure on Special Counsel David Weiss from Republican members of Congress, which they argue also violates the separation of powers. But in making that case, the motion notes that the federal ban on gun possession by illegal drug users is constitutionally dubious, widely flouted, and rarely enforced.
Biden's gun purchase violated 18 USC 922(g)(3), which makes it a felony for "an unlawful user" of "any controlled substance" to receive or possess a firearm. And since Biden falsely denied illegal drug use on the form he filled out when he bought the gun, he also is charged with violating 18 USC 922(a)(6), which applies to someone who knowingly makes a false statement in connection with a firearm transaction, and 924(a)(1)(A), which redundantly applies to someone who "knowingly makes any false statement or representation with respect to the information" that a federally licensed dealer is required to record.
Biden's motion notes that Section 922(g)(3) "was recently found unconstitutional by the Fifth Circuit." In August, the appeals court overturned the Section 922(g)(3) conviction of Patrick Darnell Daniels Jr., who was caught with two guns and the remains of a few joints during an April 2022 traffic stop in Hancock County, Mississippi. Applying the Second Amendment test established by the Supreme Court's 2022 decision in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, the 5th Circuit concluded that Daniels' conviction was "inconsistent with our 'history and tradition' of gun regulation."
Although Daniels was lucky that the 5th Circuit agreed with his Second Amendment argument, he was extremely unlucky to need the court's intervention in the first place. As Biden's lawyers note, Section 922(g)(3) "is very broad (unconstitutionally so), covering millions (if not tens of millions) of gun owners who use substances controlled under federal law, including marijuana, even if those drugs are legal at the state level." Yet the Justice Department "almost never" prosecutes people under that provision.
According to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, about 70 million Americans used illegal drugs (mainly marijuana) in 2022, the year that Daniels was arrested and prosecuted. Based on surveys indicating that roughly one-third of American adults own guns, we can surmise that something like 20 million people violated Section 922(g)(3) that year. Unlike Daniels, nearly all of them did so with impunity.
"Of the 132,464 criminal prosecutions under federal gun statutes" from FY 2008 through FY 2017, the motion notes, "only 1.8% were brought under Section 922(g)(3)." That amounted to an average of 120 prosecutions a year, accounting for a minuscule percentage of potential defendants.
The Justice Department "almost never brings charges under that statute absent some aggravating factor, such as the use of the firearm in a violent crime, none of which are present here," Biden's lawyers say. But as Daniels' case shows, there are exceptions.
Daniels was stopped for driving without a license plate. One of the officers happened to be a Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agent, who "approached the vehicle and recognized the smell of marihuana." A search of the car discovered "several marihuana cigarette butts in the ashtray," along with a 9mm pistol and a semi-automatic rifle. Daniels was arrested and taken to a local DEA office. Although the DEA never conducted a drug test or otherwise investigated whether Daniels was under the influence of marijuana at the time of the stop, he admitted to smoking pot on a regular basis, something like 14 times a month.
That admission was enough to charge Daniels with violating Section 922(g)(3), which was punishable by up to 10 years in prison at the time of his arrest. A jury convicted Daniels in July 2022, and he was sentenced to nearly four years in prison, plus three years of supervised release. The felony conviction also meant he was permanently barred from owning guns under another provision of the same statute.
Biden, like Daniels, was unlucky that his gun possession and drug use both came to official attention. A couple of weeks after he bought the revolver, Hallie Biden, his brother's widow and his girlfriend at the time, removed it from his pickup truck and tossed it into a trash bin behind a grocery store. When she returned, the gun was gone, which prompted a police investigation. As Biden's lawyers put it, "The gun was discarded and then discovered and investigated by local police, who decided no charges were warranted."
The second element of Biden's main federal firearm felony was established by his public admission that he was regularly using crack in 2018. At the time, he (perhaps hyperbolically) recalled in his 2021 memoir Beautiful Things, he was "up twenty-four hours a day, smoking every fifteen minutes, seven days a week."
Still, Biden's lawyers say, charging him under Section 922(g)(3) was not consistent with the Justice Department's policy of prioritizing gun cases involving violent offenders. "Mr. Biden bought a small firearm that he owned for a mere 11 days, never loaded, and never fired," they write. "Mr. Biden has no history of violence and has never posed a risk to public safety."
