Supreme Court Takes Up ATF's Unilateral 'Ghost Gun' Rules
Lower courts have been extremely skeptical of attempts to regulate unfinished parts as firearms.

Can the government regulate objects that resemble unfinished firearm parts as if they are guns because, with tools and effort, they might be turned into working components? More specifically, can a federal agency start doing that via a reinterpretation of the law, and threaten noncompliant people with prosecution on its own initiative, without an act of Congress? The Supreme Court has now agreed to weigh in on those issues after lower courts rejected federal efforts to turn many Americans into felons by reinterpreting established legislation.
The Supreme Court's announcement that it will consider arguments came in the form of a brief Monday notice that certiorari was accepted in the case of Garland v. VanDerStok.
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Government Regulators Chase Ghosts
At issue are so-called "ghost guns"—homemade firearms that are often crafted from "80 percent" kits including unfinished parts that hobbyists complete in their own workshops. The "ghost" designation comes from the absence of factory-provided serial numbers, making the DIY guns harder to trace and record. To this day, on its website, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) specifies that "ATF has long held that items such as receiver blanks, 'castings' or 'machined bodies' in which the fire-control cavity area is completely solid and un-machined have not reached the 'stage of manufacture' which would result in the classification of a firearm according to the GCA," referring to the Gun Control Act of 1968.
Like any craft, gun-making has always had fans. It became increasingly popular in recent years, spurring the creation of an industry that serves the needs of aficionados who want to evade monitoring and restrictions by intrusive government officials. It's also a lot of fun; my son and I made an AR-15 from an 80 percent receiver as a homeschooling project. Former Reason producer Mark McDaniel similarly built a pistol from a kit.
Since government officials don't like rebellious subjects, the Biden administration, knowing new gun control measures were unlikely to survive a trip through Congress, pressured the ATF to act unilaterally. The result was a redefinition of the law in an attempt to regulate non-functional objects—paperweights for all intents and purposes—that I described at the time as "hundreds of pages of firearms regulations that are as clear as mud and leave experts in the field disagreeing over the interpretation." Henceforth, items that are "readily convertible" into firearms in the eyes of ATF agents will be regulated as such. Well, maybe.
Redefined Laws Meet Skeptical Judges
"A part that has yet to be completed or converted to function as frame or receiver is not a frame or receiver," Judge Reed O'Connor of the U.S. District Court for Northern Texas wrote last year in ruling on a lawsuit brought by Jennifer VanDerStok, Blackhawk Manufacturing Group, and other plaintiffs. "ATF's declaration that a component is a 'frame or receiver' does not make it so if, at the time of evaluation, the component does not yet accord with the ordinary public meaning of those terms."
Since the law gives the ATF the power to regulate firearms and not stuff that, like much of the plumbing section of a hardware store, might be turned into firearms with work, O'Connor found the rewriting of the rules to be an "unlawful agency action taken in excess of the ATF's statutory jurisdiction. On this basis, the Court vacates the Final Rule."
The federal government had no better luck at the appeals court level before a panel of equally unreceptive Fifth Circuit judges.
"ATF, in promulgating its Final Rule, attempted to take on the mantle of Congress to 'do something' with respect to gun control. But it is not the province of an executive agency to write laws for our nation," Judge Kurt D. Engelhardt wrote for himself and Judge Don Willett in largely upholding O'Connor. "That vital duty, for better or for worse, lies solely with the legislature."
"Unless and until Congress so acts to expand or alter the language of the Gun Control Act, ATF must operate within the statutory text's existing limits," Engelhardt continued. "The Final Rule impermissibly exceeds those limits, such that ATF has essentially rewritten the law. This it cannot do, especially where criminal liability can—and, according to the Government's own assertions, will—be broadly imposed without any Congressional input whatsoever."
"The Final Rule is limitless," marveled Judge Andrew Oldham in a pointed concurrence that supported the majority "without qualification" but sought to more harshly spank the ATF. "It purports to regulate any piece of metal or plastic that has been machined beyond its primordial state for fear that it might one day be turned into a gun, a gun frame, or a gun receiver. And it doesn't stop regulating the metal or plastic until it's melted back down to ooze. The GCA allows none of this."
Both Plaintiffs and Defendants Wait on the Supreme Court
Despite the brutal courtroom slapdown, the ATF's new frame and receiver rule remains in place. Last August, the Supreme Court issued a stay of O'Connor's ruling, pending the case's journey through the legal system to the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit Court and, ultimately, the highest court in the land. With the acceptance of VanDerStok, arguments will be heard in the fall, with a final decision coming some time after.
Despite obvious disagreement between the federal government and the VanDerStok plaintiffs over the limits of the ATF's authority to unilaterally rewrite law, both wanted the Supreme Court to take the case.
"By agreeing to hear our case, the Supreme Court will have the opportunity to put ATF firmly in its place and stop the agency from unconstitutionally expanding its gun control agenda," commented Firearms Policy Coalition Action Foundation President Cody J. Wisniewski, counsel for plaintiffs. "We look forward to addressing this unlawful rule in the Court's next term."
Even if the Supreme Court rejects the lower court rulings and decides against VanDerStok and for the ATF, that might be the final word on the law, but not on ghost guns. Home manufacture of firearms developed from a hobby into an act of resistance against an intrusive state. Reinterpreting how the rules define guns won't do anything to dissuade people from trying to exercise liberty and escape control.
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Well, after all, if a man can be a woman, why can't a nail be a gun?
“Shall not be infringed” apparently means “infringed to the point of including anything, even if only a conceptual artifact, up to the edge of ordinary public meaning” so…
It would be a sad, sad day if everyone who worked for ATF spontaneously combusted.
