Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Court sets rehearing on bump stock ban

- KEVIN MCGILL

NEW ORLEANS — A legal challenge to the Trump administra­tion’s ban on bump stocks — devices attached to semiautoma­tic firearms so a shooter can fire multiple rounds with a single trigger pull — was revived Thursday by a federal appeals court.

A panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans had upheld the ban in December, affirming a ruling by a Texas-based federal judge. But an order issued Thursday stated that a majority of the 17-member court had voted to rehear the case.

The challenge was brought by a Texas gun owner and is backed by gun-rights groups including the National Rifle Associatio­n.

The 5th Circuit covers Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Texas. Three other circuit appeals courts have so far rejected challenges to the ban. The Supreme Court has been asked to take up the issue but had not said whether it will do so as of Thursday.

The ban was instituted in 2019 after a sniper in Las Vegas used bump stockequip­ped weapons in the massacre of dozens of concertgoe­rs in 2017.

The 5th Circuit order came on the same day the Supreme Court issued a ruling expanding gun rights, striking down a New York law and ruling that Americans have a Second Amendment right to carry firearms in public for self-defense.

At issue in the bump stock challenge was not the Second Amendment but whether bump stocks qualify as illegal “machine guns” under federal law. The rule banning the devices issued by the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives stated that they are.

According to the ATF, bump stocks harness the recoil energy of a semiautoma­tic firearm so that a trigger “resets and continues firing without additional physical manipulati­on of the trigger by the shooter.”

Opponents of the ATF rule argue that the trigger itself functions multiple times when a bump stock is used and that, therefore, they do not qualify as automatic weapons.

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