Gun Rights Groups Sue To Overturn Federal Weapons Registration
The case argues that, since the One Big Beautiful Bill Act eliminated taxes on the transfer of certain weapons, the constitutional basis for registering those weapons no longer exists.

A squad of Second Amendment rights organizations, including the Second Amendment Foundation, the National Rifle Association, and the Firearms Policy Coalition, along with some private citizen plaintiffs, think that new changes in government taxes on owning certain weapons create a chink in the legal armor of the federal weapon registration regime established in the 1934 National Firearms Act (NFA).
They have thus filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri against the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) and the Justice Department, seeking to end the registration requirements of that act.
Part of the recently passed "One Big Beautiful Bill Act," the suit notes, "eliminated the making and transfer taxes on suppressors, short-barreled rifles, short-barreled shotguns, and NFA-defined 'any other weapons,' while leaving the registration requirements intact. In other words, individuals no longer have to pay taxes for making and transferring most firearms under the NFA, but the firearms are still required to be registered."
There's the rub, the plaintiffs insist. They maintain that the only valid constitutional excuse for the registration was the taxes. Thus, constitutionally, with the taxes gone, the registration requirements also must go away.
As the suit puts it, with the taxes eliminated on items "including suppressors, short-barreled rifles, and short-barreled shotguns," the NFA registration requirement should now be seen as "unconstitutional as applied to those arms."
The Supreme Court, the filing shows, has in the past said outright that the legal defense of those NFA requirements lay in Congress' "enumerated power to 'lay and collect Taxes,'" and has held "that the NFA was 'only a taxing measure' and that the registration provisions were 'obviously supportable as in aid of a revenue purpose.'" (Those citations are from Sonzinsky v. United States [1937]). In 1968's Hayne v. U.S., to boot, the Supreme Court called the NFA "an interrelated statutory system for the taxation of certain classes of firearms."
The suit also points out that the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals has already ruled that the often overly malleable Commerce Clause doesn't support the registration requirements, citing the 1999 case United States v. Hall.
The suit explains why the plaintiffs are aggrieved by existing NFA registration requirements.
[They] value their personal privacy and do not want the federal government to obtain identifying information about their personally owned firearms, including information such as their names, home addresses, photographs, dates of birth, demographic information, fingerprints, and a detailed description of their firearms, including their quantity and physical locations. Federal law, however, currently requires that Individual Plaintiffs provide all of this intrusive personally identifying information to the federal government for them legally to make, transfer, or receive items defined and regulated as "firearms" under the NFA through its registration requirements. Individual Plaintiffs object to this burdensome registration requirement, which forces them to provide information to the federal government similar to that obtained from an individual arrested and charged with a crime.
The suit goes on to complain about the burden imposed by the ATF's lengthy approval process for purchases or transfers of regulated weapons. It details specific actions the individual plaintiffs want to take—such as transferring suppressors and short-barreled rifles—but are refraining from because they find the registration requirements too burdensome.
The suit also notes that one of its plaintiffs, Prime Protection STL Tactical Boutique, "is a Black-owned federally licensed firearms store in St. Louis County with
a primarily Black customer base….Prime Protection is licensed to sell NFA items
under the NFA. Despite being licensed to do so and offering them for sale, however, Prime Protection has not sold any NFA items because customers—and especially members of the Black community—do not wish to comply with the NFA's intrusive requirements."
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act did not eliminate the making or transfer tax on machine guns or "destructive devices" and thus those weapons would not be affected by the outcome of this suit. The suit spends a lot of time arguing that any restrictions on suppressors or short-barreled rifles do not meet the current standard of Second Amendment law as established in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, since they are not "consistent with this Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation" and that the objects in question are not "dangerous and unusual."
Most of the action in Second Amendment jurisprudence since 2008, when the Supreme Court established in the Heller case that the Second Amendment at the very least establishes a right to have commonly used weapons for self-defense in the home, has been about laws affecting gun ownership, carrying, and use. This new suit thus opens up a potential new frontier in rolling back laws that place restrictions on would-be weapon owners short of forbidding them to own or carry them.
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Always register your guns.
This way, it makes it easier for the government to confiscate them.
Whoa, hold on...I've been told for years gov't firearm registration is what keeps me safe. I'm not sure how that works, but they always have my best interests in mind.
Fascists will always try to suppress the freedoms of the people. Rifle through the comments to find who is for and who is against the inalienable right to bear arms.
I don't think you'll find the caliber of people here an adequate representation of those who understand the threat anti-2A folks target on their backs.
A lot of people muzzle themselves when they get triggered.
Really? It seems like they're always eager to slap in another mag to reload and double-down.
Hit the target on that one.
I'll take a shot here (reads comments). Looks like they're shooting blanks.