If it did happen there are plenty of tin pot dictators with delusions of godhood out there who are ready and willing to step into those shoes so they can have that power.
Unfortunately, this is what is needed but won’t be received from SCOTUS either way.
They need to go full scorched earth on the administrative state mandates, especially these. Unfortunately, we’re going to get, at best, “A 79.9% lower receiver is OK and you can’t say that it’s not.” while, printing images of lightning links will still be a criminal offense, IL bans assault weapons for natives but grants immunity from it’s own standing laws to migrants and, in a few years, the ATF comes back with “OK, but what about 79.85% lowers?”
It would be sad because there would likely be many innocent janitors, cafeteria workers and maybe even family members caught up in the conflagration.
Proving once again that the rebellion in Star Wars were the true villains.
If I said the right to abortion shall not be infringed they would know what the term means.
Well, that article read as pretty much a purely Libertarian position. Where are the angry Conservatives screaming that Reason is filled with leftist writers who aren't Real Libertarians (tm)?
place already has a sarcasmic.
....and where is evidence of said anger? Must live in you imagination.
Exorcise your ghost gun rights!
If the batf decides to push this every hardware store will need an FFL.
I’ve built both AR and a Polymer 80 Glock clone;
Because 1) I can and want to and 2) to resist an increasingly overreaching and intrusive State, that has no respect for our Constitution and republic upon which it is founded.
No one of the progressive wing wants to confront the real source of the overwhelming vast majority of gun crimes, that the DOJ (Garland himself) just admitted what everyone knows; inner city gang violence.
They don’t buy their weapons at gun shows by the way; the DOJ also released a study showing they are stolen and distributed on a black market. Im also certain they do not build their own (ghost guns are typically purloined weapons with defaced serial numbers).
My next project will be a PF 45, in 10mm. And I’m not a criminal unless our misguided government decides to render me such by default.
But. But. If people don't have guns they can't be stolen.
Executive over-reach. It seems obvious to me that if you have to perform a fair amount of work to turn something into a firearm, it's not yet a firearm.
Straining at gnats and swallowing elephants whole is the particular expertise of Supreme Court Justices. They should put that on their resumes and Senators should ask questions at confirmation hearings about the word count of the longest opinion they ever handed down and the level of gymnastic difficulty achieved by the tortured legal logic filling those pages. Another great skill Justices have displayed over the generations is the ability to focus only on the laws, constitutional clauses, and precedents needed to achieve the legal outcome they started out with, and to excuse it by confining their decisions to only the narrow questions contained in the appeal document whenever they’re too cowardly to make a clear, concise and definitive ruling on a contentious issue.
FWIW it's noticeable how SC decisions have got longer and longer over the years - possibly because increasingly, justices have relied on clerks in their drafting.
No, it's because you can't spin a sow's ear into a silk purse without thousands of words and a lifetime study of weasel words and logical fallacies. I once read an entire majority opinion and counted over fifty different logical fallacies, some used more than once! It's not easy when you also have to recognize what abuses the legalese glosses over, either!
Pay no attention to the 2-300 people behind the curtain blocking off the street, waving rifles in the air, and shooting people.
Edit: And it would be awesome to be so naive as to believe that Reason is on the good side of this issue but... as usual.
Thanks. That’s been on my to watch list for a couple of days.
Problem is that the vast majority of MSM are political apologists; which makes everything they report propaganda.
waste of a perfectly good corvette.
Fun note #1: Despite the fact that the NRA was commenting about Philando Castille via two spokespersons within hours of the shooting, both of which are available on Youtube, the narrative still goes that the NRA has remained silent.
Fun note #2: The fact that you don’t hear from David Hogg, Everytown, Sandy Hook Promise, etc. is a pretty irrefutable piece of objective evidence that they are political hacks and/or crisis actors and don’t really fall into the “Black Lives Matter” or the “All Lives Matter” categories, politically or non-politically.
“A bridge too far” applies to this whole ridiculous mess. The Federal government should never have been allowed to require gun manufacturers to put serial numbers on their products in the first place. The whole question of gun “regulations” is questionable from the start. Yet every step of the way the regulators have been able to argue that they already HAD permission and laws on the books that established their authority and that the latest infringement of the right to keep and bear arms was only a little outside their previous authority! Now that they are blatantly trying to regulate non-firearms as if they were already firearms should be the signal for the Supreme Court not only to prohibit this latest enforcement action but to declare most of the previous encroachments to be unconstitutional as well. But they probably won’t. The very idea that government should regulate something because it might someday be used to commit a crime by somebody somewhere is shaky at best and downright obnoxious at worst. The narrative that government has the authority to infringe on the rights of people who have never committed a gun crime because someone will commit a gun crime is specious on its face! The Supreme Court should slap this down with extreme prejudice and Congress should impeach any Executive Branch official who violates her oath of office in this particularly egregious fashion.
An infringement is an infringement, no matter how small.
Occasionally I buy raw materials for the small machine shop we have at work. Lately I've noticed that more and more material vendors have changed their fine print to read "you agree that this material will not be used to create a firearm or to create parts for firearms".
only the criminals will have 3D printers.
Do I have to stamp my 3D printer with a serial number before it gets to the bottom of the lake or is it OK if it just sits down there without one? Please answer quickly as I'm having some boating difficulty.
I notice this is the day where Reason (reluctantly) notices fascism.
I see a failure to note the obvious end game.
The BATF's new regs condition the degree of completion on how difficult it would be to convert it into a functioning receiver, which isn't just a function of the shape of the metal, but also your tools. skills, and knowledge.
The end goal is to make possession of firearms PLANS together with the tools and skills constructive possession of a firearm, so that machinists will have to avoid having possession of firearms plans, and the average joe will find it legally perilous to have a home machine shop.