SCOTUS Ponders the Implications of Prosecuting Gun Owners for a Crime Invented by Bureaucrats
Several justices seemed troubled by an ATF rule that purports to ban bump stocks by reinterpreting the federal definition of machine guns.

On March 26, 2019, every American who owned a bump stock, a rifle accessory that facilitates rapid firing, was suddenly guilty of a federal felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison. That did not happen because a new law took effect; it happened because federal regulators reinterpreted an existing law to mean something they had long said it did not mean.
On Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court considered the question of whether those bureaucrats had the authority to do that. The case, Garland v. Cargill, turns on whether bump stocks are prohibited under the "best reading" of the federal statute covering machine guns. While several justices were clearly inclined to take that view, several others had reservations.
The products targeted by the government are designed to assist bump firing, which involves pushing a rifle forward to activate the trigger by bumping it against a stationary finger, then allowing recoil energy to push the rifle backward, which resets the trigger. As long as the shooter maintains forward pressure and keeps his finger in place, the rifle will fire repeatedly. The "interpretive rule" at issue in this case, which was published in December 2018 and took effect three months later, bans stock replacements that facilitate this technique by allowing the rifle's receiver to slide back and forth.
Officially, the purpose of that rule was merely to "clarify" that bump stocks are illegal. According to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF), they always have been, although no one (including the ATF) realized that until 2018.
Federal law defines a machine gun as a weapon that "automatically" fires "more than one shot" by "a single function of the trigger." The definition also covers parts that are "designed and intended…for use in converting a weapon" into a machine gun.
During Wednesday's oral arguments, Principal Deputy Solicitor General Brian H. Fletcher maintained that a rifle equipped with a bump stock plainly meets the criteria for a machine gun. It "fires more than one shot by a single function of the trigger," he said, because "a function of the trigger happens when some act by the shooter, usually a pull, starts a firing sequence." An ordinary semi-automatic rifle, according to Fletcher, "fires one shot for each function of the trigger because the shooter has to manually pull and release the trigger for every shot." But "a bump stock eliminates those manual movements and allows the shooter to fire many shots with one act, a forward push."
Fletcher argued that a rifle with a bump stock also "fires more than one shot automatically, that is, through a self-regulating mechanism." After "the shooter presses forward to fire the first shot," he said, "the bump stock uses the gun's recoil energy to create a continuous back-and-forth cycle that fires hundreds of shots per minute."
Jonathan F. Mitchell, the attorney representing Michael Cargill, the Texas gun shop owner who challenged the bump stock ban, argued that Fletcher was misapplying both of those criteria. First, he said, a rifle equipped with a bump stock "can fire only one shot per function of the trigger because the trigger must reset after every shot and must function again before another shot can be fired." The trigger "is the device that initiates the firing of the weapon, and the function of the trigger is what that triggering device must do to cause the weapon to fire," he added. "The phrase 'function of the trigger' can refer only to the trigger's function. It has nothing to do with the shooter or what the shooter does to the trigger because the shooter does not have a function."
Second, Mitchell said, a rifle with a bump stock "does not and cannot fire more than one shot automatically by a single function of the trigger because the shooter, in addition to causing the trigger to function, must also undertake additional manual actions to ensure a successful round of bump firing." That process "depends entirely on human effort and exertion," he explained, because "the shooter must continually and repeatedly thrust the force stock of the rifle forward with his non-shooting hand while simultaneously maintaining backward pressure on the weapon with his shooting hand. None of these acts are automated."
Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson seemed eager to accept Fletcher's reading of the law, arguing that it is consistent with what Congress was trying to do when it approved the National Firearms Act of 1934, which imposed tax and registration requirements on machine guns. Although bump stocks did not exist at the time, they suggested, the law was meant to cover any firearm that approximated a machine gun's rate of fire.
According to Fletcher, "a traditional machine gun" can "shoot in the range of 700 to 950 bullets a minute," while a semi-automatic rifle with a bump stock can "shoot between 400 and 800 rounds a minute." As he conceded, however, the statute does not refer to rate of fire. "This is not a rate-of-fire statute," he said. "It's a function statute." To ban bump stocks, in other words, the ATF has to show that they satisfy the disputed criteria.
