Our motion for summary judgment makes two main sets of arguments. First, the NFA's regulations of untaxed "firearms" exceeds Congress's constitutional authority. Second, the NFA's regulation of suppressors and SBRs violates the Second Amendment.
A thread on the highlights of our motion for summary judgment.
The NFA has always been justified as an exercise in the taxing power. That is how then-Attorney General Homer Cummings explained it in 1934, and it's how every court since has upheld it.
One Representative even said at the time that if you removed the tax, the NFA wouldn't survive.
With the tax now set to $0, the NFA's registration scheme has no basis to exist.
I am going to skip through the commerce clause portions because while they are very legally interesting, they are a bit in the weeds for our purposes here - let's go straight to the Second Amendment stuff.
Suppressors and SBRs are arms, and no history justifies the NFA's regulations on them.
Notably, the United States has previously conceded that suppressors are at least protected by the Second Amendment (though they nonetheless argue the NFA is constitutional).
Suppressors and SBRs are not "dangerous and unusual." For one, they are not "dangerous" because they are not dangerous compared to weapons in common use (which they also are themselves too).
For another, they are not unusual. Today there are at least 3.5 million registered suppressors, and looking back historically, even historical figures like President Teddy Roosevelt owned them.
4.5 million*
As for SBRs, while we believe they should just be considered like any other rifle, even specifically looking at registered SBRs, that number is at 870,000.
And that does not include "AR pistols" and similar firearms, which number in the millions.
The reason suppressors are still so regulated (and outright banned in a few states) likely comes down to a Hollywood-based misconception. People think they are whisper quiet, as portrayed in films like John Wick 2.
But aside from maybe suppressed .22lr and certain subsonic rounds, ammunition fired suppressed is still very loud.
There is considerable scientific and medical backing for the idea that suppressors should be used to protect hearing.
Suppressors are critical home-defense tools. Firing a gun in doors without a suppressor is extremely loud and disorienting, and also causes hearing damage.
Suppressors are rarely used in crime, and the government admits it. Nor are they particularly useful to criminals. They make firearms significantly larger (and thus harder to carry), while not making them quiet enough to not be noticed when fired.
Similarly, SBRs are also rarely used by criminals. Which makes sense, as they are still pretty large to try and carry around.
SBRs were added to the NFA basically by historical accident, because the original bill was going to include pistols and a member of Congress didn't want hunting rifles swept up into it as concealable firearms.
There is no historical tradition supporting the NFA. While the Supreme Court has said licensing regimes that ensure that those who carry arms are law-abiding citizens, that can already be accomplished as to suppressors and SBRs via standard background checks.
That covers the substantive Second Amendment arguments in our motion, but you can read the whole motion here:
A Ninth Circuit panel has overturned California’s burdensome and error-prone ammunition background check regime in a case we have been watching closely, Rhode v. Bonta. We congratulate our friends and frequent litigation partners at CRPA on this significant win.
Besides such background checks being unprecedented, the other big problem with California’s system is it does not even work well, worsening the constitutional concerns with it. By the state’s own admission, it wrongly denied over 10% of applicants who tried to use it, and the State did not bother to tell those people why they were denied, so many did not subsequently purchase ammunition. Data that Judge Benitez forced the State to disclose showed that of the 7,342 people wrongly rejected in January of 2023, only 62.9% managed to successfully purchase ammunition by July 1, 2023. Over a third, around 2700 people, were either denied their rights or forced to purchase ammunition through illegal means.
To make matters worse, this background check costs a dollar each time you do it, and it will now be increasing to $5. If you do not have a firearm registered at your current address, then you have to do a costlier $19 background check to purchase ammunition.
We are relieved the panel ruled correctly, but of course given this is the Ninth Circuit, en banc review is certainly possible.
🧵👇
For some more background, here is a chart submitted by California DOJ showing the data for the first six months of 2023.
Look at the ratio between people denied ammunition because they are a prohibited person, compared to people denied due to a records mismatch. 141 vs. 58,057. For every prohibited person the system stops from buying ammunition, it blocks about 411 law-abiding citizens from their purchases.
Even setting aside constitutional concerns (and we certainly do not!), this system simply does not work.
The panel is Judges Ikuta, Bade, and Bybee, with Judge Ikuta writing the majority opinion. A favorable panel to be sure, but not as favorable as it seems given Judge Bybee has a track record of hostility to the Second Amendment.
Judge Ikuta starts by emphasizing the uniqueness of California's system. When the test is historical tradition, any “first-of-its-kind” system should be looked upon very skeptically. Yes, analogical reasoning may sometimes be acceptable, but there is nothing new about buying and selling ammunition; it is as old as firearms.