Cannon fodder just waiting to get picked off.
however, Prime Protection has not sold any NFA items because customers—and especially members of the Black community—do not wish to comply with the NFA's intrusive requirements
Also, pretty sure that ChatGPT wrote this article.
I hear Tranny Self Defense can't make a sale either. But that could be because their customers can't decide what gender to check on the form.
It gets really awkward when they're trying to decide, and then realize they have to use the bathroom and don't know which one to enter.
IANAL but I do have some questions.
Chief justice Roberts famously let Obamacare survive a challenge because its tax was a penalty, or vice versa (after a while, all this legal jargon melts together), therefore it survived. Memory says that penaltax it has was later reduced to 0 and there was some further kerfuffle.
Q1: Do courts distinguish between a $0 tax and no tax?
Q2: If the Supreme Court tosses this much of the NFA, could a future Congress restore the tax and restore the NFA?
Yes that would seem to be relevant case law. But the overriding issue is the effect this will have on the deficit. Reason libertarians love them some 2A but they love taxes more.
Q1. Courts tend to see through silly games. I think courts would consider $0 tax to be no tax at all and that there would be no justification to make people jump through hoops to comply with that tax.
Q2. If courts considered the status quo pre-BBB constitutional, certainly they would consider it to be constitutional once again.
That said, US v. Miller was decided wrong (hell, Miller didn't even show up at SCOTUS and nobody argued his side) and the 1934 NFA should have been struck down on the spot.
That's like in the game of Illuminati, is a group with 0 power the same as a group without power?
This seems like an opportunity for a sue and settle strategy. The lawyers ought to be talking to someone in the DOJ to get them on board.
I wonder why the bill didn’t remove the registration requirements. No I don’t.
The case argues that, since the One Big Beautiful Bill Act eliminated taxes on the transfer of certain weapons, the constitutional basis for registering those weapons no longer exists.
Um, what crazy red maga hat-wearing state do you all live in where you're allowed to even transfer a weapon, tax be damned?
Are you saying that you don’t own any guns?
I think that he lives in a state where you need a permit to receive a transferred firearm. Or, they may require that you buy it new?
Most of the country only requires for everyone that you have to go through a FFL for new firearms. Or, for handguns, if you are transferring over a state line.
Not the one you live in, I'm guessing. Don't most states allow private transfers to known parties?
There was never a Constitutional basis for registering any weapons.
There is if you only read the Cliff Notes.
“Congress shall have the power to promote the general welfare and regulate commerce.”
There you go. Unlimited power.
I had to write a check to close out my National Direct Student Loan for $00.00 to satisfy the final invoice for that amount. So a tax of $0 might still be a tax if so intended to be a tax of $0 rather than no tax at all.
Why do you hate due process?
"I had to write a check to close out my National Direct Student Loan for $00.00 to satisfy the final invoice for that amount."
Another sterling example of federal government insanity.
I predict that the Supreme Court - having made clear rulings to justify registration based on taxes in the past - will dodge the obvious implications by stating that the plaintiffs do not have standing to file in this case. Keep in mind that Supreme Court judges are EXPERTS at dodging loaded issues in order to maximize central government authority, even when us lesser mortals can see no logical way out of taking a stand. They will think of some extremely clever folderol, fancy footwork or bafflement with bullshit even if it takes a hundred pages of circumlocution to achieve it.
Yep. Their job is to protect government power while throwing us a bone once in a while.
Sometimes I wonder what a sober sarc would be like.
An oxymoron.
1934 National Firearms Act (NFA)?
Yet ANOTHER blatantly treasonous scam by FDR & [D] trifecta.
The people's law (US Constitution) literally put the 'Fed' in charge of ensuring the 2A-Liberty for the people against State Tyranny; not to do Federal Tyranny instead.
State's do inter-state citizen criminal control - not the 'Fed'. The Fed's only responsibility there is to ensure the privileges and immunities (14A) of citizens aren't trampled by that State control.
I swear the very basic structure of what the USA is has been entirely lost to the biggest [WE] mob RULES! 'Democracy' BS. (i.e. gang wars)
"since the One Big Beautiful Bill Act eliminated taxes on the transfer of certain weapons, the constitutional basis for registering those weapons no longer exists."
Yes, that was the fucking point. Reason could gain some credibility if they'd give republicans credit when it's due.
Except the bill originally got rid of it entirely, as I understand it, and the senate changed it to just zeroing out the tax. This is good, but not nearly as good as it should have been. Better to have clear legislation ending this nonsense than to have to go through the courts.
How about not registering for a draft that no longer exists?
Doherty, it's not a registration. It's a record of a tax paid. They are saying that since the tax brings in no revenue then there is no need to file the paperwork for a tax stamp.
Sure, that's the legal justification. But the effect is the same as a registration requirement.