17 states join GOA/GOF and sue ATF’s new firearms rule on 80 percent/kits

Thank you for the detailed updates. I will go through Starbucks drive thru today, happy and carefree as a bird. After all, this is all free. Like gov programs, a unknown entity pays for it all. It comes from ''the stash''.....

Donate some cabbage$$ to these organizations fellas:thumbup:! The shotgun you (inevitably) save might very well be your own:)
 
Update to post #25 on Firearms Policy Coalition challenge to ATF's Final Rule on pistol braces Mock v Garland (ATF pistol brace rule) - https://www.thehighroad.org/index.php?threads/17-states-join-goa-gof-and-sue-atf’s-new-firearms-rule-on-80-percent-kits.908730/#post-12545537

Gun Owners of America (GOA) and the Gun Owners Foundation (GOF) jointly filed a lawsuit challenging the Biden Pistol Brace Ban with Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton for TX/GOA v ATF (ATF pistol brace rule) - https://www.gunowners.org/goa-and-texas-ag-paxton-file-suit-against-atf-pistol-brace-rule/
  • Lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas
  • Final Rule’s definition of “Rifle” was issued in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act’s Notice and Comment Requirement
  • "The Final Rule is contrary to statute and exceeds the authority granted by Congress ... Final Rule ... is an assertion of authority in excess of what was granted to ATF by statute"
  • Because ... firearms with stabilizing braces are protected “arms” regardless of whether they are GCA “pistols” or NFA “short-barreled rifles,” Defendants in either case bear the heavy burden of justifying the Final Rule’s regulation of protected arms by proffering a widespread pattern of identical or relevantly similar regulations from the time of the Second Amendment’s adoption
  • “the Second Amendment extends, prima facie, to all instruments that constitute bearable arms, even those that were not in existence at the time of the founding.” (Heller)
  • If a pistol itself is protected under Heller and Bruen, then the addition of a stabilizing brace does not deprive the pistol of Second Amendment protection
  • Pistols with stocks ... were never restricted with respect to who could possess them, and were never required to be registered until passage of the NFA. See Bruen (“[P]ostratification adoption or acceptance of laws that are inconsistent with the original meaning of the constitutional text obviously cannot overcome or alter that text.”)
  • Final Rule violates the Fifth Amendment’s protections against selfincrimination as at least 30 states – a majority of the country – where persons cannot comply with the Final Rule by registration, without incriminating themselves under both state and federal law
  • Under the APA, a court shall “hold unlawful and set aside agency action, findings, and conclusions found to be … arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with the law.”
  • Congress did not authorize ATF to, decades after the law was passed and at least a decade after the first stabilizing brace was permissively classified, reverse its longstanding policy, materially revise definitions, and alter the classification of millions of lawfullypurchased firearms to bring them under the NFA’s control.
  • Final Rule is in excess of the authority Congress granted ATF and is therefore in violation of the APA
  • The APA requires agency action be set aside if it is “contrary to constitutional right, power, privilege, or immunity.”
 
Update to post #27 on FPC case Mock v Garland (ATF pistol brace rule) and GOA/GOF/TX AG case TX/GOA v ATF (ATF pistol brace rule) - https://www.thehighroad.org/index.php?threads/17-states-join-goa-gof-and-sue-atf’s-new-firearms-rule-on-80-percent-kits.908730/page-2#post-12546278

Now, 25 states sue ATF over pistol-brace rule in FRAC v ATF (ATF pistol brace rule) filed by Firearms Regulatory Accountability Coalition - https://thenewamerican.com/twenty-five-states-sue-atf-over-pistol-brace-rule/
  • Lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western Division of North Dakota
  • AGs from 25 states filed a lawsuit stating ATF’s new rule is unconstitutional and violated the principle of separation of powers ... "The Separation of Powers clearly bars federal agencies from making new laws without Congressional directive.”
  • "Final Rule … represents an abrupt reversal of ATF’s longstanding position that these items are not subject to NFA controls … The agency charged with administering the NFA and GCA believed for years that pistols equipped with stabilizing braces are not subject to heightened regulation, and now holds the opposite"
  • "Without any legislative change, the President of the United States ordered ATF to abandon a decade of practice under an established statutory framework and 'to treat pistols modified with stabilizing braces' as 'subject to the National Firearms Act.'”
  • ATF must justify its incursion and infringement of the Second Amendment by demonstrating that it is consistent with the nation’s historical tradition. According to the high court in Bruen
 