"It seems like, yes, that this is functioning like a machine gun would," Justice Amy Coney Barrett said. "But, you know, looking at that definition, I think the question is, 'Why didn't Congress pass…legislation to make this cover it more clearly?'"
Justice Neil Gorsuch made the same point. "I can certainly understand why these items should be made illegal," he said, "but we're dealing with a statute that was enacted in the 1930s, and through many administrations, the government took the position that these bump stocks are not machine guns." That changed after a gunman murdered 60 people at a Las Vegas country music festival in October 2017, and it turned out that some of his rifles were fitted with bump stocks.
The massacre inspired several bills aimed at banning bump stocks. Noting that "the ATF lacks authority under the law to ban bump-fire stocks," Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D–Calif.) said "legislation is the only answer." President Donald Trump, by contrast, maintained that new legislation was unnecessary. After he instructed the ATF to ban bump stocks by administrative fiat, the agency bent the law to his will. Noting that "the law has not changed," Feinstein warned that the ATF's "about face," which relied partly on "a dubious analysis claiming that bumping the trigger is not the same as pulling it," would invite legal challenges.
Feinstein was right about that, and one of those challenges resulted in the decision that the government is now asking the Supreme Court to overturn. In January 2023, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit rejected the ATF's redefinition of machine guns.
"A plain reading of the statutory language, paired with close consideration of the mechanics of a semi-automatic firearm, reveals that a bump stock is excluded from the technical definition of 'machinegun' set forth in the Gun Control Act and National Firearms Act," 5th Circuit Judge Jennifer Walker Elrod wrote in the majority opinion. And even if that were not true, Elrod said, "the rule of lenity," which requires construing an ambiguous criminal statute in a defendant's favor, would preclude the government from punishing people for owning bump stocks.
Gorsuch alluded to Feinstein's prescient concerns about the ATF rule's legal vulnerability: "There are a number of members of Congress, including Senator Feinstein, who said that this administrative action forestalled legislation that would have dealt with this topic directly, rather than trying to use a nearly 100-year-old statute in a way that many administrations hadn't anticipated." The ATF's attempt to do that, he said, would "render between a quarter of a million and a half million people federal felons," even though they relied on guidance from "past administrations, Republican and Democrat," that said bump stocks were legal.
Justices Brett Kavanaugh and Samuel Alito also were troubled by that reversal's implications for people who already owned bump stocks. Fletcher tried to assuage those concerns.
"ATF made [it] very clear in enacting this rule that anyone who turned in their bump stock or destroyed it before March of [2019] would not face prosecution," Fletcher said. "As a practical matter," he added, "the statute of limitations for this offense is five years," meaning prosecutions of people who owned bump stocks before the rule took effect will no longer be possible a month from now. "We have not prosecuted those people," he said. "We won't do it. And if we try to do it, I think they would have a good defense based on entrapment by estoppel," which applies when someone follows official advice in trying to comply with the law.
"What is the situation of people who have possessed bump stocks between the time of the ATF's new rule and the present day or between the time of the new rule and the 5th Circuit decision?" Alito asked. "Can they be prosecuted?" Fletcher's answer: "probably yes." That prospect, Alito said, is "disturbing."
Kavanaugh wondered about gun owners who did not destroy or surrender their bump stocks because they did not know about the ATF's rule. "For prosecuting someone now," he asked, "what mens rea showing would the government have to make to convict someone?" Fletcher said the defendant would "have to be aware of the facts" that, according to the ATF's reinterpretation of the law, make bump stocks illegal. "So even if you are not aware of the legal prohibition, you can be convicted?" Kavanaugh asked. "That's right," Fletcher replied.
"That's going to ensnare a lot of people who are not aware of the legal prohibition," Kavanaugh said. "Why not require the government to also prove that the person knew that what they were doing…was illegal?"
Gorsuch mocked Fletcher's apparent assumption that gun owners can be expected to keep abreast of the ATF's edicts. "People will sit down and read the Federal Register?" he said to laughter. "That's what they do in their evening for fun. Gun owners across the country crack it open next to the fire and the dog."
Maybe not, Fletcher admitted, but the publicity surrounding the ban and the legal controversy it provoked probably brought the matter to many people's attention. "I agree not everyone is going to find out about those things," he said, "but we've done everything the government could possibly do to make people aware."
