Mel Gibson Got His Gun Rights Back, but Millions of Americans With No History of Violence Are Still Waiting
The movie star’s special treatment highlights the injustice of an illogical federal law.

Like millions of Americans, Mel Gibson has a criminal record that disqualifies him from legally owning a gun. Unlike nearly all of those people, the movie star, whom President Donald Trump has designated as one of his three "ambassadors" to Hollywood, will be relieved of that disability, thanks to a recent decision by Attorney General Pam Bondi that also covers nine less famous individuals.
Although Gibson's inclusion on that list smacks of political favoritism, Bondi's move is part of a long overdue effort to restore the Second Amendment rights of "prohibited persons" who pose no threat to public safety. The Gibson controversy should not overshadow a much bigger scandal: the unjust, constitutionally dubious policy that permanently disarms Americans based on a wide range of criminal convictions, including many that do not involve the use or threat of force.
Gibson lost the right to possess firearms in 2011, when he pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor involving domestic violence: an assault on his girlfriend. Another provision of the same federal law sweeps much more broadly, covering anyone convicted of a crime punishable by more than a year of incarceration, regardless of the sentence that was actually imposed, whether or not the offense involved violence, and no matter how long ago it happened.
To give you a sense of how capacious that category is, it includes the president himself, who last year was convicted of 34 state felonies involving falsification of business records. Because of those convictions, which did not result in any formal punishment, a man entrusted with control of the nation's vast military might, including its nuclear weapons, is not allowed to own a gun.
No matter what you think about the underlying case, that situation makes no sense as a matter of public safety. It is likewise hard to see the logic of taking away someone's Second Amendment rights because he grew or sold marijuana, underreported his income to obtain food stamps, misrepresented the thickness of shoe inserts, tampered with fishing gear, inadvertently transported a box of ammunition into Mexico, or committed any of the myriad other nonviolent offenses that trigger this disability.
Even the American Civil Liberties Union, which is not known for defending the Second Amendment, sees a problem with this "extraordinarily broad statute," which "does not target dangerousness or propensity to commit violence." It says "there is no historical precedent for such a broad ban on firearm possession."
After casting that absurdly wide net, Congress approved a process that could eventually allow people to wriggle free. It authorized the attorney general to restore a prohibited person's gun rights when "the circumstances regarding the disability, and the applicant's record and reputation, are such that the applicant will not be likely to act in a manner dangerous to public safety."
That process, however, was delegated to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF), which Congress has prohibited from considering such applications since 1992. Because of that spending rider, prohibited persons had no recourse unless they managed to obtain a pardon that restored their gun rights.
Bondi is trying to revive the remedy that Congress offered before making it impossible to obtain. An interim final rule that took effect last month rescinds the ATF's authority in this area, returning it to the attorney general.
Bondi says that move is consistent with a February 7 presidential order that instructed her to "assess any ongoing infringements" of Second Amendment rights stemming from "actions of executive departments and agencies." She notes that the "confusing" lack of a remedy for prohibited persons "has taken on greater significance given developments in Second Amendment jurisprudence since 1992."
Those developments cast doubt on the constitutionality of defining prohibited persons so broadly that they include millions of Americans with no history of violence. Challenges to those restrictions, which have been successful in several cases involving people convicted of nonviolent crimes, may ultimately force Congress to take a narrower approach.
© Copyright 2025 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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Bondi and trump have literally said they want to expand it to non violent felons. You are a fucking moron.
He didn't blame them for the injustice and informs the reader of Bondi and Trump's efforts to reverse the wrong.
JS;dr
VD;dr. VD (Venereal Disease) is some BAD shit! Go see the Dr. if you've got the VD!!! THAT is why I say VD;dr.!!!
(Some forms of VD also cause bona fide mental illness… THINK about shit!)
JS;dr
It is not an illogical law, just an unjust one. The point is backdoor prohibition of gun ownership. There is a large portion of Congress, overwhelmingly Democrats, who do not view the right to bear arms aa a legitimate civil liberty and will use any excuse to remove it from a citizen.
Do not confuse evil intent with irrationality.
Do not confuse evil intent with irrationality.
Sullum deliberately traffics in the confusion and on behalf of the evil intent. Mel Gibson, Donald Trump, Hunter Biden, and Alec Baldwin were all just guys not doing anything wrong who similarly got caught up in irrational political movements to strip people of them of their gun rights. Of course, Alec Baldwin actually shot two people, killing one, and Hunter Biden knowingly committed (multiple counts at multiple levels of) fraud even if the 4473 form gets tossed aside, but, you know, shooting someone in the face is a just a political stunt talked up by the, uh, actor's, uh, political opposition the same way 34 completely novel counts of filing your taxes after an election is.
Mel Gibson lost his gun rights? He must've killed *two* cinematographers and injured one director with a gun, in hand, while filming on set, in front of eye witnesses, of a show that he was producing, with employees that he hired...
Go fuck yourself with your "Gibson's removal from that list *might* be political favoritism." narrative you stupid sack of shit.
This is a no-brainer for Libertarians: Pay your debt = your debt is paid. Even for violent felons, none of this parsing bullshit.
Anything beyond is just control, force, and coercion.
What about recidivism is the usual rebuttal, and the simple response is "you mean like what happens now under our current system?"
Even for violent felons, none of this parsing bullshit.
Anything beyond is just control, force, and coercion.
Not to defend any up front mandatory sentencing legislation (the opposite actually), but I can envision an alternate libertarian future past or reality (or case, I guess) where robbery gets pleaded down to burglary so long as the accused swears never carry a weapon or whatever.
Then, when Gauge Grosskreutz, on video, tries to shoot Kyle Rittenhouse with a concealed weapon that he shouldn't be carrying as part of his sentencing agreement, the charges escalate.
It's not really hoplophobia or whatever to forbid someone who keeps hurting themselves or others by sticking their finger in outlets from being near outlets. More just straight up rational behavioral correction.
Gun ownership goes beyond simply “paying your debt” it includes demonstrating responsibility.
“A well regulated militia being necessary for the security of a free state”
Something that is well regulated demonstrates that it functions according to specifications. People need to demonstrate responsibility to enjoy gun ownership.
People who have committed a crime have demonstrated that they aren’t responsible. Different crimes should demand different demonstrations.
No violence, 5 years crime free before eligible.
Some violence, 10 years.
Initiated serious violence, 20 years.
Under what Article, section and clause does Congress get the authority to pass such legislation?
Surely tis is an infringement and thus not constitutional.
SCOTUS needs to make a sweeping ruling settling this issue once and for all!
Hate to pile on, but Jacob Sullum won't take yes for an answer. Trump and Bondi spent political capital not only to restore 2A rights to certain people, but to bypass the BATF/whatever it's called to allow rights to be restored in the first place.