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Breaking: DOJ Reclassifies Bump Fire Stocks as Machine Guns
The Truth About Guns ^ | 03/10/18 | Dan Zimmerman

Posted on 03/10/2018 12:47:25 PM PST by Simon Green

In the post-Parkland hysteria, President Trump directed the Department of Justice to perform some regulatory legerdemain where bump fire stocks are concerned. The ATF had long ago passed on the stocks, deeming them perfectly legal accessories for semi-automatic rifles. Now, in a Saturday morning move apparently meant to fly under the radar . . .

The U.S. Department of Justice formally submitted a regulation on Saturday to ban “bump stocks,” a modification to high-capacity rifles that lets them fire like an automatic weapon.

President Donald Trump signed a memorandum in February directing the department to make the regulatory change, which must now be approved by the Office of Management and Budget before it is published and subject to a commentary period.

Nothing to worry about though…that will never get through Congress! Au contraire, mon frere.

The move does not require congressional approval, allowing the administration to side-step what could have been insurmountable pressure from pro-gun groups such as the National Rifle Association that have worked to erode changes in firearm laws in the wake of mass shootings in Florida and Nevada.

It’s no biggie, though. Really, now many people own, or even want a bump fire stock? This won’t affect me!

Think again. If the DOJ can use regulatory fiat to bring their ban hammer down on bump fire stocks, magically deeming them machine guns, what’s to stop this or, more likely, some future administration from deciding that “high-capacity” 30-round magazines are also unacceptable modifications that facilitate “unnecessary” rates of fire? Or lighter, drop-in triggers? Anything that could plausibly be argued to increase a gun’s “standard” rate of fire.

The NRA was on board with regulating bump fire stocks in theory, but hadn’t signed on to this particular move. This sets a terrible regulatory precedent that will almost surely be expanded and abused again down the road. Will the NRA sue? Will SAF or the GOA?

We haven’t been able to get our mitts on the new DOJ regulatory language yet, but will publish it when it’s available. Stay tuned.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Constitution/Conservatism; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 4dchess; badpolicy; banglist; bloggers; boom; braking; bumpstocks; doj; triplechess; trump; trumpbanglist
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To: Thibodeaux
Symantics..... The trigger is pulled automatically by the recoil action and the bump

Will probably see new mfg semi autos required to use a double action trigger/hammer lower. Auto-feed the next round, but not cock the hammer. Then require full trigger pull to move the hammer from rest to cock to fire. Wait for it, there will be a new definition from semi-auto to just auto-load.

201 posted on 03/11/2018 2:34:57 PM PDT by redcatcherb412 (Emerged intact.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
So if you own a bump stock but no firearm you still own a machine gun?

If this regulation is actually implemented, then probably yes. See here Drop In Auto Sears (DIAS)

202 posted on 03/11/2018 2:56:56 PM PDT by cidrasm
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To: JamesP81

Here is the problem

In my “meat life”, I have to deal with alphabet soup agencies all the time. One thing that I had to learn rather painfully is that an administrative finding IS NOT law, and DOES NOT protect you from persecution. Even if the SAME compliance office and officer wrote BOTH.

The ruling on bump stocks was an administrative finding, using just the reasons you stated. However, prior to that finding bump stocks and such tricks were viewed as “Creating a machine gun”. Unfortunately, that means that the law did not change, the understanding and enforcement of it did. So while in the late 90’s you could be arrested for having a shoestring in your gun locker, now all of a sudden you can have a much more obvious means of making a gun fire rapidly that is ok. A felony yesterday is now OK, without any change in law or court ruling.

When this administrative ruling came out, my gun club had a meeting about it. We have in our ranks lawyers and current and former members of various .gov agencies (nothing fancy, local FDA and the like). They all stated that we should not risk our club over an administrative ruling, and we banned rapid fire devices and tricks like the bump stock (and the old rubber band trick). Why? The history of enforcement was that such things were considered “making a fully automatic weapon”, and while one letter said it wasn’t, we DID NOT want to be involved in a test case. We are a small club that now has development on two sides. Not a good situation in purple Iowa.

In my professional life, I had an EPA agent send me a letter, notarized, for an action. We were stuck and pretty much had to do such action. A few years down the road, the political climate changed and we were brought up on enforcement actions for that same activity. When the agent testified, in court, that “Yes, I did say it was ok for Red to do X”, the judge ruled, as they have so often, that the administrative letter did not mean it was legal. My company had to pay a fine, and face legal consequences, for doing something our EPA agent not only said was OK, but suggested we do to mitigate a further complication.

Heck, there are people in jail right now for doing what someone in the IRS said was OK!

What does this mean? It means that when you play stupid games you win stupid prizes. If you don’t have an action signed by a court of law, it can be overturned by the stroke of a pen. Heck, even if you do have a judge say it is ok, it can be overturned by the next higher court. Like or not (and believe me I do not like it), bump stocks were and are jailbait. Just like the AR pistols that are all the rage right now, someone can decide they are “Short barreled rifles” at the stroke of a pen suddenly you are in legal trouble.

Never, ever, trust an administrative ruling. I don’t like this, but it was a likely outcome. Part of me wonders if this wasn’t a way to create “instant felons” and seize some guns.


203 posted on 03/11/2018 4:47:51 PM PDT by redgolum
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To: MaxistheBest
If you can watch this video and still say that the this AR15, with a Bump Stock engaged, isn’t an automatic gun or machine gun, then you’re on drugs.

Huh? Do you not know what a machine gun is? Just because something can fire quickly does not make it a machine gun..
204 posted on 03/11/2018 4:55:31 PM PDT by Svartalfiar
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To: Thibodeaux

“A rifle with a bump stock is a machine gun. The machinery is crude but it fires as long as the trigger is pulled. The weapon is therefore automatic.”

Sorry, a bumpfire stock makes a rifle a Single Shot firearm. One pull of the trigger = One shot fired.


205 posted on 03/12/2018 11:35:55 AM PDT by 2harddrive
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To: headstamp 2

“They’ll need to ban belt loops too.”

...and rubber binders... string,...thumbs... fingers, elbows...freedom....


206 posted on 03/12/2018 11:40:33 AM PDT by READINABLUESTATE (Don't hate me because I'm sane.)
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To: NKP_Vet

Here’s some info from 2000.

https://theintercept.com/2016/01/27/donald-trump-in-2000-i-support-the


207 posted on 03/12/2018 12:19:59 PM PDT by NKP_Vet ("Man without God descends into madness")
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To: Svartalfiar

Bump fire stocks allow a semi auto AR 15 to function as low cyclic rate machine gun without violating the legal and technical definition of a machine gun which is a weapon capable of firing multiple rounds with a single trigger pull

Based on the legal definition of a machine gun, the BATF administrative letter classifying bump stocks as a legal accessory to a semi auto rifle is correct and 100% consistent with the law restricting machine guns passed by Congress

Trumps attempts at an administrative solution are a blessing because they shut down Poorly conceived, do something legislation in Congress

The DOJ rule proposal now goes through the proper OMB public posting and public feedback and comment period . There will no doubt be many comments pointing out that bump fire stocks meet the legal definition of a legal semi auto

The process will take about 4 months during which time emotions will cool off and the DOJ will conclude that their rule change is not lawful and the banning of bump fire stocks


208 posted on 03/12/2018 3:07:15 PM PDT by rdcbn
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To: Simon Green
They going to ban my finger?


209 posted on 03/13/2018 11:47:16 AM PDT by RightGeek (FUBO and the donkey you rode in on)
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