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Adding to post #28 - FPC attorney discuss lawsuits against ATF regarding pistol brace - https://rumble.com/v297r2f-breaking...ifle-and-pistol-brace-rule-is-in-trouble.html
  • ATF's new rule published on 1/31/23 makes almost any pistol with "stabilizing brace" as SBR (Short barreled rifle) and subject to NFA restrictions
  • Two major lawsuits were filed one with Gun Owners of America (GOA)/Gun Owners Foundation (GOF) joined with Texas Attorney General for GOA/TX v ATF and 25 states' AGs joining FRAC/SB Tactical for FRAC v ATF (Lawsuit funded by NRA but NRA did not join the lawsuit as plaintiff)
  • (There is third lawsuit filed by Firearms Policy Coalition for Mock v Garland but not addressed by the video done by FPC attorney)
  • In the Final Rule, ATF expanded the regulatory definition of "rifle" so almost all pistols with "stabilizing brace" attached becomes SBR by adding the statement, "a weapon that is equipped with an accessory, component or other rearward attachment (i.e., a "stabilizing brace") that provides surface area that allows the weapon to be fired from the shoulder, provided other factors, which indicate that the weapon is designed, made, and intended to be fired from the shoulder."
  • This rule change caused millions of firearms to fall under the NFA's regulation of SBR

GOA/TX v ATF is seeking to find the rule change invalid:
  • Rule change is a violation of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) and the Second Amendment
  • ATF did not follow the proper procedure of APA as the Final Rule is significantly different from the Proposed Rule
  • The Proposed Rule centered around the worksheet 4999 but the published Final Rule scrapped the worksheet entirely and came up with a new and vaguer test to determine what is rifle and SBR
  • Such drastic change is not allowed under the APA
  • To be given "Chevron deference", agency's interpretation of an ambiguous statute must be "rational" or "reasonable"
  • Chevron deference and the Rule of Lenity - The "Rule of lenity" indicates that when dealing with criminal statutory interpretation a court is required to apply any unclear or ambiguous law in a way that is most favorable to the people not the enforcement agency
  • This argument has already been validated by the 5th Circuit for Cargill v ATF bump stocks case. "... The APA specifically sets forth standards by which courts must review agency actions - arbitrary and capricious, abuse of discretion, in excess of statutory authority, and so on ... The Final Rule promulgated by the ATF violates the APA" - https://www.nraila.org/articles/202...hat-congress-not-atf-declares-what-the-law-is
  • GOA argued "Contrary to ATF's position, criminal laws are for courts, not for the Government, to construe. If Congress wishes to criminalize braced pistols, it can amend the NFA to do so." "This preserves the separation of powers by ensuring legislatures, not executive officers, define crimes. But Congress has not done so, and ATF's sudden reversal violates the Rule of Lenity."

FRAC v ATF
  • Firearms Regulatory Accountability Coalition and SB Tactical are joined by WEST VIRGINIA, NORTH DAKOTA, ALABAMA, ALASKA, ARKANSAS, FLORIDA, GEORGIA, IDAHO, INDIANA, IOWA, KANSAS, KENTUCKY, LOUISIANA, MISSISSIPPI, MISSOURI, MONTANA, NEBRASKA, NEW HAMPSHIRE, OKLAHOMA, SOUTH CAROLINA, SOUTH DAKOTA, TENNESSEE, UTAH, VIRGINIA, and WYOMING
  • The Final Rule is an agency action that exceeds the ATF's statutory authority
  • The Final Rule regulates pistols and other firearms equipped with "stabilizing braces" even though the text and structure and history and purpose of NFA and GCA shows that the statute does not regulate such weapons
  • "At minimum, the statutes and Rule are grievously ambiguous as applied to "stabilizing braces", and thus the Adjudications violate the rule of lenity. The adjudications are invalid because they interpret the NFA and GCA in a way that encompasses millions of weapons - undoubtedly in common use - and thus raises grave constitutional doubts under the Second Amendment."
  • In Caetano v Mass., 30,000 stun guns made stun guns "in common use" for the purposes of the Second Amendment therefore protected by the text of the Second Amendment and this is important as there are 30, up to 100 million pistol braces in common use.
 
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Update to Morehouse/GOA/GOF v Garland (ATF redefinition of firearm) lawsuit that 17 states' AGs joined - https://www.thehighroad.org/index.php?threads/17-states-join-goa-gof-and-sue-atf’s-new-firearms-rule-on-80-percent-kits.908730/

FPC attorney discuss Morehouse/GOA/GOF v Garland - https://rumble.com/v29lecj-atf-stri...nd-restrict-framesreceivers-judge-disagr.html
  • GOA filed an appeal to the 8th Circuit
  • Case was originally filed in a district court in North Dakota and request was made for a preliminary injunction
  • District court judge Welte denied the request on the basis the Final Rule does not violate the 2A as purchase of 80% receiver now requires serialization of receiver under the Final Rule
  • Judge also noted the Supreme Court's Bruen ruling dealt with carry laws and did not applied to the Final Rule
  • GOA is requesting the 8th Circuit to reverse the district court ruling and hearing is set for March 14th by a 3 judge panel who are all Bush appointees
 
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Adding to post #29 regarding ATF's pistol brace rule - https://www.thehighroad.org/index.php?threads/17-states-join-goa-gof-and-sue-atf’s-new-firearms-rule-on-80-percent-kits.908730/page-2#post-12548001

Another federal lawsuit filed is set to have a decision by March 24.