Beyond the unfairness to gun owners who bought products they quite reasonably thought were legal, the ATF's about-face lends credibility to the complaint that its current interpretation of the law is misguided. If the ATF was wrong before, how can we be confident that it is right now?
According to the agency's new understanding of the statute, Mitchell noted, "function of the trigger" hinges on what the shooter is doing. But "function is an intransitive verb," he said. "It can't take an object grammatically. It's impossible. The trigger has to be the subject of function. It can't be the object."
Gorsuch picked up on that point, noting that the government had likened "function of the trigger" to "a stroke of a key or a throw of the dice or a swing of the bat." But "those are all things that people do," he said. Since function is an intransitive verb, "people don't function things. They may pull things, they may throw things, but they don't function things."
Gorsuch noted that the ATF is relying on "a very old statute" designed for "an obvious problem" posed by gangsters like Al Capone armed with machine guns that fired repeatedly "with a single function of the trigger—that is, the thing itself was moved once." Maybe legislators "should have written something better," he said. "One might hope they might write something better in the future. But that's the language we're stuck with."
What about the ATF's claim that a rifle equipped with a bump stock shoots "automatically"? Fletcher conceded that "an expert" can bump-fire a rifle "without any assistive device at all" and that "you can also do it if you have a lot of expertise by hooking your finger into a belt loop or using a rubber band or something else like that to hold your finger in place." But he added that "we don't think those things function automatically because the definition of 'automatically'" entails "a self-regulating mechanism."
As the government sees it, a shooter creates such a mechanism by using a bump stock, notwithstanding the "manual actions" that Mitchell highlighted. "There's nothing automatic about that," Mitchell argued. "The shooter is the one who is pushing. It's human effort, human exertion. Nothing automatic at all about this process."
Barrett asked Fletcher how the ATF would treat an elastic "bump band" marketed as an accessory to facilitate rapid firing. "Why wouldn't that then be a machine gun under the statute?" she wondered. "We think that's still not functioning automatically because that's not a self-regulating mechanism," Fletcher replied.
Mitchell, by contrast, argued that Barrett's hypothetical product and a bump stock are "indistinguishable when it comes to 'automatically.'" Bump firing with either involves "a manual action undertaken entirely by the shooter," he said. "There is no automating device….It is all being done by the shooter."
Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who was sympathetic to Fletcher's argument, nevertheless implied that the legal status of bump stocks might not be as clear as the government suggests. "The back-and-forth here leads me to believe that at best there might be some ambiguity," she said. But if the statute is in fact unclear, the 5th Circuit said, the ambiguity should be resolved in a way that protects gun owners from prosecution for a crime invented by bureaucrats.
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Justice Jackson: "And when, you know, 'function' is defined, it's really not about the operation of the thing. It's about what it can achieve, what it's being used for. So I see Congress as putting function in this. The function of this trigger is to cause this kind of damage, 800 rounds a second or whatever."
Most qualified justice in history.
Yeah, she seems to think that a spring-loaded stock makes a standard semi-auto sporting rifle 10x faster than a minigun.
Fun fact: An A-10 Warthog / Thunderbolt II, when it makes the 'brrrrrrrr' sound that makes tanks go away? 64 rounds per second. 12.5x slower than her theoretical bump-stocked AR-15.
Audio: https://twitter.com/atwitty2/status/1762876552314753189
Bonus Fun fact: There are numerous weapons that could well outstrip Jackson’s rate of fire, have practically demonstrated the ability, is based on a technology that predates semi-automatic fire by several centuries, and wouldn’t essentially be regarded as illegal or covered by the rule.
Essentially, between cannons, blunderbusts, shotguns (drilling, vierling, and fünfling) and volley guns; 800+ rounds, even in a single firing of well under a second, has been feasible and legal, for civilians for over 200 yrs.
In the ’00s a company called Metal Storm invented a stacked round (again, save the electronic triggering, 17th C. technology) volley gun that could, logistically, fire a million rounds a second (though a million-round volley was never fired, just numerous 180 round/0.01s volleys). The fatal flaw in the system being that for stacked rounds and reloadability, the weapon’s reach and accuracy was on par with your average shotgun and, if your goal is simply to rain down unaimed lead, you could do it cheaper with older, and entirely legal, technology.
