Fifth Circuit Rules Against Texas on Silencer Case Standing, Fight Continues

Silencer Ownership Law USA

On June 21, 2024, a three-judge panel of the Fifth Circuit issued a unanimous opinion against Ken Paxton, the Attorney General of the State of Texas, and three individual plaintiffs. The ruling stopped the challenge to the National Firearms Act federal regulation of silencers, at least for the present. The opinion was not about the merits of the case. It was based solely on the plaintiffs’ standing to sue. The case is Paxon v Dettelbach.

From the opinion:

First, the declarations do not state any intention to engage in conduct proscribed by law. Rather, the declarations state only that the Individual Plaintiffs “intend to personally manufacture a firearm suppressor for [their] own non-commercial, personal use.” But, as the federal government points out, the statutes at issue do not prohibit the Individual Plaintiffs from making a firearm suppressor. Rather, they only prohibit making a firearm suppressor without complying with the applicable procedures and requirements, i.e., applying for approval, paying the requisite tax, registering the suppressor, and labeling it with a serial number. See 26 U.S.C. § 5871. This is a distinction with an important difference because it differentiates this case from those in which the statutory scheme at issue is a blanket prohibition.

From the above, the plaintiffs might gain standing if they submitted Form 1 applications to the ATF and refused to pay the $200 tax, give pictures and images of proposed silencers to be produced, and made clear they were doing so under protest.

It is not clear if AG Paxton would be required to create another challenge based on such actions. AG Paxton could ask for a hearing en banc at the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.

AG Paxton filed the lawsuit as required by Texas statute HB957. From HB957:

Sec. 2.054. ATTORNEY GENERAL. On written notification to the attorney general by a United States citizen who resides in this state of the citizen’s intent to manufacture a firearm suppressor to which Section 2.052 applies, the attorney general shall seek a declaratory judgment from a federal district court in this state that Section 2.052 is consistent with the United States Constitution.

AG Paxton has filed the lawsuit. The lawsuit has been denied for lack of standing. A federal court has not ruled on the merits of the case.  AG Paxton has fulfilled his legal obligation to file the case, although the case has not settled the issue the Texas legislature wished to have settled.

Analysis: This case is one of several attacks on the viability of keeping silencers/suppressors subject to National Firearms Act (NFA) regulation. Aside from the obvious Constitutional questions, such regulation does not make any sense. The regulation is counter productive and produces much more harm than any of the known benefits.  Actual, criminal use of silencers for violent purposes is extremely rare. The 1986 ban on silencer parts is based on a foundation of lies.  There is a push to make obtaining legal silencers easier, either by reforming the NFA or by removing silencers from the NFA.

If former President Trump wins his third election for the presidency, and his coattails result in a conservative majority in the House and the Senate, it is likely  a version of the Hearing Protection Act will pass. Paul Ryan will not be Speaker of the house, willing to throw away his career in a weird effort to stop President Trump from succeeding, at any cost.


About Dean Weingarten:

Dean Weingarten has been a peace officer, a military officer, was on the University of Wisconsin Pistol Team for four years, and was first certified to teach firearms safety in 1973. He taught the Arizona concealed carry course for fifteen years until the goal of Constitutional Carry was attained. He has degrees in meteorology and mining engineering, and retired from the Department of Defense after a 30 year career in Army Research, Development, Testing, and Evaluation.

Dean Weingarten

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Carbuilder

Last time I looked into doing a form 1, no pictures or blueprints were required. Only caliber and overall length.

Akai

Why not start by challenging the ATF on it’s definition of “firearm” as it is applied to something like a supe? The metal or plastic tube cannot by itself fire any ammo or expel a projectile. Once you get it removed from NFA then it becomes an issue like bump stocks, and it’s not easy to ban stuff by exec order, so they would really need congress or State to act, which that too is not easy for them to do.

musicman44mag

Get rid of the unconstitutional silencer law. Do it for the children and the all important health and safety of others!!!! The surgeon general should be on board with this and if he is not, I am sure President Trump will replace him with someone who is.

swmft

need to get rid of gca atf and everything done by demons

musicman44mag

I think we need a lot of the agencies that we have including ATF but I think there should be a re-vamp of all agencies with a new set of rules regarding what they can and cannot do as well as what we are going to take away from them and they cannot circumvent what the actions are with different actions to bring it back. None of them can change rules that make new laws like the ATF did. Kamalatoe seems to think we need a gun buyback. No agency should be allowed to do that and no new agencies… Read more »

Last edited 3 months ago by musicman44mag
Enemy of Democracy

music,
Besides DoD, Dept. of Interior, Treasury and Customs I can not think of a single federal agency whose very existance is not a violation of The U.S. Constitution!

musicman44mag

Yes, and even the ones you mentioned are in violation when they set people up and lie about them to shut them up or take the blame away from the real perpetrator.

Enemy of Democracy

True!

Logician

What a load of B.S.!! Since the legal system has been shown over and over again to be completely unreliable in doing anything, except to preserve its own criminal ways, why do so many people flock to it and defer to it? Chevron has been over turned because it was as wrong as wrong can be, and so we just have to extend that line of logical reasoning to the entire scam of the legal system! I’m still waiting for someone to show me where and why I am wrong in any of my refutations of the machinations of the… Read more »

Logician

The NFA doesn’t even EXIST in present time, because it goes against the Constitution, that is if you still believe in that god damned piece of paper! Bush was right on one thing in his entire, miserable existence here, that it’s just a piece of paper with no real significance to it any longer.