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71 Million Americans May have to Report Gun Buys to Feds
opposingviews.com ^ | 31 May, 2011 | Chris W. Cox

Posted on 06/02/2011 7:15:24 AM PDT by marktwain

If you’re one of the nearly 71 million Americans who live in the four southwest border states, some of your gun purchases could soon be reported to the federal government. If you don’t like that—and no gun owner should—read on, because this may be our first big head-on gun control battle against the Obama administration.

The fight began with a bureaucratically worded “Emergency Notice of Information Collection Under Review,” published in the Dec. 17 “Federal Register”—the daily publication where all proposed federal rules make their debut. It announced that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives plans to require federal firearms licensees in the border states to begin reporting all transfers “of two or more rifles within any five consecutive business days with the following characteristics: (a) Semi automatic; (b) a caliber greater than .22; and (c) the ability to accept a detachable magazine.”

In other words, a dealer would have to tell the government every time a deer hunter in Sacramento or Amarillo finds a good deal on a pair of semi-auto .30-06s like the popular Remington 7400.

Some might ask, “Aren’t multiple rifle sales already reported?” The answer is a definite “No.” For many years, Congress has required dealers to report multiple sales of handguns—and only of handguns. According to one of the basic rules for interpreting laws, when the legislature specifies one thing, it excludes everything else. (This is the same principle your parents applied when they said you could have only a cookie, even if there were also cupcakes and pies on the table.)

For months now, anti-gun activists, members of the media and federal bureaucrats have been urging the BATFE to ignore this principle.

As we’ve reported before (See “End Run,” Feb. 2011), the drumbeat began with New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s group, Mayors Against Illegal Guns, and its “Blueprint for Federal Action on Illegal Guns.” That document was an agenda of 40 ways for the Obama administration to impose new restrictions on gun owners and the gun industry, without bothering to go to Congress.

The “Blueprint” urged the BATFE to “identify the long guns most linked to crime and require dealers to report multiple sales of such guns.” MAIG, of course, is falsely assuming that when a particular type of gun is frequently traced, that must mean the gun is frequently used in crime. That’s a lie heard nearly every day in the gun control debate, despite repeated warnings from the Congressional Research Service and the BATFE itself that tracing is designed to find the source of specific guns, not to collect statistics. (For more information, see “Traces of Truth,” Dec. 2010.)

The push for multiple sales reporting continued with a pair of reports by the Department of Justice’s Inspector General this year. First, a draft report in September noted that multiple sales reports on rifles would have been useful for investigations of supposed gun trafficking to Mexico. While the September draft made no specific recommendations, a final report issued in November urged the BATFE to require multiple sales reports on long guns. The Inspector General recommended that the BATFE “work with the Department [of Justice] to explore options for seeking a requirement for reporting multiple sales of long guns.” The bureau responded that it “concurs” in the recommendation “but notes that this may require a change to the Gun Control Act which is beyond ATF’s and the Department’s authority.”

But there’s a twist. According to the latest installment in the Washington Post‘s months-long “Hidden Life of Guns” series, the BATFE itself had already recommended a reporting requirement last spring, months before the Inspector General’s recommendation. The policy, according to the Post, was held up by then-White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel because it would energize gun owners before the midterm elections.

If that’s true—and we certainly don’t always believe the Post—it was a cynical move by Emanuel, a longtime ally of the anti-gun groups. But it would definitely be consistent; after all, President Obama also waited until after the elections to nominate Andrew Traver, another official with long ties to gun-ban activists, as director of the BATFE.

All this maneuvering aside, how can the BATFE try to require something the Congress never authorized?

Showing why it’s now the greatest organized threat to our Second Amendment rights, Mayor Bloomberg’s MAIG pointed the way. MAIG’s “Blueprint” suggested that the new multiple sales reports could be required through “demand letters.” These are letters sent to dealers by the BATFE. According to the provision of the Gun Control Act that authorizes these letters, dealers must submit “all record information required to be kept [under the Gun Control Act] or such lesser record information as the Attorney General in such letter may specify.”

That sounds like an incredibly broad license for anything up to total gun registration based on dealers’ records. But Congress has passed many protections against gun registration, including the Firearms Owners’ Protection Act’s ban on new rules or regulations that would require dealers’ records “to be recorded at or transferred to a facility owned, managed, or controlled by the United States.”

So what does the law really allow? A quick look at history answers that question. The original demand letter provision was a regulation adopted in 1968, under the original Gun Control Act, and added to the U.S. Code in 1986. Back in 1968, Harold Serr, the director of the Treasury Department’s Alcohol and Tobacco Tax Division (the precursor of today’s BATFE) wrote to U.S. Sen. Frank Church of Idaho that “under no circumstances does the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax Division intend to require licensed firearms dealers to submit all records of firearms transactions to a central location. This would be in effect gun registration and the Congress clearly showed its desires in this area when gun legislation was voted on.”