FPC attorney discuss Watterson v ATF (ATF pistol brace rule) - https://rumble.com/v29p7ld-breaking...and-pistol-brace-rule-set-for-a-decision.html
  • Federal case is filed in Eastern District of Texas to challenge ATF's pistol brace rule
  • Plaintiff is making similar arguments as TX/GOA v ATF case alleging ATF is violating the APA, 2A and exceeding agency authority
  • Plaintiff is seeking to invalidate ATF's pistol brace rule and requesting preliminary injunction
  • Plaintiff is asking the court to expedite the case and make a ruling before the 60 days when ATF can start enforcement (compliance deadline is 120 days) or grant a preliminary injunction
  • Plaintiff is arguing ATF's pistol brace rule is violation of the APA and the Second Amendment and stated, "Not only does the Rule violate multiple provisions of the Constitution, but it also exceeds Defendant's statutory authority"
  • While referencing the Supreme Court's West Virginia v EPA ruling, "Moreover, Defendants made critical policy decisions regarding public safety and the right to keep and bear arms when issuing the Rule ... Although Congress was required to speak clearly here, it failed to do so. None of the provisions on which the Defendants rely, clearly give defendants the authority to decide to redefine "rifles" to include pistols equipped with stabilizing braces."
  • In WV v EPA, for extraordinary cases, agency like ATF must point to clear congressional authorization for the authority it claims. Regulation of pistol brace as SBR is of great political significance so ATF must show clear congressional authorization of their actions, which they cannot
  • Plaintiffs claim pistol brace rule is a clear violation of the Second Amendment, "History and tradition do not support the Rule's restrictions on a person's right to keep and bear arms ... ATF itself has estimated that between 3 and 7 million affected stabilizing braces have been sold from 2013 to 2020, and yet Defendants point to only two incidents where criminals used stabilizing braces in the Rule. This demonstrates that pistols with stabilizing braces are not unusual or dangerous and the overwhelming majority of pistols with stabilizing braces are being used for lawful purposes. Pistols with stabilizing braces are in common use by law-abiding citizens and fall squarely within the Second Amendment's bounds."
  • Plaintiffs finish by stating, "Moreover, there is no long standing historical tradition that justifies banning a pistol because it has a stabilizing brace or requiring a person to register a pistol due to a stabilizing brace."
  • The Court will issue an order on Plaintiff's Motion for Relief or Preliminary Injunction on or before March 24, 2023
 
FPC attorney discuss Paxton v Dettelbach/ATF (TX suppressor law v ATF) where Texas AG sued ATF regarding homemade suppressors made and kept in Texas - Link
  • Texas House Bill 957 exempted from federal regulations suppressors made in Texas and remain in Texas including registration and taxation requirements under the NFA
  • After HB 957 was signed into law, ATF sent out a letter threatening NFA and GCA regulations will be enforced against those buying/selling these suppressors made in TX
  • After ATF sent out the warning letter, TX AG Paxton filed a lawsuit against the ATF on behalf of the plaintiffs stating, "Federal regulation of these items that are made and stay within a state is not permitted since this law does not impact interstate commerce ... The federal regulation of these items by the ATF drastically impacts Second Amendment rights an allows an impermissible tax on a [Constitutional] right."
  • State of TX filed a second amended complaint after the Bruen ruling and ATF filed a Motion to Dismiss in response but the court denied the Motion to Dismiss
  • Court has set the case to be heard on a Summary Judgement Motion which can dissolve the dispute without a full trial taking place
  • State of TX filed the argument why the case should be dismissed under Summary Judgement and why made in TX suppressors do not fall under the NFA regulations - https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.txnd.359439/gov.uscourts.txnd.359439.46.1.pdf
  • TX argued, "Making a firearm suppressor for non-commercial, personal use is conduct covered by the Second Amendment. Although the NFA itself defines firearm suppressors as "firearms," whether a firearm suppressor is or is not an "arm" is not the issue. Firearm suppressors are attached to the barrel of firearms. When one keeps or bears arms with a firearm suppressor, one is exercising Second Amendment rights, just as when one keeps or bears arms with a trigger, or a detachable magazine, or a scope, one is exercising Second Amendment rights."
  • "Regulating firearm suppressors, triggers, detachable magazines, or scopes is regulating conduct falling within the scope of the Second Amendment's guarantee. Likewise, when one goes to a firing range, they are exercising Second Amendment rights, even though a firing range is not an arm."
  • "Moreover, in Bruen, the Court defined "arms" broadly to include modern instruments that facilitate armed self-defense. Previously, it recognized the historical inclusion of "armor of defense" within the definition of arms, showing the definition is not limited to completed firearms. And Bruen clarifies that the Second Amendment covers "conduct falling within the scope of the Second Amendment's guarantee," not just arms."
  • "Moreover, Defendants are not able to establish a historical tradition of prohibiting the making of firearms unless pre-approved by the government. No government attempted to regulate the making of firearms until 1968, when the NFA was amended. There were no American taxes on firearms in the 18th Century. The first federal tax on firearms was enacted in 1919, and the first federal tax on making firearms was enacted in 1968."
  • "Finally, Defendants are not able to establish an American 18th Century historical tradition of requiring that firearms be registered or have serial numbers. Those requirements first appeared in 1934."
  • Texas argued regulation of home-made firearms requiring registration, serializing and taxation did not start until 1960s that is not rooted in relevant history and tradition required by Bruen
 
Update to VanDerStok v Garland (ATF frame or receiver rule) - https://www.thehighroad.org/index.php?threads/17-states-join-goa-gof-and-sue-atf’s-new-firearms-rule-on-80-percent-kits.908730/#post-12542719

ATF faces another loss as SAF/Defense Distributed was granted limited preliminary injunction.