Those factors help explain why Weiss initially filed just one gun charge against Biden and agreed to drop it if Biden successfully completed a two-year pretrial diversion program. Weiss also reportedly viewed Biden's drug problem as a mitigating factor (which seems paradoxical, since Biden's gun crime hinged on his drug use). In any event, the diversion agreement, which was paired with a plea agreement that promised probation in exchange for Biden's admission of two tax misdemeanors, fell apart last July under scrutiny by a federal judge.
After negotiations aimed at producing a new agreement reached an impasse, Weiss decided to charge Biden with two more gun felonies. He also obtained a separate indictment that lists nine tax crimes—six misdemeanors and three felonies. The combined maximum penalties are 25 years in the gun case and 17 years in the tax case, for a total of 42 years.
Biden's lawyers portray that escalation, which vividly illustrates the broad discretion that gives prosecutors enormous power to coerce guilty pleas, as evidence that Weiss has been improperly influenced by criticism from the president's enemies. Whether or not you buy that argument, any sort of prison term for Biden's gun offenses, which did not injure or threaten anyone, would be plainly unjust, especially since it would be based on a law that arbitrarily strips Americans of their constitutional rights.
Although Biden's lawyers understandably do not mention it, the president is totally on board with the gun policy that could send his son to prison. The Biden administration is actively defending Section 922(g)(3) against challenges like Daniels', based on the same specious arguments that the 5th Circuit and two district courts have rejected. And last year, the president signed a bill that increased the maximum penalty for violating that provision while creating yet another potential felony charge for illegal drug users who dare to exercise their Second Amendment rights.
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He has the right to keep and bear arms.
But does he have the right bears in trunks?
Nice, sure, but what about the other 329,999,999 Americans who would not have a powerful father and all his ill-gotten gains to hire expensive lawyers?
Sorry, not sorry. Get rid of the law, or get rid of Hunter, one or the other.
Yup. This is the corrupt, monarchastic opposite of "Congress shall make no law..." and "Shall not be infringed..."
It wouldn’t break y heart if he got a long sentence and sold everyone out to avoid prison. Not that that would be allowed.
But is it unconstitutional for me?
Due to new goverment wide DEI initiaves, we will apply anti-racism standards to constitutional rights. So, if you are white, then no.
He's only asking for HIS charges to be dismissed, not for the law to be declared null & void, so, still illegal for you.
At the motion-to-dismiss stage, I think that's all they can ask. They could ask for the law to be overturned only if it goes to trial, no?
What do you think the chances are that they follow up on the constitutionality question, if they're successful in getting the charges dismissed?
Zero. Because if the charges are dismissed, there's no case or controversy still live by which the constitutionality question could be asked. You'd have to bring that question up again in a different case.
Its not 'rarely enforced' if you're an otherwise law-abiding white person.
It is a literal focus of the Biden DoJ.
So career criminal crackheads are exempt.
If their daddy is president? Yes.
The democrats, and their RINO collaborators, should all be removed from government, and people like the Bidens rounded up and convicted of treason.
I’m pro death penalty, so I favor executing them.
Hi Jacob! Any word about Hunter influence peddling for his dad and selling access, or has Charles Koch still forbidden you guys from talking about it?
He did that the other day. He is only being targeted for politics. Anyone else who wilfully fails to be taxes is let go.
Also trump sold nuclear secrets.
Doesn't "unconstitutional, widely flouted and rarely enforced" describe the 91 charges Trump is having to fight to be able to have the time to run for office?
Not quite. As widely flouted would infer a common understanding of the crime. For Trump it was a novel construction used to create the crime while making excuses as to why it was a one time construction.
Jaywalking is a widely flouted crime. People know what the crime is. A prosecutor didnt have to take completely unrelated items like financial reporting and create a crime to criminalize free speech.
The democrats are literally making up crimes and torts that don’t exist to prosecute Trump. Every charge against him in each case is absurd on its face.
The government, including the judiciary, Needs a hard reset to reset the corrupted data in the current build. Like a smartphone. Not a revolution, just a reset. Restoring the government to constitutional conditions. And flushing the corrupted data.
"Nearly all of them did so with impunity."
This is very disingenous Sullum.
They don't do so with impunity. Its just a crime that's very hard to catch someone at. Yet when they are caught, they absolutely are prosecuted. Biden got caught.
And the idea that 'republican members of congress' have any sway over a DOJ and a special prosecutor *appointed by a Democratic presidential administration* . . . and you take this at face value, no pushback?