Get off her fucking back, she’s not a biologist!
Fair.
Citizen: (upon answering doorbell) Good morning. What can I do for you?
ATF Agent: We've come to take you to jail.
Citizen: Jail!! What the hell for?
ATF Agent: It has been reliably reported to us that you once bought, and are still in possession of a machine gun, and that is not licensed and you have not paid the NFA tax on it.
Citizen: You're out of you mind. I don't have a machine gun.
ATF Agent: please Citizen, come along quietly and peaceably. You are going to jail, and we can do this the easy way, or the hard way, or you can sneeze the wrong way and all 45 armed agents who are directing those little red dots on your chest can just blow you to hell then go get a sandwich. It really is your choice. Your neighbor has reported that you have a bump stock. She alleges that she has seen it even though she was not real sure what one looks like. Put you hand behind your back and don't resist. You have the right to remain silent . . . .
Citizen: this is insane. Bump stocks don't even shoot! And they aren't against any law I know about.
ATF Agent: Citizen, what is not specifically permitted to you is prohibited to you. And no law specifically says you can have bump stock. Now, are you willing to talk to us without an attorney present. It is possible that you could mitigate your situation by giving us some other names?
Or a gunsmith, apparently.
She's not a woman.
“Or whatever.”
Inclines me to suspect she just doesn’t really care about this particular right.
Most qualified justice in history.
Wrong justice. That was Chuck Grassley talking about Kavanaugh.
Certainly she was more qualified than ACB, though I doubt you'd recognise the fact. and had significantly more judicial experience than Thomas, who was an equal opportunity hire if ever there was one, and Roberts.
Jesus Christ on a crutch…the only reason and I mean the only reason Kagan and Jackson are on the Court is they are POC women. Obama and Obama II said exactly that when looking for nominees.
Do you feel similarly about Thomas? There's no doubt why he was nominated. Or how about ACB? You think she was nominated as the best available candidate?
BTW Kagan is not a POC. She's very pale brown, like me, but there have been plenty of pale brown people on the court - RBG, Breyer, etc. And she had the intellectual chops to justify her appointment.
You know what? Grow the fuck up. All SC appointments are political. And in times past, the racial and sex bias operated as a default so no-one queried why a very long succession of white men were being nominated.
Certainly she was more qualified than ACB
No shit. Anyone with functioning eyes knows that. ACB has the wrong color skin.
Thomas, who was an equal opportunity hire if ever there was one
No shit. I'm no biologist, but Thomas probably has a penis.
That was Chuck Grassley talking about Kavanaugh.
No shit. Motherfucker not only has the wrong skin color, but is also the wrong gender.
and Roberts.
No shit. Ditto.
Well I can sympathize. Seconds seem like minutes whenever her honor opens her mouth.
My finger guns shoot as fast as I can say, "pew pew" and I can't get then up to 800 rounds per minute.
It seems to me that Congress, in passing the statute in the first place, could have defined a machine gun in terms of rate of fire. "For the purposes of this statute, an automatic machine gun shall be defined as a gun capable of firing n rounds or more per minute." They didn't. They chose to define a machine gun in terms of function of the trigger.
By refusing to define it in terms of rate of fire, they left the possibility of some gun which fires extremely rapidly nevertheless not meeting the definition of "automatic machine gun" and therefore not coming under the terms of the statute.
However, I am surprised by Justice Gorsuch's concern that gun owners may not be aware of legal changes. Suppose that Congress today were to pass a new law outlawing bump stocks, and suppose that such law were to pass judicial review. How can we know that every single bump stock owner, or any particular one, was aware of the change of law?
Obviously, there must be some legal standard for notification to the general public. It is impossible to suppose that nobody can be indicted for a crime before he is provably aware of the exact contours of the law.
Or, if we indeed take that position, then a vast mass of American law becomes moot. Has anyone, anyone at all, read the entire Federal Register? Or even a significant fraction of it?
Rate of fire would have been a pointless metric back then, ambiguous at best, indeterminable in practice. There was a clear engineering proxy that made an unambiguous distinction, while accomplishing the intended rate of fire limitation to that achievable from a conscious trigger pull (bump-style workarounds notwithstanding). Now, as sear engagement time goes to zero, that engineering distinction has become less indicative as a proxy. On the technocratic definition, has anyone determined whether there actually is provable sear engagement for each and every fired round? Tolerances and timing are always such that there’s at least a fraction of a second of sear engagement each time?