Judge Reed O’Connor of US District Court for the Northern District of Texas granted limited preliminary injunction to Tactical Machining and expanded to include customers, allowed Blackhawk Manufacturing Group, Inc./80 Percent Arms to join the lawsuit as plaintiff. Blackhawk Manufacturing Group, Inc./80 Percent Arms then filed for preliminary injunction protection including their customers and judge O'Connor granted same limited preliminary injunction protection as Tactical Machining and customers - https://www.thehighroad.org/index.php?threads/17-states-join-goa-gof-and-sue-atf’s-new-firearms-rule-on-80-percent-kits.908730/#post-12454007

In granting the preliminary injunction in November of 2022, judge stated (Page 5) - https://assets.nationbuilder.com/fi...and_118_Order_on_Blackhawk_MPI.pdf?1667493155

Rather than recite its previous analysis with respect to the interpretive claims verbatim, the Court incorporates by reference the reasoning in its First Opinion. To summarize: the Final Rule purports to regulate firearm parts—including incomplete, non-functional receivers and weapon parts kits—contrary to the plain language of the GCA, which confined ATF’s authority to regulation of “firearms,” a term clearly defined by the statute. Moreover, the Final Rule’s expanded definition of “frame or receiver” to include partially manufactured, non-functional receivers within the meaning of “firearms”—contrary to the GCA’s clear statutory definition—is facially unlawful.

In January of 2023, 5th Circuit ruled against ATF on Cargill v Garland bump stocks case where ATF violated APA requirements - https://www.nraila.org/articles/202...hat-congress-not-atf-declares-what-the-law-is

"... The APA specifically sets forth standards by which courts must review agency actions—arbitrary and capricious, abuse of discretion, in excess of statutory authority, and so on ... The Final Rule promulgated by the ATF violates the APA. We therefore REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND with instructions to enter judgment for Cargill." - https://nclalegal.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/5th-Cir-en-banc-opinion.pdf


Then in February of 2023, Second Amendment Foundation and Defense Distributed filed a Motion for Summary Judgement - https://www.thehighroad.org/index.php?threads/17-states-join-goa-gof-and-sue-atf’s-new-firearms-rule-on-80-percent-kits.908730/#post-12542719


Now SAF/Defense Distributed was granted limited preliminary injunction by judge O’Connor - https://thereload.com/federal-judge-expands-block-on-biden-ghost-gun-ban/

In granting the preliminary injunction, judge stated (Page 9) - https://www.saf.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/2023-03-02-Injunction.pdf

“... the Government’s likely ultra vires enforcement efforts upset decades of ATF regulatory precedent against a public that has relied on that historic posture” and “the liberty interests of law-abiding citizens wishing to engage in historically lawful conduct (dealing in now-regulated parts)—which Defense Distributed shares—outweighs the Government’s competing interest in preventing prohibited persons from unlawfully possessing firearms.

... Having considered the arguments, evidence, and applicable law, the Court holds that the relevant factors weigh in favor of expanding the current preliminary injunction to include Defense Distributed and, necessarily, its customers”
FPC attorney discuss VanDerStok v Garland and limited preliminary injunction - https://rumble.com/v2caz4j-atf-stri...nd-restrict-framesreceivers-by-federal-c.html
 
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ATF loses another preliminary injunction along with temporary restraining order (TRO) for Polymer80 v Garland (ATF redefinition of firearm).


Judge Reed O’Connor of US District Court for the Northern District of Texas has been busy:
  • Granted limited preliminary injunction to Tactical Machining
  • Expanded preliminary injunction to include customers
  • Allowed Blackhawk Manufacturing Group, Inc./80 Percent Arms to join the lawsuit as plaintiff.
  • Granted limited preliminary injunction to Blackhawk Manufacturing Group, Inc./80 Percent Arms including customers
  • Granted limited preliminary injunction to Second Amendment Foundation/Defense Distributed

