East Bay Times

Justices to hear challenge to `ghost guns' limits

- By Adam Liptak

WASHINGTON >> The Supreme Court agreed Monday to hear a challenge to the Biden administra­tion's regulation of “ghost guns.”

In defending the rule, a critical part of President Joe Biden's effort to address gun violence, administra­tion officials said such weapons have soared in popularity, particular­ly among criminals barred from buying ordinary guns.

The regulation, issued in 2022 by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, broadened the bureau's interpreta­tion of the definition of “firearm” in the Gun Control Act of 1968.

The new regulation did not ban the sale or possession of kits and components that can be assembled to make guns, but it did require manufactur­ers and sellers to obtain licenses, mark their products with serial numbers and conduct background checks.

Gun owners, advocacy groups and companies that make or distribute the kits and components sued to challenge the regulation­s, saying that they were not authorized by the 1968 law, which defined firearms to include weapons that “may readily be converted to expel a projectile by the action of an explosive” and “the frame or receiver of any such weapon.”

Judge Reed O'Connor, of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, sided with the challenger­s and struck down the regulation in July, saying that “a weapon parts kit is not a firearm” and “that which may become or may be converted to a functional receiver is not itself a receiver.”

O'Connor, who was appointed by President George W. Bush, added: “Even if it is true that such an interpreta­tion creates loopholes that as a policy matter should be avoided, it is not the role of the judiciary to correct them. That is up to Congress.”

A three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in New Orleans, affirmed O'Connor's ruling. All three members of the panel were appointed by President Donald Trump.

“Because Congress has neither authorized the expansion of firearm regulation nor permitted the criminaliz­ation of previously lawful conduct,” Judge Kurt D. Engelhardt wrote for the panel, “the proposed rule constitute­s unlawful agency action, in direct contravent­ion of the legislatur­e's will.”

In urging the Supreme Court to hear the administra­tion's appeal in the case, Garland v. VanDerStok, No. 23-852, Solicitor General Elizabeth B. Prelogar said the appeals court's ruling would produce “a flood of untraceabl­e ghost guns into our nation's communitie­s, endangerin­g the public and thwarting law enforcemen­t efforts to solve violent crimes.”

A Supreme Court brief from some of the challenger­s in an earlier phase of the case said the comparison was flawed.

“A better analogy would be to a `taco kit' sold as a bundle by a grocery store that includes taco shells, seasoning packets, salsa and other toppings, along with a slab of raw beef,” the brief said. “No one would call the taco kit a taco. In addition to `assembly,' turning it into one would require cutting or grinding and cooking the meat — and until that was done, it would be nonsensica­l to treat it as food and the equivalent of a taco.”

In an unusual move, the challenger­s joined the administra­tion in urging the court to hear the case.

 ?? DAKOTA SANTIAGO — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? So-called “ghost guns” are displayed during an NYPD news conference in New York, in May of 2022.
DAKOTA SANTIAGO — THE NEW YORK TIMES So-called “ghost guns” are displayed during an NYPD news conference in New York, in May of 2022.

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