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    Home » Blog » Supreme Court to decide if government can regulate ‘ghost guns’

    Supreme Court to decide if government can regulate ‘ghost guns’

    April 23, 2024Updated:April 23, 2024 US News No Comments
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    The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives will determine whether to govern so-called “ghost gun” products that can be put together to make a functioning weapons.

    A lower court decision that upheld a law intended to stop the packages, which allow a customer to purchase a firearm without a serial number to record and without a history test, was overturned by the Biden management.

    The U. S. The 2022 law, according to the Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, was outside the purview of the Gun Control Act of 1968, which allowed ATF to define a done “frame or device” as a rifle.

    The Biden administration claimed in the Supreme Court complaint that the 5th Circuit choice had encouraged gun dealers to prevent the background checks and record-keeping requirements that are typically required of firearm dealers.

    A typical English speaker may be aware that a company that sells kits that can be assembled into handguns in minutes and that are created, promoted, and used solely for that purpose is engaged in selling firearms, according to the complaint.

    The result of the 5th Circuit’s view “would get a flood of anonymous spirit weapons into our Nation’s areas, endangering the people and thwarting law-enforcement efforts to solve violent crimes, ” the Biden presidency wrote.

    The rule’s challengers, which includes weapons parts set makers, urged the justices to let the 5th Circuit determination to have. The group claimed that the ATF law exaggerated the law’s definition of “firearm.”

    “If that definition has become obsolete or unsatisfactory in any way, that is an issue for Congress to address, ” the challengers ’ brief said.

    The Supreme Court earlier ruled 5 to 4 that the presidency could carry on enforcing the law while the dispute was pending.

    The judges will decide the case by the end of the court’s following expression in June 2025 despite not setting a deadline for oral arguments in Monday’s order.

    Following the elementary school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, which resulted in the deaths of 19 students and teachers, the Democratic-controlled House passed legislation in 2022 on a largely party-line ballot.

    However, the last gun violence package, which contained some gun control measures, did not include those ghost gun provisions in it.

    The Supreme Court recently heard about the ghost gun law, which reportedly involves legal issues over concealed-carry regulations and a unique ATF law governing so-called “bump stocks,” which allow a rifle to imitate automatic flames.

    ___

    © 2024 CQ-Roll Call, Inc

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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