Wednesday, May 15, 2024

New Details Leaked On Biden Administration’s Upcoming Background Check Power Grab

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By NRA-ILA

Last week, we reported on the Administration's treacherous move to defund scholastic archery, hunting, and marksmanship programs under an obscure provision of the Orwellian Bipartisan Safer Communities Act (BSCA). The BSCA has proven to be the gift that keeps on giving for extreme and persecutory , to the mortification of some of its more moderate supporters who thought they were voting for provisions aimed at reducing and increasing access to mental healthcare. Now, details are emerging of Biden's latest plans to leverage the sprawling, sinister act in his continued pursuit of civilian disarmament. This time the target is eliminating the age-old practice of noncommercial, private firearm sales.

Biden has not been coy about his ambitions to push existing law as far as possible (and likely past the breaking point) toward “universal” firearm background checks. We have already reported on an executive order he released in March, the first item of which was “moving the U.S. as close to universal background checks as possible without additional legislation.” But Biden did have legislative help from the BSCA in this effort, which amended a critical legal term concerning who is considered “engaged in the business” of firearm sales, and therefore required to become a federal firearm licensee (FFL) and run background checks on all retail transfers.

Previously, an individual only needed an FFL when engaged in “a course of or business“ involving “repetitive” buying and reselling  of firearms with the “principal objective” of “livelihood and profit.” The BSCA removed the “livelihood” element so that profit seeking alone would fulfill the required objective of the sales.This change broadened the FFL requirement, but a “course” of “repetitive” buying and reselling of firearms is still necessary. Nevertheless, it has remained unclear where the lines are to be drawn.

Now, the Times is reporting that Biden will move ahead with implementing a longtime goal of the anti-gun movement: setting a numerical threshold of sales that will establish when an individual needs an FFL. That article states:

The regulations will set a threshold number of transactions that would define a dealer; gun-control groups hope to see it at five sales a year or lower. The rules will be backed up by a renewed push to prosecute businesses that refuse to register, by accessing bank records, storage unit leases and other expenses associated with running an off-the-books gun business.

Indeed, gun control groups had pushed for this same move under the Obama/Biden administration. But even Obama's army of anti-gun lawyers could not come up with a way around statutory language and judicial interpretations that pre-empted this approach. If the New York Times's report is true, Biden is clearly hoping activist courts will hang their hats on the changes made by the BSCA to ratify the fiction that used that act to authorize a numerical threshold for who is required to obtain an FFL.

Of course, the BSCA says nothing of the sort. “Livelihood” may not be the same thing as “profit,” but the structure that has always required a case-by-case determination based on the facts of each situation remains in place.  Also remaining in place are longstanding qualifications in the law that allow for “occasional sales, exchanges, or purchases of firearms for the enhancement of a personal collection or for a hobby” or for the sale of “all or part of [a] personal collection of firearms.”

Yet the has already shown a distinct willingness to ignore limitations on its authority in other ambitious gun-control rulemakings, a number of which remain mired in ping-ponging judicial proceedings that have substantiated plaintiffs' allegations of overreach. This rule will almost certainly be no different.

Biden's gun control schemes, however, reach well beyond agency enforcement and court proceedings. Collaborators in the technology and financial sectors stand ready to help the administration implement its policies with corresponding censorship, de-platforming, and de-banking. Armslist, which was featured at length in the Times report as a supposed private sales boogieman, lost its YouTube account within days of the article's publication. And popular payment processingwebsite designauction sitessocial media, and business support software companies or online platforms have already banned even legal firearm sales from their business models. Absent explicit evidence of collusion, these “coincidental” confluences of private sector “business decisions” with administration enforcement policies will be difficult to reach through the judicial process.

The NRA of course opposed the BSCA and warned the public and its moderate supporters that it “leaves too much discretion in the hands of government officials and also contains undefined and overbroad provisions – inviting interference with our constitutional freedoms.” This warning, unfortunately, has been borne out again and again, and the upcoming background check rulemaking could be the most dramatic example yet.

Stay tuned for further developments, and rest assured that the NRA will use all available measures to continue to counteract the Biden administration's abuse of the BSCA and other provisions of federal law.

Find the original article in its entirety on NRA-ILA.

7 COMMENTS

  1. Anyone wanna bet that they will try to limit the number of ‘private’ transactions to either 2 or 3 annually and will throw a bone out and ‘settle’ for 5? Never mind of course for them to be able to ‘track’ the number of those sales is for a full blown registry which they would also need to have in place in order to do mandatory universal background checks.
    I predict that there will be a whole lot of fire sales in the week before these rules take effect.

  2. It would be acceptable to me if everyone that wanted to vote or buy a car also had to pass the same background check that firearms persons do.
    This would eliminate the worry some have of the government knowing who has a gun at home.

    • Carl – have ya bought a car recently? They DO a background check of sorts – via credit records. The dealership essentially ‘shops’ your personal info and based on what they find you WILL get what they deem the best interest rate. If you buy second hand from a private seller that issue never comes in to play. Oh yeah, they also verify that you have a valid driver’s license before they will let you even take a test drive.
      Apples to oranges.
      How many ‘background’ checks should someone have to endure before .gov deems you ‘trustworthy’ enough to own a 3000lb potential death dealing machine, much less a gun?

  3. globalists and their globalist puppet soros and their demonrat criminal party and their rino criminal party and their usps CRIMINAL organization and their doj and fbi CRIMINAL organizations to appoint globalist puppet, chester biden to continue to preach globalist agendas .

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