And now, judge O'Connor granted preliminary injunction and temporary restraining order for Polymer80 Inc. - https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.txnd.371791/gov.uscourts.txnd.371791.27.0.pdf
  • a. Parts that may become receivers are not receivers ... Congress did not cover all weapon parts—only frames and receivers. And only the frames and receivers “of any such weapon” that Congress described in the primary definition ... The Final Rule’s redefinition of “frame or receiver” conflicts with the statute’s plain meaning. The definition of “firearm” in the Gun Control Act does not cover all firearm parts ... ATF’s new definition of “frame or receiver” in 27 C.F.R. § 478.12(c) is facially unlawful
  • b. A weapon parts kit is not a firearm ... the only firearm parts that fall under ATF’s purview are “the frame or receiver of any such weapon” that Congress defined as a firearm ... Congress’s definition does not cover weapon parts, or aggregations of weapon parts, regardless of whether the parts may be readily assembled into something that may fire a projectile ... The statutory context repeatedly confirms that Congress intentionally chose not to regulate “weapon” parts generally ... Final Rule— specifically, 27 C.F.R. §§ 478.11, 478.12(c)—exceeds the scope of ATF’s authority under the Gun Control Act.
  • Court GRANTS Plaintiff’s motion for ... a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction ... The Court ORDERS that Defendants and their officers, agents, servants, and employees are enjoined from implementing or enforcing against Polymer80, Inc. or its customers, in any manner, the provisions in 27 C.F.R. § 478.11 and 478.12 that this Court has determined are likely unlawful.
 
Update to Hardin v ATF (ATF bump stock ban).

Another blow to ATF "redefinition" of what firearm/machine gun is.

In January of 2023, 5th Circuit ruled against ATF on Cargill v Garland bump stocks case where ATF violated APA requirements - https://www.nraila.org/articles/202...hat-congress-not-atf-declares-what-the-law-is

"... The APA specifically sets forth standards by which courts must review agency actions—arbitrary and capricious, abuse of discretion, in excess of statutory authority, and so on ... The Final Rule promulgated by the ATF violates the APA. We therefore REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND with instructions to enter judgment for Cargill." - https://nclalegal.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/5th-Cir-en-banc-opinion.pdf
Now 6th Circuit ruled that ATF went beyond its legal authority when it banned bump stocks by classifying them as "machine gun" parts in 2017 - https://www.reuters.com/legal/gover...es-against-us-ban-gun-bump-stocks-2023-04-25/
  • 6th Circuit Judge Ronald Lee Gilman ... 1934 law must be interpreted according to the "rule of lenity," which requires ambiguity in a criminal statute to be resolved in criminal defendants' favor.
  • "Because the relevant statutory scheme does not clearly and unambiguously prohibit bump stocks, we are bound to construe the statute in Hardin's favor,"
  • Judge David McKeague joined in the opinion and judge John Bush concurred ... federal law was not ambiguous and clearly did not cover bump stocks.
 
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Saw a video of Biden recently holding up an 80% lower pistol, Polymer 80 red case in the background. The secret is out.

Wonder if he'll finish it?:rofl:
 
Huge development that could end ATF over reach.

The Supreme Court agreed to hear Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, a case which could see an end to Chevron deference, in which courts defer to a federal agency’s interpretation of an ambiguous statute - https://www.nationalreview.com/news...nd-of-judicial-deference-to-federal-agencies/
  • National Marine Fisheries Service regulation requires that herring fishing boats allow an additional person on board to serve as a monitor, tracking compliance with federal regulations. The monitor’s salary must be paid by the fishing company being monitored, reducing fishing profits in a business where margins are tight.
  • Loper Bright Enterprises and other fishing companies sued to challenge the rule, saying the Magnuson-Stevens Act doesn’t mention payment of the monitor, but the district court ruled against the industry.
  • “The Supreme Court has an opportunity to correct one of the most consequential judicial errors in a generation. Chevron deference has proven corrosive to the American system of checks and balances and directly contributed to an unaccountable executive branch, overbearing bureaucracy, and runaway regulation,” - Cause of Action Institute counsel Ryan Mulvey

FPC attorney discuss how Loper v. Raimondo case will affect ATF over reach cases - Supreme Court Grants Review Marking The End To ATF Power & Authority



FYI ...Hageman Accuses ATF Of Trying 'To Subvert The Authority Of Congress' With New Rule on pistol brace, bump stock ... (reference post - https://www.thehighroad.org/index.php?threads/17-states-join-goa-gof-and-sue-atf’s-new-firearms-rule-on-80-percent-kits.908730/page-2#post-12572466)

 
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And this from Politico regarding the Supreme Court agreeing to hear Loper v. Raimondo that could affect to end ATF's over reach in defining what is firearm/machine gun.

Supreme Court move could spell doom for power of federal regulators - https://news.yahoo.com/supreme-court-move-could-spell-172650246.html
  • Supreme Court ... taking up a case squarely aimed at killing off ... the precedent that has come to be known as Chevron deference: the principle that courts should defer to reasonable agency interpretations of ambiguous provisions in congressional statutes and judges should refrain from crafting their own reading of the laws.
  • Overturning the doctrine would have major implications for the Biden administration ... complicate ... efforts to tackle major issues ... via regulation ... The Supreme Court’s move is another signal that the court’s conservatives have not tired in their efforts to weaken the administrative state.
  • The Supreme Court’s decision to hear the fishing case ... indicates that at least four justices wanted to grant review — and that those who want to overturn Chevron feel they may now have five votes to do so.
  • Several justices have railed against Chevron in recent years ... Justice Clarence Thomas wrote in 2020 that “Chevron is in serious tension with the Constitution"
  • The Supreme Court in recent years has moved away from Chevron ... In the past six years, agencies lost 70 percent of Supreme Court cases that addressed Chevron ... the high court increasingly "has been applying the rules of statutory interpretation even more closely," ... That includes last year's ruling in West Virginia v. EPA, which strengthened and for the first time named the "major questions" doctrine as a way to strike down regulations.
  • West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey, who led a coalition of red states ... "Congress should pass laws, judges should construe them, and unelected bureaucrats should stick to their job of just implementing those laws—not rewriting them"
 