This is why all gun owners should be given 300k advancements to write memoirs so the DoJ can find drug users.
This is very disingenous Sullum.
You're only citing have of his dishonesty. The "something like 20 million" assumption is predicated on relatively random distribution and two same or similar populations. The Survey is reported as being American civilians 12 and up but his firearm number is listed as Adults.
This is failing Jr. High aptitude testing stupid.
Well, if his lawyer says so, it must be true. Lawyers are well known for their honesty.
With luck, this case will lead to the overturning of any and all laws that SleepyJoe had a hand in creating.
Joe wasted his entire life.
Bigger waste than the foreigners who thought they bought someone competent enough to benefit them?
Rules for thee, not for me.
Your comment seems the most succinct and cogent for the situation.
"In any event, the diversion agreement, which was paired with a plea agreement that promised probation in exchange for Biden's admission of two tax misdemeanors, fell apart last July under scrutiny by a federal judge."
I noticed Sullum chose to ignore the immunity deal that the judge questioned. The fact that the prosecutor didn't previously file an objection to the plea agreement (along with the diversion and plea agreements) which gave Hunter immunity from future crimes, shows he's working for Hunter's daddy rather than the people.
Yep, rules for thee, but not for the Bidens. Joe wrote the laws and took a pledge to enforce them, so apply them to Hunter. It would be just. They should have done to Biden what they did to Trump, in picking a Biden hating prosecutor to go after Hunter rather than a career suck up.
And?
Either the laws are enforced against all, or they are enforced against none.
Let's compromise, and enforce it against some. Sounds reasonable, no?
I know! We can select based on (D) or (R)!
What is most definitely illegal though are extortion, racketeering, money laundering, and tax evasion.
Not to mention that this motherfucker is in numerous photos and videos in possession of crack cocaine and engaging in various sex acts with underage hookets.
We all know damn well that of his name was Tyrone Blyden instead of Hunter Biden he would already be doing a 5-10 year stint, mandatory.
Trying to keep your own money shouldn't be a crime.
The libertarian excuses for why dems shouldn't be held to the same standards as the population. Not to be confused with libertarians for novel legal constructions to target people who have mean tweets.
At least Reasons record of choosing the least sympathetic people is covered. The line for then seems to be a drug addled, hooked buying, tax evading, influence selling piece if shit son of a president and Trump when choosing to defend someone's rights.
Fix the edit button.
Too many mean comments about the far leftist writers, so Reason is punishing us.
Every solution they come up with to stop spam comments breaks the commenting system. Probably outsourcing.
If Charles Koch only donated a little more money they could afford to upgrade from state of the art Geocities-era technology.
It's all those highly-qualified-we-can't-get-an-American-to-do-the-job H1B guys.
So they aren't send us their best and brightest?
We have a million prisoners. Imagine the win-win for everybody (other than the prisoners) if we could either send them to the front lines (like Russia) or have them do cheap labor in China/Mexico and not burden US taxpayers with it.
Either the law gets eviscerated, or Joe Biden's son goes to prison. The American people can't lose this case.
There is no possibility of Hunter going to prison. If he is convicted, he'll be pardoned or his sentence will be commuted.
Of course. Trump pardoned nearly 150 of his buddies, family friends, and contributors before he left office. Why shouldn't Biden do likewise?
Nope. Try again. Or don’t. I wouldn’t want a stupid leftist cunt like you to give yourself a stroke futilely attempting to think.
They'll just let him go on a technicality or write the justification for letting him go so narrowly that it doesn't apply to anybody else.
Or they can convict him but the judge can "accidentally" screw up the trial so that any conviction gets thrown out on appeal. Maybe have a couple of mistrials before then.
The American people lose in any of those scenarios: justice isn't done and these kinds of games cost tons of taxpayer dollars.
Welp, just when I thought shit couldn't get any weirder...
It would be delicious if the Republican quest to get Hunter for a firearms violation ended up gutting an NRA/GOA win in an appellate court.
Won’t happen. The craven leftist court would dp strike down the conviction on constitutional grounds, but only as it applies to this case. They pull that bullshit a lot.
I think you've been taken in by a stupefying tarbaby.
4473 is duly passed law. The contests the NRA/GOA are fighting (setting aside that, for quite some time, the NRA has striven to distance itself from such divisive issues) are for people who were armed users of MJ that is legal in their state. Hunter isn't/wasn't a user of MJ and the 4473 issue isn't that he used MJ, it's that he had a conviction.