Instead, the demand letter provision was to be used for examining dealers’ records in the course of a criminal investigation, or for tracing guns—two activities that are authorized by other provisions today.

More recently, demand letters have been used for other limited purposes. For example, the BATFE uses this provision to compile annual statistical reports on how many firearms are made and exported by each gun manufacturer. And in 1994, when certain shotguns were reclassified as “destructive devices” under the National Firearms Act, the bureau used the provision to get contact information for buyers of those guns in order to inform them about NFA registration requirements

More objectionable was the use of demand letters, beginning during the Clinton administration, to get certain dealers to report all used gun transactions for use in future traces. NRA strongly objected to that program and funded litigation against it. Unfortunately, the government won those cases, but even the court decisions stressed how limited the program was. As the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit put it, the demand letter statute “is not a limitless delegation of authority” and “cannot be construed in an open-ended fashion.”

The courts also stressed that the demand letters were only issued to dealers who had supposedly failed to respond quickly to trace requests, or who had high numbers of guns traced quickly to crimes. As flawed as those reasons were, the letters still only went to a few hundred dealers—less than 0.1 percent of the licensees in the United States at the time.

Compare that to the number of dealers slated to receive the new multiple sales letters. The BATFE estimates that nearly 8,500 dealers will receive those letters; that’s nearly one out of every seven firearm retailers in the United States today, including many who are hundreds of miles from the Mexican border. That’s obviously casting way too big of a net, and could lay the groundwork for even broader demands that would truly amount to a gun registration scheme.

That makes this fight a top priority for NRA. Right now, we’re filing comments with the Office of Management and Budget, asking them to deny the proposed “information collection.” But we’ve also begun planning our next move, which will be legislative proposals to limit the “demand letter” authority.

Fortunately, our allies in Congress are already rallying across party lines on this issue. For example, the entire Montana congressional delegation has already weighed in, with Democratic Sens. Max Baucus and Jon Tester calling the proposal “unnecessarily burdensome” and arguing that any further reporting requirement “must be done by Congress through the transparent legislative process.”

Likewise, Montana’s Republican U.S. Rep. Denny Rehberg, joined by 35 House colleagues, including incoming Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith, R-Texas, blasted the “new, onerous requirements that would inevitably track and catalogue the purchases of law-abiding gun owners,” also denouncing the proposal as an “end run around Congress.”

NRA will make sure all of these arguments are heard on Capitol Hill—and in the courts, if necessary—as this fight goes on.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Arizona; US: California; US: New Mexico; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: banglist; batfe; batfeisajoke; bloodoftyrants; bloomberg; bootthebatfe; democrats; donttreadonme; govtabuse; liberalfascism; maig; nra; obama; rapeofliberty; registration; rifles; shallnotbeinfringed; tyranny
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To: marktwain

I only got a few guns, but I got lotsa bullets. Come get ‘em.


21 posted on 06/02/2011 9:38:30 AM PDT by P8riot (I carry a gun because I can't carry a cop.....Eagle Scout since Sep 9, 1970)
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To: Niteranger68

That’s what I mean. Only FFLs can “not comply”, and they won’t be FFLs for long if they don’t comply - which is fine by the Feds.

The Left has figured out that rights are easily abridged if a third party can be hobbled to achieve that end. (As in: in DC it is legal to own a gun, but no way to get one.)


22 posted on 06/02/2011 9:39:47 AM PDT by ctdonath2
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To: Joe Brower

Be Ever Vigilant!!


23 posted on 06/02/2011 9:49:05 AM PDT by blackie (Be Well~Be Armed~Be Safe~Molon Labe!)
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To: All

Americans deserve all the government they voted for.


24 posted on 06/02/2011 10:01:01 AM PDT by wastedyears (SEAL SIX makes me proud to have been playing SOCOM since 2003.)
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To: B4Ranch

“...Any American citizen that surrenders any weapon to a government official deserves to live their life wrapped in chains...”

And I’ll add this, paraphrasing ol Sammy Adams:

Crouch down and lick the hands that feed you - or the boots that stomp out your freedom, and I hope your chains DON’T rest lightly on you. And rest assured that those of us who didn’t surrender will GUARANTEE that posterity forgets that you were ever our countrymen..

Some may be cowards, but many, many others...not so much.


25 posted on 06/02/2011 10:03:02 AM PDT by NFHale (The Second Amendment - By Any Means Necessary.)
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To: marktwain

Common Law Rights


26 posted on 06/02/2011 10:04:26 AM PDT by phockthis
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To: no-to-illegals
So his middle name bears a stronger resemblance to CUSTER than Hussein? LOL
27 posted on 06/02/2011 10:17:58 AM PDT by ExSoldier ("Life without God is like an unsharpened pencil: It has no point.")
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To: ctdonath2
And now he’ll have to send a copy of those 4473s if more than 1 purchase is made in 5 days.

