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Sig Sauer Lawsuit Against ATF Muzzle Brake/Silencer Ruling has Merit
Gun Watch ^
| 18 April, 2014
| Dean Weingarten
Posted on 04/18/2014 9:55:41 AM PDT by marktwain
Photo from the ATF letter. Sig Sauer never contended that the muzzle brake would not function as part of a gun muffler/silencer/suppressor |
Sig Sauer, Inc., the well respected firearms manufacturer, has filed suit against B. Todd Jones as the Director of the ATF for ruling that the muzzle brake that they submitted for evaluation is "a part intended only for use in the assembly or fabrication of a silencer and therefore is a silencer..." as defined in U.S. statutes. The case document can be read here. It is nine pages long, and makes a fascinating read.
Sig Sauer Inc., included laboratory tests that showed that the muzzle brake reduced muzzle rise and did not reduce the report of the firearm to which it was permanently attached.
The crux of the matter is the part of the law that requires severe regulatory and financial burdens for the sale and possession of silencers. The law defines silencers in three ways. From law.cornell.edu, here is the definition of silencers in U.S. code:
(24) The terms firearm silencer and firearm muffler mean any device for silencing, muffling, or diminishing the report of a portable firearm, including any combination of parts, designed or redesigned, and intended for use in assembling or fabricating a firearm silencer or firearm muffler, and any part intended only for use in such assembly or fabrication.
For the first test: Is it a device for silencing, muffling, or diminishing the report of a portable firearm?
Sig Sauer includes tests showing that it does not silence, muffle or diminish the report, and says that it is for use as a muzzle brake.
For the second test: Is it a combination of parts, designed or redesigned and intended for use in assembling or fabricating a firearm silencer or firearm muffler?
Clearly it is *a* part, but just as clearly it is not a sufficient "collection of parts" by itself, which brings us to the third test, which ATF used in its letter to justify its classification of the muzzle brake as a "silencer": Is it "any part intended only for use in such assembly or fabrication"?
This is the entire crux of the matter. Sig Sauer says that it is a "dual use" component, that can be used as part of a gun muffler, *and* can be used as a muzzle brake, and that it is designed and sold as a muzzle brake. They include tests to that effect.
It appears to me that they have a logical and reasonable case. Will a judge see it that way?
The courts have not challenged the ATF judgement regularly, but there is precedent. Few have challenged the ATF with first rate attorneys and corporate financial backing. Thompson-Center Arms did, and won their case, United States v. Thompson-Center Arms Company. In that case, it is worth noting that one of the main points of Justice Souter's argument in the majority opinion, was that the parts had dual use utility, depending on the way that they were assembled, and applied the rule of lenity to rule against the ATF.
Just recently, in Innovator Enterprises v. United States, the D.C. district court held that the ATF must do more than merely declare something to be what it says it is. It has to show reason and logic, it may not be arbitrary and capricious in its rulings. The Innovator case is very close to the Sig Sauer case, in that both involve muzzle brakes that the ATF ruled as "silencers" without any scientific testing of the devices.
Will Sig Sauer win its lawsuit? It is impossible to know. Clearly the muzzle brake can be used as part of a suppressor, but just as clearly, it works just fine as a muzzle brake.
In the Innovator case, the court made use of the research done by P. Clark on the Criminal Use of Firearm Silencers. In this academic work, Clark shows that the original purpose of the law was never explained, and that it is doubtful that there is any useful purpose served by the law.
While repeal of the extreme regulation of silencers is a legislative function, a court could well take into consideration the limited utility of the law in determining how broadly or narrowly to interpret it. While courts have been severely criticized for looking at foreign law as a means of justifying their decisions, in this case it could work for the narrow interpretation of this particular law. Most European jurisdictions regulate gun mufflers far less than the United States, if at all.
©2014 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice is included.
Link to Gun Watch
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Politics; Science; Society
KEYWORDS: atf; banglist; btoddjones; guncontrol; kenyanbornmuzzie; lawlessdictator; sigsauer; silencer; suppressor
There never was a valid reason for the extreme regulation and taxation of gun mufflers.
