Current:Home > NewsJohnathan Walker:Supreme Court agrees to hear case over ban on bump stocks for firearms -GrowthInsight
Johnathan Walker:Supreme Court agrees to hear case over ban on bump stocks for firearms
Fastexy Exchange View
Date:2025-04-08 15:15:01
Washington — The Johnathan WalkerSupreme Court on Friday said it will consider a challenge to a Trump-era regulation that bans so-called "bump stocks," a firearms modification that increases the rate of fire of semi-automatic rifles.
In a brief unsigned order, the court agreed to decide the case, known as Garland v. Cargill. There were no noted dissents. The justices also took up a case involving the National Rifle Association, and a third dispute related to arbitration agreements.
At the center of the legal battle over bump stocks is a rule from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, or ATF, issued in 2018 that expanded the definition of "machine gun" prohibited under the National Firearms Act to include bump stocks. Any person found with the device would be subject to a felony.
The ban arose after a gunman used semi-automatic weapons outfitted with bump stock devices in a 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas that killed 58 people and injured more than 500. The devices allowed the shooter to fire "several hundred rounds of ammunition" into the crowd that were attending a concert. It was the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history.
The legal fight over the bump stock ban
Michael Cargill, the man who brought the case now before the court, bought two bump stocks in April 2018, before the ATF issued its final rule outlawing them, but turned in the devices in March 2019 after the ban went into effect. That same day, he filed a lawsuit in federal district court in Texas challenging the ban on numerous grounds.
The district court sided with the federal government and determined that bump stocks allow more than one shot to be fired by a single pull of the trigger. It also found that a bump stock creates a weapon that fires more than one shot "automatically" because the device is a self-acting mechanism that enables continuous fire.
A three-judge appeals court panel agreed with the district court's conclusion that bump stocks qualify as machine guns under federal law. But the full U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit reversed the panel's decision under a legal principle that requires the court to side with the challenger when a law is ambiguous. After determining that the National Firearms Act is ambiguous in two areas, the 5th Circuit concluded that a non-mechanical bump stock is not a machine gun under the law.
The Biden administration asked the Supreme Court to take up the dispute over the bump stock ban in April, arguing that ATF's rule didn't change the scope of the prohibition on machine guns and instead was a means of informing the public of the agency's view that bump stocks are machine guns.
"Bump stocks allow a shooter to fire hundreds of bullets a minute by a single pull of the trigger. Like other machine guns, rifles modified with bump stocks are exceedingly dangerous; Congress prohibited the possession of such weapons for good reason," the Justice Department told the Supreme Court in a filing. "The decision below contradicts the best interpretation of the statute, creates an acknowledged circuit conflict, and threatens significant harm to public safety."
The Biden administration told the court that the 5th Circuit's decision conflicts with others from at least three appellate courts, all of which rejected challenges to the bump stock ban. The Supreme Court, too, has turned away disputes over the rule and has declined to stop its enforcement.
If allowed to stand, Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar warned that the consequences of the lower court's ruling will likely "reverberate nationwide," and "is likely to mean that manufacturers within the Fifth Circuit will be able to make and sell bump stocks to individuals without background checks and without registering or serializing the devices."
"Given the nationwide traffic in firearms, there is little reason to believe that such devices will remain confined to the Fifth Circuit," she added.
Lawyers for Cargill are also urging the Supreme Court to take up the challenge to ATF's bump stock ban, arguing that the definition of machine gun under federal law is an issue "that affects many Americans."
Americans bought 520,000 bump stocks during a nine-year span when they were legal, and the new prohibition requires them to be surrendered or destroyed, Cargill's attorneys said in a filing.
"Despite ATF's previous assurances that federal law permitted possession of a bump stock, the Final Rule now brands as criminals all those who ever possessed a bump stock," the lawyers wrote.
veryGood! (884)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Ethics agency says Delaware officials improperly paid employees to care for seized farm animals
- Matthew Perry Got Chandler’s Cheating Storyline Removed From Friends
- Body cam video shows girl rescued from compartment hidden in Arkansas home's closet
- Big Lots store closures could exceed 300 nationwide, discount chain reveals in filing
- Starbucks to raise baristas' hourly wages starting in January
- New Mexico St lawsuit alleges guns were often present in locker room
- Bronny James in attendance for USC opener in Las Vegas, and LeBron James hopes for a comeback
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Video shows forklift suspending car 20 feet in air to stop theft suspect at Ohio car lot
Ranking
- Police remove gator from pool in North Carolina town: Watch video of 'arrest'
- Rhode Island could elect its first Black representative to Congress
- 'Tiger King' star pleads guilty to conspiring to money laundering, breaking federal law
- Law and order and the economy are focus of the British government’s King’s Speech
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- One of Virginia’s key election battlegrounds involves a candidate who endured sex scandal
- Hezbollah and Hamas’ military wings in Lebanon exchange fire with Israel. Tension rises along border
- Kenya declares a surprise public holiday for a national campaign to plant 15 billion trees
Recommendation
Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
Daniel Jones injury updates: Giants QB out for season with torn ACL
Michigan State men's basketball upset at home by James Madison in season opener
Cardinals QB Kyler Murray in line to be activated and start Sunday vs. Falcons
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
Live updates | Netanyahu says Israel will have ‘overall security responsibility’ in Gaza after war
German federal court denies 2 seriously ill men direct access to lethal drug dose
Alabama playoff-bound? Now or never for Penn State? Week 10 college football overreactions