Boston Herald

Trump plan to ban bump stocks will likely lead to legal battle

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WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion said yesterday it has taken the first step in the regulatory process to ban bump stocks, likely setting the stage for long legal battles with gun manufactur­ers while the trigger devices remain on the market.

The move was expected after President Trump ordered the Justice Department to work toward a ban following the shooting deaths of 17 people at a Florida high school in February. Bump stocks, which enable guns to fire like automatic weapons, were not used in that attack — they were used in last year’s Las Vegas massacre — but have since become a focal point in the gun-control debate.

The Justice Department’s regulation would classify the hardware as a machine gun banned under federal law. That would reverse a 2010 decision by the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives that found bump stocks did not amount to machine guns and could not be regulated unless Congress amended existing firearms law or passed a new one.

A reversal of the department’s earlier evaluation could be seen as an admission that it was legally flawed, which manufactur­ers could seize on in court. Even as the Trump administra­tion moves toward banning the devices, some ATF officials believe it lacks the authority to do so.

But any congressio­nal effort to create new guncontrol laws would need support from the pro-gun Republican majority. A bid to ban the accessory fizzled last year, even as lawmakers expressed openness to the idea after nearly 60 people were gunned down in Las Vegas.

Some states have sought their own restrictio­ns in light of the inaction. A ban on bump stocks was part of a far-reaching school safety bill signed by Florida Gov. Rick Scott, a Republican, on Friday that was immediatel­y met with a lawsuit by the National Rifle Associatio­n. The powerful group has said it supports ATF regulation­s on the accessory but opposes any legislatio­n that would do the same. The NRA did not immediatel­y return calls for comment yesterday.

Calls mounted for a bump stock ban after the Las Vegas shooting, and the Justice Department said in December it would again review whether they can be prohibited under federal law. Trump told officials to expedite the review, which yielded more than 100,000 comments from the public and the firearms industry. Many of the comments came from gun owners angry over any attempt to regulate the accessory, a move they view as a slippery slope toward outlawing guns altogether.

The proposal still needs the approval of the Office of Management and Budget.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? TRIGGERING DEBATE: A bump stock, as seen here on an AR-15 rifle, uses the recoil of the gun to let the finger ‘bump’ the trigger.
AP FILE PHOTO TRIGGERING DEBATE: A bump stock, as seen here on an AR-15 rifle, uses the recoil of the gun to let the finger ‘bump’ the trigger.

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