Update to Mock v Garland (ATF pistol brace rule) - https://www.thehighroad.org/index.php?threads/17-states-join-goa-gof-and-sue-atf’s-new-firearms-rule-on-80-percent-kits.908730/page-2#post-12548001

BREAKING: Fifth Circuit Issues Injunction on ATF Pistol Stabilizing Brace Ban - https://www.firearmspolicy.org/fpc-...le-will-seek-clarification-on-scope-of-ruling

5/23/23 - Firearms Policy Coalition (FPC) released a statement on the Fifth Circuit’s Order granting an Injunction Pending Appeal in Mock v. Garland, FPC and FPC Action Foundation’s federal lawsuit challenging the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives’ (ATF’s) recent rule reclassifying braced pistols as National Firearms Act (NFA)-regulated short-barreled rifles

Injunction pdf - https://assets.nationbuilder.com/fi..._for_Injunction_Pending_Appeal.pdf?1684857978

FPC challenged ATF’s administrative rule that seeks to reclassify “braced pistols” as “short-barreled rifles.” In so doing, the rule would transform millions of peaceable people into felons overnight simply for owning a firearm that has been lawful to own for a decade, unless they either destroy their constitutionally protected property or comply with the NFA’s onerous and unconstitutional requirements.

FPC has argued that the rule is a violation of both the U.S. Constitution and the Administrative Procedure Act because it infringes upon the fundamental and natural rights of the People. Plaintiffs sought declaratory and injunctive relief to secure their constitutionally protected right to keep and bear arms.

Per the the Fifth Circuit’s Order, “IT IS ORDERED that the appeal is EXPEDITED to the next available Oral Argument Calendar. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Appellants’ Opposed Motion For a Preliminary Injunction Pending Appeal is GRANTED as to the Plaintiffs in this case.”

FPC intends to seek clarification as to who is covered under the scope of the injunction.

“We are very excited and encouraged by the Fifth Circuit's decision this morning," said Cody J. Wisniewski, Senior Attorney for Constitutional Litigation at FPC Action Foundation. "We intend to ask the Court for additional information about who is covered under the injunction, but cannot stress enough just how important this decision is. The fight is far from over, but this is a huge victory in the battle against the ATF's unconstitutional and unlawful brace rule!"​
 
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Attorney who worked with FPC discuss today's 5th Circuit issued injunction for Mock v Garland on ATF Pistol Stabilizing Brace rule:
 
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LiveLife was being sarcastic with this wisecrack:



Despite the seriousness of the matter, this whole discussion could be considered amusing as we watch the BATF chase its own tail.

But that bolded part by LiveLife really broke me up. I can almost see a whole new set of rules, proposals, "technical corrections," and tail-chasing over what constitutes "selling them separately."

Second floor of the building?

Around the corner at the gas station?

Ten or fifteen or twenty minutes between the sales? The next day?

ROFL

Terry, 230RN

Logically, a separate Company unattached physically or corporately to the first would be unassailiable legally.
 
Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer, just a layperson posting on THR. :)

THANK YOU JUSTICE THOMAS!! :cool::p
Yes! :D

And we are seeing history in the making as the Supreme Court is looking to end Chevron deference that could end executive agency/ATF overreach - https://www.thehighroad.org/index.p...n-80-percent-kits.908730/page-2#post-12617217

“The Supreme Court has an opportunity to correct one of the most consequential judicial errors in a generation. Chevron deference has proven corrosive to the American system of checks and balances and directly contributed to an unaccountable executive branch, overbearing bureaucracy, and runaway regulation,” - Cause of Action Institute counsel Ryan Mulvey​

Even Politico agrees :eek: - https://www.thehighroad.org/index.p...n-80-percent-kits.908730/page-2#post-12617997

Supreme Court move could spell doom for power of federal regulators ... taking up a case squarely aimed at killing off ... the precedent that has come to be known as Chevron deference: the principle that courts should defer to reasonable agency interpretations of ambiguous provisions in congressional statutes and judges should refrain from crafting their own reading of the laws ... Overturning the doctrine... Supreme Court’s move is another signal that the court’s [Originalists] have not tired in their efforts to weaken the administrative state.

... The Supreme Court in recent years has moved away from Chevron ... In the past six years, agencies lost 70 percent of Supreme Court cases that addressed Chevron ... That includes last year's ruling in West Virginia v. EPA, which strengthened and for the first time named the "major questions" doctrine as a way to strike down regulations.