Most qualified justice in history.
Meanwhile, 76-yr.-old Justice Clarence Thomas manages to, in a single question, summarize the arc of selective interpretation/bastardization of S230 *and* get Netchoice's Attorney to agree by plainly stating the quiet part out loud.
But we aren't gonna talk about that here in the home of "Muh 1A uv the Intrnetz!"
selective interpretation/bastardization/misrepresentation
At whose behest was this rule created?
Almost every member of federal government.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2017/politics/bump-stock-ban-whip-count/
Oh. You think it was a single person.
And because I already know how insipid your response will be, should I go ahead and add the word you chose, behest, to the list?
behest
noun
be·hest bi-ˈhest bē-
Synonyms of behest
1
: an authoritative order : COMMAND
The meeting was called at the senator's behest.
2
: an urgent prompting
At the behest of her friends, she read the poem aloud.
And reminder, dems wanted far more restrictions implemented. Even the NRA supported the ban initially. And no I don't agree with Trump signing the memo. But it wasn't a singular person shouting for it. No matter how much your TDS forces you to blame a single person instead of everyone championing it. But then again you were just blaming Trump singularly for Covid this week. Meh.
As expected you go into full defense mode. Funny how you never give anyone except Trump the benefit of the doubt. Everyone else is eeeeeeevil.
If a legal prohibition on this item has such strong Congressional support, let Congress pass a bill outlawing it, or an amendment to existing legislation. Then we can have a nice big public debate, the courts will weigh in on the constitutionality of the prohibition, and we can generally uphold constitutional and democratic norms.
The alternative is to allow an executive agency comprising unelected and obscure bureaucrats to arrogate legislative power on the sly. This is one more step away from an America which we can describe as a Constitutional and Democratic Republic. It's one more step towards an America in which our elections and legislatures are mere window dressing for an oligarchy, or an empire.
Yeah, not his fault, etc.
So we can count on Trump rolling over again on the 2nd Amendment the next time it appears he will lose.
Shocking!
1) do those governing derive their power from the consent of the governered?
2) can you consent to someone being allowed to do what you do not think you have the right to do?
If you believe only 1 is incorrect you believe in totalitarianism.
If you believe the answer to 2 is yes, you support an anarchist society where only you have to abide by the law.
If you believe the answer to 1 is no and the answer to 2 is yes, you are Chem Jeff, sarc, sqrl, etc
This relates to gun control, because how can I consent to those that govern me being allowed to do things I think I am morally wrong to do?
The fifth circuit court is the biggest bunch of cucks in the country, everything should get appealed from that shithole.
The 5th Circuit is why this case is before SCOTUS. They blasted this rule making by the ATF and the Government appealed.
Are you sure you aren't thinking of the 9th?
Unelected and faceless bureaucrats in the Administrative State waved a magic wand and created millions of felon's overnight without a law being passed by Congress.
Now I hope everyone see's the danger of The Cathedral.
Unfortunately the perception of danger, injustice or unfairness is largely going to depend upon getting what they want.
If the law requires interpretation so much that several judges can't agree on what it means then it's impossible to form intent. If it's not clear that what I did was illegal then I have no mens rea. It's that simple.
I agree that no conviction should flow but unfortunately you’re wrong about mens rea. The necessary element is whether you intended to commit the action – the actus reus you did commit, and if it turns out that the action is illegal, then you’re guilty of a crime. After all, we all know that ignorance of the law is not an excuse, which principle runs counter to the idea that criminal intent is required.
https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/mens_rea
The mens rea requirement is premised upon the idea that one must possess a guilty state of mind and be aware of his or her misconduct; however, a defendant need not know that their conduct is illegal to be guilty of a crime. Rather, the defendant must be conscious of the “facts that make his conduct fit the definition of the offense.”
(My bold)
"Ignorace of the law is no excuse" is a legal fiction that might have been useful when the entirety of the law could fit on a single bookshelf. In the current situation, it's an impossible standard that is long-past overdue to be abolished. As an ethical matter, ignorance of the law is an excuse and standards to the contrary (such as the one you cite) should be reversed.
