Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

High court to rule on bump stock ban

Shooting sparked disputed regulation

- MARK SHERMAN

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court agreed Friday to decide whether a Trumpera ban on bump stocks, the gun attachment­s that allow semi-automatic weapons to fire rapidly like machine guns, violates federal law.

The justices will hear arguments early next year over a regulation put in place by the Justice Department after a mass shooting in Las Vegas in 2017.

Federal appeals courts have come to different decisions about whether the regulation defining a bump stock as a machine gun comports with federal law.

The justices said they will review the Biden administra­tion’s appeal of a ruling by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans that invalidate­d the ban.

The Supreme Court already is weighing a challenge to another federal law that seeks to keep guns away from people under domestic violence restrainin­g orders, a case that stems from the landmark decision in 2022 in which the six-justice conservati­ve majority expanded gun rights.

The new case is not about the Second Amendment right to “keep and bear arms” but rather whether the Trump administra­tion followed federal law in changing the bump stock regulation.

The ban on bump stocks took effect in 2019. It stemmed from the Las Vegas shooting in which the gunman, a 64-yearold retired postal service worker and high-stakes gambler, used semi-automatic rifles to fire more than 1,000 rounds in 11 minutes into a crowd of 22,000 music fans.

Most of the rifles were fitted with bump stock devices and high-capacity magazines. A total of 58 people were killed in the shooting and two died later. Hundreds were injured.

The Trump administra­tion’s ban on bump stocks was an about-face for the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. In 2010, under the Obama administra­tion, the agency found that a bump stock should not be classified as a machine gun and therefore should not be banned under federal law.

Following the Las Vegas shooting, officials revisited that determinat­ion and found it incorrect.

Bump stocks harness the recoil energy of a semi-automatic firearm so that a trigger “resets and continues firing without additional physical manipulati­on of the trigger by the shooter,” according to the ATF.

A shooter must maintain constant forward pressure on the weapon with the nonshootin­g hand and constant pressure on the trigger with the trigger finger, according to court records.

The full U.S. 5th Circuit ruled 13-3 in January that Congress would have to change federal law to ban bump stocks.

But a panel of three judges on the federal appeals court in Washington looked at the same language and came to a different conclusion.

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