Hours before its stay was to expire, the Court extended its block of a Texas judge’s finding that the rule was illegal.
The Supreme Court has again reinstated on an emergency basis the Biden administration’s rule regulating so-called ghost guns that can be assembled at home.
The ruling is not the final word on the issue. The case continues in the lower courts. It could also return to the Supreme Court in the future.
“Ghost gun” is a pejorative term used by gun control advocates to describe a homemade firearm that lacks a serial number and therefore can’t be tracked by law enforcement. Although some states regulate homemade guns, gun control groups have been trying for years to ban or regulate homemade guns at the federal level but have failed to convince the U.S. Congress to act.
President Joe Biden has claimed that privately made guns, which are often made with gun kits, are the “weapons of choice for many criminals.”
The government’s “frame or receiver” rule dates to April 2022. It requires individuals who assemble homemade firearms to add serial numbers to them. The rule also mandates background checks for consumers who buy gun-assembly kits from dealers.
Pieces of guns that are shipped are nonetheless still guns subject to existing laws, the government argues.
The new unsigned order from the nation’s highest court came late in the day on Oct. 16 in an emergency application brought by the Biden administration in a case known as Garland v. Blackhawk Manufacturing Group Inc. (court file 23A302). No justices dissented. The court gave no reasons for its decision.
Before that, Justice Samuel Alito had administratively stayed a Sept. 14 order of U.S. Judge Reed O’Connor of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas that blocked the rule. The stay had been scheduled to expire at 5 p.m. on Oct. 16.
Before that, on July 5, Judge O’Connor entered an injunction after finding that the regulation violated existing law.
The judge found that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF), which is part of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), went beyond its statutory jurisdiction in regulating “partially manufactured firearm components, related firearm products, and other tools and materials.”
The rule “is unlawful agency action,” the judge found at that time.
On July 24, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit denied the government’s request to stay the lower court’s order blocking the rule “because the ATF has not demonstrated a strong likelihood of success on the merits, nor irreparable harm in the absence of a stay.”
The issue came before the Supreme Court on Aug. 8 when a 5–4 split on the high court allowed the government’s rule on ghost guns to remain in place while an appeal of the injunction was pending in the 5th Circuit.
Four conservative justices—Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, and Brett Kavanaugh—dissented from the decision.
Two conservatives—Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett—joined the court’s three liberals—Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson—in voting to allow the rule to remain in effect for the time being.
Then on Sept. 14, Judge O’Connor issued an order narrowing his injunction to cover 80 Percent Arms and Defense Distributed, two companies involved in the litigation, along with their customers.
The DOJ told the 5th Circuit that the district judge was ignoring the Supreme Court’s order.
On Oct. 2, the 5th Circuit issued a ruling indicating it disagreed with the DOJ’s contention but also found that the injunction “sweeps too broadly.”
“Injunctions that afford relief to non-parties are potentially problematic. And it appears the district court’s injunction sweeps too broadly insofar as it affords relief to non-party customers.”
Nevertheless, the court found, “The party-plaintiff manufacturers would be irreparably harmed by being forced to shut down their companies or by being arrested pending judicial review of the Final Rule.”
Although it vacated the injunction as it applied to gun kit customers, the court said it did so based on the Biden administration’s assurances that it “will not enforce the Final Rule against customers who purchase regulated ‘frames or receivers’ and who are otherwise lawfully entitled to purchase firearms.”
The circuit court also suggested Judge O’Connor could revisit the matter and broaden his injunction should the administration break its promise not to enforce the rule against customers.
“Of course, if circumstances change, the district court is free to narrowly tailor injunctive relief to meet the changed circumstances,” the 5th Circuit stated.
“But as things stand today, the Government is correct that the injunction cannot extend to non-party customers.”
The circuit court added that the plaintiffs who brought the action against the rule are “likely to succeed on the merits because the Final Rule is contrary to law.”
Houston, Texas-based Chad Flores, attorney for Defense Distributed, one of the gun makers in the case, said the Supreme Court’s new ruling is wrong.
“Thankfully this error as to interim technicalities won’t last long, as the Fifth Circuit is on the verge of striking down this rule as unconstitutional overreach very soon,” he told The Epoch Times by email.
“The court system obviously still has work to do in giving Second Amendment rights full constitutional protections, and Defense Distributed will endure as long as it takes to see that vindication as to both rights and remedies.”
Blackhawk Manufacturing attorney Michael James Sullivan of Ashcroft Law Firm in Boston, Massachusetts, had not responded to a request for comment at the time of publication.
The Epoch Times reached out to the DOJ for comment but had not received a reply as of press time.
Matthew Vadum is an award-winning investigative journalist.