West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey, who led a coalition of red states ... "Congress should pass laws, judges should construe them, and unelected bureaucrats should stick to their job of just implementing those laws—not rewriting them" :rofl::neener:


And just as the Supreme Court made history last year with Bruen ruling eliminating the "two step" approach and now mandating the "text and history" only approach for Second Amendment cases along with justice Thomas stating the "Second Amendment is not a second class right", we may see Supreme Court making history again for Loper v. Raimondo based on words justice Thomas wrote for Baldwin v US specific to Administrative Procedure Act (APA) to end Chevron deference and executive agency/ATF overreach - https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/19pdf/19-402_o75p.pdf

... “the judicial power, as originally understood, requires a court to exercise its independent judgment in interpreting and expounding upon the laws.” ... The Framers anticipated that legal texts would sometimes be ambiguous, and they understood the judicial power “to include the power to resolve these ambiguities over time” in judicial proceedings

... Chevron also gives federal agencies unconstitutional power. Executive agencies enjoy only “the executive Power.” ... But when they receive Chevron deference, they arguably exercise “[t]he judicial Power of the United States,” which is vested in the courts. Chevron cannot be salvaged by saying instead that agencies are “engaged in the ‘formulation of policy.’” ... If that is true, then agencies are unconstitutionally exercising “legislative Powers” vested in Congress.

... This apparent abdication by the Judiciary and usurpation by the Executive is not a harmless transfer of power. The Constitution carefully imposes structural constraints on all three branches, and the exercise of power free of those accompanying restraints subverts the design of the Constitution’s ratifiers. The Constitution shielded judges from both the “external threats” of politics and “the ‘internal threat’ of ‘human will’” by providing tenure and salary protections

The Constitution also restricted the legislative power by dividing it between two Houses that check each other, one of which was kept close to the people through biennial elections ... When the Executive exercises judicial or legislative power, however, it does so largely free of these safeguards. The Executive is not insulated from external threats, and it is by definition an agent of will, not judgment [Maybe swayed by campaign donors/special interests]. The Executive also faces election less frequently than do Members of the House, and its power is vested in a single person. Perhaps worst of all, Chevron deference undermines the ability of the Judiciary to perform its checking function on the other branches.

The Founders expected that the Federal Government’s powers would remain separated—and the people’s liberty secure—only if the branches could check each other ... When the Executive is free to dictate the outcome of cases through erroneous interpretations, the courts cannot check the Executive by applying the correct interpretation of the law. Chevron deference appears to be inappropriate in many cases for another reason: It is likely contrary to the APA, “which [Chevron] did not even bother to cite.” The APA provides that, “[t]o the extent necessary to decision and when presented, the reviewing court shall decide all relevant questions of law, interpret constitutional and statutory provisions, and determine the meaning or applicability of the terms of an agency action.”

... When the APA was enacted, the meaning of a statute was considered a question of law ... “places the court’s duty to interpret statutes on an equal footing with its duty to interpret the Constitution, and courts never defer to agencies in reading the Constitution.” ... Finally, the deferential standards of review elsewhere in the APA—which require courts to “hold unlawful and set aside agency action, findings, and conclusions found to be . . . arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion ..."

... Chevron requires judges to surrender their independent judgment to the will of the Executive ... Chevron transfers power to agencies ... gives agencies the power to effectively overrule judicial precedents. Chevron withdraws a crucial check on the Executive from the separation of powers ... gives the Executive the ability to neutralize a previously exercised check by the Judiciary.

... Under its rule of deference, agencies are free to invent new (purported) interpretations of statutes ... Chevron ... poignantly lays bare the flaws of our entire executive-deference jurisprudence
 
Wow, I can just see and anticipate the Supreme Court ending Chevron deference with Loper v. Raimondo case which means the end of executive agency/ATF overreach ;) (See previous post regarding the Supreme Court making history with taking another Chevron deference case with justice Thomas writing laying the groundworks to end executive agency overreach like ATF's rules on bump stock, pistol brace, etc.)

And just yesterday, 5th Circuit granted preliminary injunction for Mock v Garland case which clearly argued for ATF violating APA (Which is violation of the Constitution), ATF exercising law making powers not authorized by Congress, ATF failing to consider Heller, Caetano, Bruen rulings and not engaged in court-mandated text and history analysis - https://www.thehighroad.org/index.p...in-light-of-bruen.916923/page-3#post-12631025
  • "Final Rule ... promulgated (published) by ... [ATF] to regulate 'braced pistols' as 'short-barreled rifles' ... violate the Administrative Procedure Act (APA)"
  • "Final Rule, by re-writing and significantly expanding the definition of 'rifle,' exercised legislative powers. A violation of the Constitution is always a violation of the APA. Thus, agencies violate the APA by exercising legislative powers."
  • "Final Rule is not merely a regulatory change that allows the Agencies to enforce the NFA and GCA. The Final Rule would give the Agencies new power over new items that are not contemplated nor regulated under federal law. This rulemaking constitutes an executive branch agency making new law, bearing potential criminal penalties, in violation of the Delegation Doctrine as established by the structure of the U.S. Constitution and elucidated by the U.S. Supreme Court."
  • "The Supreme Court has 'reaffirm[ed] the core administrative-law principle that an agency may not rewrite clear statutory terms to suit its own sense of how the statute should operate.' (Utility Air Regulatory Group v EPA)"
  • "Final Rule fails to adequately consider the Supreme Court’s opinions in Heller, Caetano, and Bruen ... [ATF] should have engaged in the court-mandated text and history analysis."
 
