Critics Fundamentally Misconstrue the Supreme Court’s Bump Stock Ruling

Opinion

shoelaces shoestrings bump stock iStock-Asia Tsyhankova 1347935679
Even shoelaces or shoestrings can function as bump stocks. iStock-Asia Tsyhankova 1347935679

After the Supreme Court overturned the Trump administration’s bump stock ban last week, critics complained that the justices had interpreted the Second Amendment in a way that rules out perfectly reasonable gun regulations.

That was an odd complaint, because the case did not involve the Second Amendment.

The Court’s decision upheld an important principle that goes far beyond gun control: Federal bureaucrats do not have the authority to invent new crimes by rewriting the law. All Americans, regardless of how they feel about gun rights, have a stake in that principle, which is crucial to the rule of law, the separation of powers, and the due process requirement of fair notice.

Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) saw last week’s decision as a sign that the Supreme Court plans to “fundamentally rewrite the Second Amendment,” which will “make it very hard for Congress or state legislatures to be able to regulate guns.” MSNBC commentator Joyce Vance had a similar objection: “Does the history & tradition of our country really suggest the Founding Fathers meant for the 2nd Amendment to arm Americans with guns that fire 400 to 800 rounds per minute?”

Although Murphy is a lawyer and Vance is a law professor, they completely misconstrued what this case was about. The Supreme Court ruled that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives exceeded its statutory authority when it tried to ban bump stocks.

The products the ATF targeted are designed to assist bump firing, which involves pushing a rifle forward to activate the trigger by bumping it against a stationary finger, then allowing recoil energy to push the rifle backward, resetting the trigger. As long as the shooter maintains the requisite amount of forward pressure and keeps their finger in place, the rifle will fire repeatedly.

The “interpretive rule” at issue in this case, which was published in Dec. 2018 and took effect three months later, banned stock replacements that facilitate this rapid-firing technique by allowing the rifle’s receiver to slide back and forth. The ATF did that by classifying rifles equipped with bump stocks as machine guns, which contradicted the statutory definition and the agency’s long-standing interpretation of it.

Under federal law, a machine gun is a weapon that “automatically” fires more than one round “by a single function of the trigger.” A bump-fired rifle plainly does not fit that definition: It shoots just one round each time the trigger is activated and, given the manual effort necessary to fire additional rounds, does not fire “automatically.”

Bump stocks became notorious after a gunman used them in an attack that killed 58 people at a Las Vegas music festival in Oct. 2017. But even legislators who wanted to ban them recognized that the ATF could not do that on its own.

Because “the ATF lacks authority under the law to ban bump-fire stocks,” Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) said, “legislation is the only answer.” Noting that “the law has not changed,” Feinstein warned that “the gun lobby” would “have a field day” with the ATF’s “about face,” which relied partly on “a dubious analysis claiming that bumping the trigger is not the same as pulling it.”
Feinstein was right about that. But contrary to Murphy’s take, recognizing that the ATF overstepped its authority does not mean Congress is powerless to act.

“The statutory text is clear, and we must follow it,” Justice Samuel Alito wrote in a concurring opinion. “An event that highlights the need to amend a law does not itself change the law’s meaning.” But “now that the situation is clear,” he added, “Congress can act.”

Whatever the merits of a bump stock ban, in other words, regulators cannot unilaterally impose one, especially when that decision suddenly criminalizes the conduct of gun owners who abided by the law as the ATF had repeatedly explained it. Allowing that sort of lawless edict would be a recipe for tyranny.


About Jacob Sullum

Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine. Follow him on Twitter: @JacobSullum. During two decades in journalism, he has relentlessly skewered authoritarians of the left and the right, making the case for shrinking the realm of politics and expanding the realm of individual choice. Jacobs’ work appears here at AmmoLand News through a license with Creators Syndicate.

Jacob Sullum
Jacob Sullum
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Duane

Although Murphy is a lawyer and Vance is a law professor

Just proves what we know about most lawyers.

Colt

Liberals… still trying to convince the rest of us with an IQ and cognitive brain function that a man is actually a woman… and you wonder why they have “gun problems”

Wass

You’d think, they would at least give Trump some honor for the bump stock ban. They hardly noticed him. Thankfully, his SCOTUS picks helped correct his error.

GomeznSA

Yikes – I had to read the article since the caption for the lead picture was so ‘wrong’ A shoestring cannot be a ‘bump stock’ – period. That shoe string, regardless of the color ‘may’ facilitate ‘bump firing’ but in no way, shape or form is it any where near a ‘stock’. After all, bump firing is a technique, not a piece of hardware. When the issue originally came up post Las Vegas where one individual allegedly used bump stocks – which has NOT been proven one way or another, many of us were concerned that a knee jerk reaction… Read more »

Wild Bill

Democrat Murphy is half right. A return to the Constitution, not a rewrite, “… will “make it very hard for Congress or state legislatures to be able to regulate guns.”  And that is what the founders intended all along.

Darkman

Republican senator blocks ban on bump stocks for guns brought by Democrats
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/republican-senator-blocks-ban-bump-stocks-guns-brought-democrats-rcna157516

NDevr2Persevere

Idiots! Yes, they are. Like TDS, they have GDS (gun derangement syndrome) and will do anything to take our guns away including making dumbass comments portrayed in this excellent article! SMH in disbelief they screwed this up!!!

gregs

whew! thought you were going for a tranny thing when i saw the picture, then read the caption underneath. i don’t like seeing the rainbow God gave us twisted into something repugnant. anyhow. chris, this decision doesn’t prevent any state or federal government from regulate firearms, it just has to be within the context of the wording of the Second Amendment. reigning in the federal government is why the Constitution and Bill of Rights was written as it was. our founding fathers wanted to constrain the power of the federal government and bureaucracy. hey, if you don’t like freedom there… Read more »

Considerthis

If my memory serves me, at one time the ATF did actually declare that shoelaces are machine guns. That is the kind of unenforceable law that allows them to nose into anybodies business. I guess one of the brighter dim bulbs at the agency finally figured out that they were in violation since they wore shoes too. So they never really tried to enforce it.

HLB

perfectly reasonable gun regulations”. Not constitutionally allowed.

HLB