So I'm good if I make five purchases in ONE day?

28 posted on 06/02/2011 10:20:38 AM PDT by ExSoldier ("Life without God is like an unsharpened pencil: It has no point.")
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To: ExSoldier

Uh, that would be more than 1 purchase in 5 days.


29 posted on 06/02/2011 10:23:38 AM PDT by ctdonath2
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To: blackie
Be Ever Vigilant!!

BEV?

I like Springfield Armory's motto better: BEG!

Bring
Enough
Gun!

Any mission. Any foe. At any range.

HoooooooAH!

30 posted on 06/02/2011 10:25:41 AM PDT by ExSoldier ("Life without God is like an unsharpened pencil: It has no point.")
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To: NFHale

>>Some may be cowards, but many, many others...not so much.<<

Too many Americans IMO are casually accepting the ongoing deprivation of rights under color of law that is continually spewn by our presidential administrations and political parties. I do not accept their premise that this loss of personal liberty as being necessary for our protection. Once removed we will never regain them without a serious battle and lots of bloodshed. How do we get these people up off their knees?


31 posted on 06/02/2011 10:29:06 AM PDT by B4Ranch (Allowing Islam into America is akin to injecting yourself with AIDS to prove how tolerant you are...)
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To: ctdonath2
Uh, that would be more than 1 purchase in 5 days.

Oh. You're right. I'm DAIN BRAMAGED. Only six more days to teach the Spawn of SATAN before summer vacation! You can tell the effect they have on me. Right now I'm in my SMN class which stands for Shoot Me Now.

32 posted on 06/02/2011 10:39:58 AM PDT by ExSoldier ("Life without God is like an unsharpened pencil: It has no point.")
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To: ExSoldier
I took his story (the old Cherokee) to be more of a warning than a middle finger. Since the Cherokee Nation always was there for our forefathers (numerous times) in spite of our nation's forefathers not being there for them, when needed, I took the story to be a warning. Personally I prefer the finger next to the thumb, should I be forced to defend myself, or my family. Though I do recall one of the best crack shots I ever saw used his middle finger. That person was my Dad.

If any offense was taken from my prior post, that was not my intent.

33 posted on 06/02/2011 10:45:32 AM PDT by no-to-illegals (Please God, Protect and Bless Our Men and Women in Uniform with Victory. Amen.)
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To: no-to-illegals
If any offense was taken from my prior post, that was not my intent.

Please see my post #32 above and understand my damaged state of mind at this point in time. No offense taken or given.

34 posted on 06/02/2011 11:12:52 AM PDT by ExSoldier ("Life without God is like an unsharpened pencil: It has no point.")
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To: ExSoldier

Some are hooked on acronyms, some are not.


35 posted on 06/02/2011 12:18:14 PM PDT by blackie (Be Well~Be Armed~Be Safe~Molon Labe!)
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To: marktwain
What’s to stop them from applying this to every state and every type of firearm?

What’s to stop them from using this data to compile a gun registration database?

What’s to stop them from applying this to every state and every type of firearm?

What’s to stop them from wanting to ‘verify’ this data with each and every gun owner?

[With the registration “Cat” out of the bag]
What’s to stop them from wanting to charge a tax for each hand every gun you own?

What’s to stop them from requiring to get a license and pay a fee for the privilege of owning your guns?

Finally, What’s to stop them from confiscating your now “Registered” guns?

36 posted on 06/02/2011 12:36:10 PM PDT by BerserkPatriot (There are no 1st Amendment rights without 2nd Amendment Rights)
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To: SC_Pete

Someone mentioned this on another forum: Given that Obama and his merry band of national socialists are pretty radical in ‘normal’ times, it kind of makes you wonder how they would use a serious crisis to be even more radical.


37 posted on 06/02/2011 12:40:11 PM PDT by BerserkPatriot (There are no 1st Amendment rights without 2nd Amendment Rights)
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To: blackie
Some are hooked on acronyms, some are not.

I think that's largely symptomatic of folks with military backgrounds: SNAFU, BOHICA, FUBAR, which has more recently been superseded by the computer generation... which has far more of those acronyms to be hooked on.

38 posted on 06/02/2011 1:18:41 PM PDT by ExSoldier ("Life without God is like an unsharpened pencil: It has no point.")
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To: ExSoldier

I’m acquainted with acronyms, I was in the Navy in the late 40’s. :)


39 posted on 06/02/2011 1:46:49 PM PDT by blackie (Be Well~Be Armed~Be Safe~Molon Labe!)
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To: BerserkPatriot

The Obama administration is working on all fronts to drag our country to the ash heap of history. If he really had a crisis to work with, “God Help the USA”.


40 posted on 06/02/2011 1:55:31 PM PDT by SC_Pete
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