Update to Mock v Garland - https://www.firearmspolicy.org/mock

5/24/23: CASE CALENDARED for oral argument on Thursday, 06/29/2023 at 10:00 am in the En Banc Courtroom in the Wisdom Courthouse in New Orleans.
FPC intends to seek clarification as to who is covered under the scope of the injunction.
Waiting on the clarification as to who are covered by the preliminary injunction.
 
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BTW, in case nobody has said it recently, thank you very much for these timely updates, much appreciated.
Thanks and you are very welcome.

I am glad we have gotten very favorable rulings from 5th and 6th Circuit for bump stock and pistol brace along with district courts recently! :D:thumbup:

And eagerly hope for Supreme Court ending Chevron deference for Loper v. Raimondo case to end executive agency/ATF overreach next.
 
More good news that could help end executive agency/ATF overreach.

Today, in 9 - 0 unanimous decision, the US Supreme Court ruled against EPA again in Sackett v. EPA after last year's ruling against EPA in WV v EPA - https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/22pdf/21-454_4g15.pdf

... EPA’s interpretation is inconsistent with the CWA’s [Clean Water Act] text and structure and clashes with “background principles of construction” that apply to the interpretation of the relevant provisions ... EPA must provide clear evidence that it is authorized to regulate in the manner it proposes. (Page 23)

First, “exceedingly clear language” is required if Congress wishes to alter the federal/state balance or the Government’s power over private property. The Court has thus required a clear statement from Congress when determining the scope of “the waters of the United States.”

Second, the EPA’s interpretation gives rise to serious vagueness concerns in light of the CWA’s criminal penalties, thus implicating the due process requirement that penal statutes be defined “ ‘with sufficient definiteness that ordinary people can understand what conduct is prohibited.’ ” Where penal statutes could sweep broadly enough to render criminal a host of what might otherwise be considered ordinary activities, the Court has been wary about going beyond what “Congress certainly intended the statute to cover.”

Under these two background principles, the judicial task when interpreting “the waters of the United States” is to ascertain whether clear congressional authorization exists for the EPA’s claimed power. The EPA’s interpretation falls far short of that standard. (Page 25)

We reverse the judgment of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. It is so ordered. (Page 28)
Attorney who worked for FPC discuss today's ruling related to 2A

 
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Another federal court issued a preliminary injunction against ATF pistol brace rule following 5th Circuit issue of injunction for Mock v Garland - https://www.thehighroad.org/index.p...n-80-percent-kits.908730/page-2#post-12633434

SAF v ATF - SAF wins preliminary injunction in arm brace rule challenge - https://www.saf.org/saf-wins-preliminary-injunction-in-arm-brace-rule-challenge/

A federal judge in Texas has issued a preliminary injunction in a Second Amendment Foundation challenge to the Biden administration’s new “Arm Brace Rule,” granting in part our motion. The case is known as SAF, et.al. v. ATF, et. al.

SAF is joined in the case by Rainier Arms, LLC and two private citizens, Samuel Walley and William Green. They are represented by attorney Chad Flores at Flores Law in Houston, Texas.

Defendants are the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) and Director Steve Dettelbach, the Department of Justice and Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. The complaint was filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division.

In her ruling, U.S. District Judge Jane J. Boyle writes, “The Court grants in part the Motion and issues a preliminary injunction as to Plaintiffs in this case only, pending resolution of the expedited appeal in Mock v. Garland, No. 23-10319 (5th Cir.). Upon resolution of the appeal in Mock, the Court will address the remaining relief Plaintiffs request in their Motion. If necessary, the Court will order additional briefing at that time.”

“This is a significant win,” said SAF founder and Executive Vice President Alan M. Gottlieb. “When Joe Biden took office, he immediately began weaponizing the ATF, and this new pistol brace rule is a result of that strategy. It amounts to a dramatic shift in policy, and leads us to conclude the administration is moving to change the definition of pistols fitted with these braces to be ‘rifles,’ and thus subject to the National Firearms Act. In the process, they’re turning millions of law-abiding citizens into criminals. We can’t allow that without a fight.”

“We are pleased that the Court has preliminarily enjoined ATF’s brace ban before the effective date,” said SAF Executive Director Adam Kraut. “SAF will continue to aggressively litigate this issue to prevent the erosion of constitutional rights and prevent administrative agencies from overstepping their authority.”​
 
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