I agree wholeheartedly.
I recall an egregious English case where a seaman was convicted under a law passed while he was at sea - Rex v Bailey, 1800 and which it was conceded he could not have known about. He was pardoned immediately, though.
I would say that in principle it should be no excuse for laws that people generally should be expected to know - update the "man waiting for the Clapham omnibus" to "the person on the uptown A platform at Penn Station" should know, and then decide for specific other laws, whether the individual concerned should have been expected to know. For example, can the average American be expected to know that they can't import goods made from cat fur? Nope. But if someone is a furrier, then they should. So allow an ignorance defence in cases outside of the regular run-of-the-mill criminal cases. This requires more detail than we need to go into atm, though.
It was also based on the assumption that the law prohibited actions that anybody with a functioning conscience would be aware were wrong, and so it was irrelevant that you didn't know they were also illegal.
"Ignorance of the law is no excuse" has no place once the government gives up on pretending it only outlaws acts that are inherently wrongful.
Im assuming the outcome of this case will have implications for braces and forced reset triggers?
In both instances we have a federal agency attempting to make law, and naturally determining the applicable punishment which it will also enforce.
I think the ATF is on firmer ground, statutorily speaking, with the braced pistol rule. What I think will work against them is that they said for 10+ years they weren't SBRs and then suddenly reversed course once 40+ million of them were in the wild.
That is the premise for the bump stock case also. The atf said in letters that the bump stock was legal.
Then, they changed their mind.
Exactly. Same argument, same inconsistency, never mind overreach.
No. Trump issued an executive order declaring bump stocks to be machine gun conversions, and ATF twisted itself into knots to support the EO.
Simple: if the rule is sufficiently unclear, you shouldn't be convicted for violating it, and it's obvious that the rule is unclear.
Now do the Constitution.
Yes, the ATF is an agency filled with ham-handed thugs, and the DoJ is not any better, and so they should lose.
But this parsing of a statute doesn't really work for those old statutes, which were not drafted as precisely. Congress intended to ban machine guns, and if bump stocks make guns that are effectively machine guns, can't we chalk it up to a different approach to drafting?
Regardless of Congress' intent, they were *very* specific that it was one function of the trigger. This doesn't fit the legal definition of a machine gun, and therefore isn't one.
Also, machine guns are *obviously* military/militia weapons and are covered under the 2nd amendment's text, history, and tradition.
There is no (logical) way this can be upheld.
I hear you. Just sayin'.
Sure, but it probably will be upheld anyway, because the majority on the Court aren't THAT principled, and they don't like machine guns.
I don’t think it will be hard for the SC to find that a bump stock does not meet the one function of trigger verbiage if they care to, since no conscious individual trigger pull is needed, only constant pressure against the stock, if I understand the mechanical function. Some of the commentary is already circling that determination, it only remains to be comported with the mechanical prescription in the statute.
If congress wants a different definition of machine gun then they need to pass a new law.
And act like real grown up adults and accept responsibility?
fiat
1: an authoritative or arbitrary order
What about the ATF's claim that a rifle equipped with a bump stock shoots "automatically"? Fletcher conceded that "an expert" can bump-fire a rifle "without any assistive device at all" and that "you can also do it if you have a lot of expertise by hooking your finger into a belt loop or using a rubber band or something else like that to hold your finger in place." But he added that "we don't think those things function automatically because the definition of 'automatically'" entails "a self-regulating mechanism."
The ATF erred here. He should have gone for the gusto and said "Yes, Your Honors, the government should have the power to make rubber bands, stationary sticks, and pants illegal because they all can turn semi-automatic weapons into machine guns."
Even if the bumpstock ban does not infringe the Second Amendment, bumpstocks were once allowed, so banning them now without just compensation infringes the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment. For the ATF to just declare the bumpstocks illegal ex post facto and require owners to turn them in without compensation under threat of arrest and prosecution is nothing but _armed robbery_.
IMHO, the only way this change is consistent with the 5th is if _Congress_ appropriates money to buy the bumpstocks from all owners at the original purchase price or higher, as well as all of them stocked in stores, distributors, and manufacturers' warehouses, and all the parts and materials stocked for bumpstock manufacturing. The ATF cannot do this on its own; it does not have the funds, and cannot legally divert funds for other purposes.