New Injunctions Issued Against ATF’s Frames and Receivers Rule

3D Printed Ghost Guns New Injunctions Issued Against ATF's Frames and Receivers Rule
New Injunctions Issued Against ATF’s Frames and Receivers Rule

On Friday, Federal District Court Judge Reed O’Connor reissued preliminary injunctions against the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosive (ATF) from enforcing the Final Rule (FINAL RULE 2021R-05F) on frames and receivers against two companies.

The two companies protected against the ATF’s rule are Defense Distributed, makers of the Ghost Gunner, and Blackhawk Manufacturing Group, Inc., d/b/a 80 Percent Arms. The Texas-based case is Vanderstok v. Garland and has been at the center of the fight over incomplete frames and receivers for a little over a year.

In 2021, President Joe Biden tasked the ATF to develop rules to tackle what he called “ghost guns.”

To him and others who share his views, unserialized frames are a tool of criminals. In the gun world, privately manufactured firearms (PMF) are a part of our history and tradition. Regardless, the ATF would follow the President’s orders and develop a rule against frames and jigs being sold together.

Numerous parties launched lawsuits against the ATF rule, which many believed exceeded the ATF’s authority. In August of 2022, Jennifer VanDerStok, Michael Andren, Tactical Machining, LLC, and the Firearms Policy Coalition (FPC) would sue United States Attorney General Merrick Garland and the Justice Department (DOJ) in Texas.

While the lawsuits were happening, the anti-gun groups were up in arms. The ATF’s rule didn’t go far enough for these anti-gun organizations. These groups would demand the ATF close the “ghost gun loophole” and ban unfinished frames and receivers. The ATF acquiesced to these groups’ demands and expanded its rule through a public letter issued on December 27, 2022. The ATF would now consider any unfinished frames to be firearms from that point onward.

The anti-gun groups would experience a short-lived celebration. Judge O’Connor in the Lone Star State was going to short-circuit the rule.

The plaintiffs in VanDerStok would win a preliminary injunction. This injunction bars the ATF from taking any enforcement action against the named plaintiffs. The Judge found that they were likely to succeed on the merits of the case.

Many other companies started intervening in the case. After each intervener, another company was covered under the injunction, including the biggest maker of kits, Polymer80. Eventually, JSD Supply would file a motion to intervene. Instead of just expanding the injunction to the Pennsylvania-based company, the Judge vacated the entire rule.

The Justice Department would immediately appeal to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. A panel of three judges would hear the arguments. Ultimately, the judges ruled that most of the rule would remain vacated. The DOJ could ask for an en banc hearing where the whole Fifth Circuit bench would decide on the case, but most legal scholars thought that would be a losing road after the recent ruling in Cargill on bump stocks.

The DOJ must have come to the same conclusion as the scholars. The department filed a writ of certiorari with the Supreme Court of The United States (SCOTUS).

A writ of certiorari, better known as a writ of cert, is a petition to the high court to hear the case. The DOJ also wanted to stay the court’s decision to vacate the rule until SCOTUS decided whether to grant cert. The DOJ would get that stay.

This series of events led Defense Distributed and 80 Percent Arms to seek a new emergency preliminary injunction against the Final Rule. Once again, Judge O’Connor would award the companies protection against ATF enforcement actions. Judge O’Connor considered the merits and found the plaintiffs were still likely to succeed and would suffer irreparable harm from the rule. The Judge wrote:

“For the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS the Emergency Motions for Injunction Pending Appeal. Accordingly, the Court ORDERS that the Government Defendants—the Attorney General of the United States; the United States Department of Justice; the Director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives—and each of their respective officers, agents, servants, and employees are ENJOINED from implementing and enforcing against Intervenor-Plaintiffs.”

The Judge believes that the law violates the Administrative Procedures Act (APA) and exceeds the authority of the ATF. The government will be sure to appeal. If past decisions are any indication, the only hope that the Biden Administration has to keep the rule in place lies with the Supreme Court.

New Injunctions Issued Against ATF’s Frames and Receivers Rule by AmmoLand Shooting Sports News on Scribd


About John Crump

John is a NRA instructor and a constitutional activist; he has written about firearms and interviewed people of all walks of life. Mr. Crump lives in Northern Virginia with his wife and sons and can be followed on Twitter at @crumpyss, or at www.crumpy.com.

John Crump

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Montana454Casull

Anybody with a clue purchased thier 80% before the illegitimate clownshow was installed after the rigged election . FJB and the ATF

DDS

I agree with what you say up to a point. But your “anybody with a clue” should have read the writing on the wall, realized that the 80% number was what the Left likes to call “a good first step” and started getting ready for the day when BATFE moves the goal posts yet again to 50% or whatever. People who looked ahead stocked up on MilSurp ammo back when “Fred” posted “buy it cheap and stack it deep” in his Shotgun News ads. Those folks are not affected or concerned by today’s ammo prices. They’re set. People who are… Read more »

Last edited 1 year ago by DDS
2AGunster

Can you make a lower with a Silver ingot? Asking for a friend

Shotsmith

With the judges Donald Trump put on the Supreme Court we have a good expectation the ATF will lose. Merick Garland continues to prove he’s not qualified to be on the Supreme Court.

Elections have consequences, mean tweets don’t. Vote for the people who get the right things done.

Montana454Casull

Keep it short , ya don’t have to write a book . Most of us have shit top do and can’t spend all day reading your post.

Bubba

If you look to the left and you look to the right and they are not crazy, than you probaby are.
The things you say are like the ramblings of a lunatic.

The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.

So if it is also happening on other sites. I’d look a little deeper into the way you phrase things or how you even approach a subject.

Orion

bitter much? from your continuous long winded diatribes it appears you must have lost some legal case and cant get passed the defeat. time to move on, bud. life is too short.

DDS

C’mon, Man!

Don’t hold back.

Take a few minutes and tell us how you really feel.

Colt

This just in.. the Biden Administration and ATF just issued a rule banning Campbell Soup in a can… Apparently it can be readily converted from its state as a partial unfinished receiver into a “machine gun”.

The “common sense” administration. LOL
Joe has no brain matter left and the handlers capitalize on it.

#ghostsoup

DDS

Be advised that if you overcook that soup BATFE considers “Chore Boy” pot scrubbing pads to be an NFA item.

https://gundigest.com/article/atf-classifies-chore-boy-pot-scrubber-pads-nfa-firearms

JMacZ

Maybe now is the time for a bit of back-up insurance…

Cadvoc

Just a thought from one who is neither a lawyer nor law enforcement: Why is it not the `Rule of Law’ that any new rule/regulation issued by the ATF or other government agency, first ensures that the new rule/regulation complies (is approve by SCOTUS, etc.) with, is in accordance with Constitutional/Federal Law, prior to application? I believe this protocol would protect our Constitutional rights, and put the burden of proof on these agencies, rather than the pocketbook of the American public/industry!

Orion

nah, he’ll never figure it out.

Akai

Didn’t this go to SCOTUS, and SCOTUS said ATF could continue their BS while lower courts handle appeals? It’s hard to keep up with what goes to SCOTUS and then it bounces all around.