1
posted on
04/18/2014 9:55:41 AM PDT
by
marktwain
To: marktwain
never trust someone who parts his name on the side.
To: 2nd amendment mama
3
posted on
04/18/2014 9:59:43 AM PDT
by
basil
(2ASisters.org)
To: marktwain
bump to be added to NSA watchlist
4
posted on
04/18/2014 10:01:07 AM PDT
by
TurboZamboni
(Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.-JFK)
To: marktwain
There never was a valid reason for the extreme regulation and taxation of gun mufflers. What's the valid reason for the ATF?
5
posted on
04/18/2014 10:04:26 AM PDT
by
TADSLOS
(The Event Horizon has come and gone. Buckle up and hang on.)
To: marktwain
If you regulate silencers you won’t have so many gangbangers running around using silenced guns when they commit their crimes. (/sarc)
To: marktwain
To eliminate public nuisance and protect auditory health I believe it is either Finland or Norway which REQUIRES use of suppressors when shooting.
7
posted on
04/18/2014 10:13:27 AM PDT
by
gaijin
To: gaijin; All
Most European countries strongly encourage the use of gun mufflers.
The Finnish Supreme Court has ruled that the ability to make, trade, buy, sell and use gun mufflers is a constitutional right.
8
posted on
04/18/2014 10:17:28 AM PDT
by
marktwain
(The old media must die for the Republic to live. Long live the new media!)
To: marktwain
Mufflers on a rifle or handgun are industrial safety devices. Nothing more, nothing less.
Stupid law but a law I adhere to with a great deal of zeal. I don’t want to go to jail only because politicians are profoundly stupid.
9
posted on
04/18/2014 10:40:22 AM PDT
by
DariusBane
(Liberty and Risk. Flip sides of the same coin. So how much risk will YOU accept? Vive Deco et Vives)
To: marktwain
“B. Todd Jones?” “P. Clark?” Concealing their sex for feminism. Weirdness.
10
posted on
04/18/2014 10:42:06 AM PDT
by
familyop
(We Baby Boomers are croaking in an avalanche of corruption smelled around the planet.)
To: marktwain
Sig likes to skate on the edge.
They also make an AR "pistol" that comes from the factory with an arm brace that can very conveniently be used as a stock, turning the pistol into a short barrel rifle - another NFA item.
11
posted on
04/18/2014 10:50:07 AM PDT
by
grobdriver
(Where is Wilson Blair when you need him?)
To: marktwain
I don’t disagree. I thought the original purpose was to control poaching with a silenced firearm.
12
posted on
04/18/2014 10:57:42 AM PDT
by
meatloaf
(Impeach Obama. That's my New Year's resolution.)
To: grobdriver
“Skate on the edge”? Are you supposed to be posing on DU?
Sig is merely adhering to the Constitution.
13
posted on
04/18/2014 11:16:11 AM PDT
by
Red in Blue PA
(When Injustice becomes Law, Resistance Becomes Duty.-Thomas Jefferson)
To: grobdriver
“Sig likes to skate on the edge.”
I think much of it has to do with a cultural set.
Sig is based in Switzerland, which, up until recently, had more firearms freedom than the United States.
I am sure that they clearly see the short barreled rifle and gun muffler laws for the idiocies that they are. Hence, they likely believe that as long as they follow the letter of the law, they should be in compliance.
The idea of a bureaucracy rewriting the regulations to enhance their power is likely culturally abhorrent to them.
14
posted on
04/18/2014 11:43:48 AM PDT
by
marktwain
(The old media must die for the Republic to live. Long live the new media!)
To: marktwain
There never was a valid reason for the extreme regulation and taxation of gun mufflers.
You're not kidding!
I just yesterday sent off my paperwork for my suppressor.
Now, the wait begins....
15
posted on
04/18/2014 11:45:43 AM PDT
by
RandallFlagg
(Uninstall Fascist Firefox. Get Pale Moon.)
To: meatloaf
I dont disagree. I thought the original purpose was to control poaching with a silenced firearm.You can poach quietly with a bow. Should bows and arrows become NFA items?
The whole line of "reasoning" used to justify these laws is invariably just a smokescreen to hide a power/money grab.
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