I know the words he typed out into the text box that got posted, but really you need to read what he wrote more like this (and then probably mute him because he's not going to raise any comedic or intellectual bars around here).
So he’s basically Ralph Wiggum?
I can't know for sure, but no better than (certainly not as humorous) and potentially worse. Ralph Wiggum cannot help who he is. He's a burden to the people around him, but he doesn't know any better. SkippingDog and others, OTOH, know how to use the internet and can interact functionally enough with the information itself to gain meaning and understanding from it. Instead, they aspire to be like Ralph, want others to regard them as Ralph, or are deliberately retarding others by acting as Ralph Wiggum.
That’s a piss poor attempt at trolling son.
Wouldn't it be more delicious, more libertarian, more humane, and less abjectly fucking retardedly evil that, instead of wishing that Hunter Biden's trial interferes with the NRA/GOAs efforts at justice for citizens who don't have Hunter's connections, Joe had a moment of divine inspiration, recognized all of the sons, daughters, mothers, fathers, aunts, uncles, nieces, and nephews these laws have hurt while, at several points, distinctly failing to prevent the phenomenon that precipitated them and issued a blanket pardon to anyone convicted under them?
I mean, for the guy who was supposed to bridge and heal the divide, it's a pretty solid opportunity but, instead, his voters are openly hoping that Hunter's breaking the law affords them greater ability to stab their own electorate in the back.
The fact is that the American legal is strongly influenced by money. Not directly, but indirectly by the quality of the lawyer you can hire. Were Hunter Biden a poor person he be sunk. He has the lawyers to question the constitutionality of this law and likely win. I suspect that part of the plea deal that fell through was aimed at preventing his lawyers from questioning the laws constitutionality.
What I'm really thankful for this season is my wisdom to cancel my subscription to Reason.
Who does the math for these guys??
" "Of the 132,464 criminal prosecutions under federal gun statutes" from FY 2008 through FY 2017, the motion notes, "only 1.8% were brought under Section 922(g)(3)." That amounted to an average of 120 prosecutions a year, accounting for a minuscule percentage of potential defendants. "
1.8% of 132464 = 2384. Over 10 years. That's an average of 238/year, not 120/year.
It amazes me how often statements get made without even a cursory look at whether they even look reasonable.
Furthermore, that's a lot of cases per year, given how difficult it is to actually detect this kind of conduct. That is the number of prosecutions is limited by being able to prove the crime beyond a reasonable doubt, not by an unwillingness of prosecutors to bring these charges.
It's not about any gun ban. It's about him lying on a form 4473 that would get anyone else thrown in jail. It's about him using illegal drugs when buying a firearm.
And who was harmed by any of that? Why not charge him with his real crimes?
And who was harmed by any of that?
Non-enforcement of laws that require truthful disclosure of facts harms everybody.
Why not charge him with his real crimes?
The corrupt federal bureaucracy already saved him from serious felonies; he should at least get prosecuted and convicted on these charges and serve the full term for them. That would be justice.
It figures they would go after him for non-crimes, like guns, drugs and tax evasion, instead of real crimes like government corruption.
Reason isn’t concerned with 200,000 dead Ukrainians as the cost of covering up Biden corruption.
They're only prosecuting him for his crimes that don't involve Joe Biden.
Have I mentioned the Sullum is a hypocritical left wing hack today? Well I just did with two minutes to spare.
"Of the 132,464 criminal prosecutions under federal gun statutes" from FY 2008 through FY 2017, the motion notes, "only 1.8% were brought under Section 922(g)(3)." That amounted to an average of 120 prosecutions a year, accounting for a minuscule percentage of potential defendants.
1.8% is pretty high for something that is so difficult to detect. Looks to me that the selective prosecution argument goes out the window right there.
Even if 922(g)(3) is unconstitutional, he is still left with lying on a federal form. That is, the correct process would have been to challenge 922(g)(3) in court instead of lying about it.
And the guy shouldn't complain: the fact that this corrupt government has deliberately let serious tax related felonies expire under the statute of limitations means he's getting off easy no matter what.
Throw the book at him.
At a minimum, don't the two separate charges for lying on that form violate the rule that one act should only ever result in one charge? Or at least, in one conviction? If the latter is the rule, then he could only be convicted on one of those two charges, not both, and the total maximum sentence he is facing would be less than claimed.