DOJ Brief in SBR Case Raises Eyebrows and Questions

Some in the 2A community are, once again, angry and upset with Attorney General Pam Bondi and the Department of Justice. At issue is a brief filed by Solicitor General John Sauer, urging the Supreme Court to deny certiorari to Rush v. United States, a challenge to the inclusion of short-barreled rifles in the National Firearms Act.

SBRs and the NFA have been a hot topic since Joe Biden’s ATF reclassified pistols with stabilizing braces as short-barreled rifles. This meant owners of these pistols had to register them with the federal government, pay a $200 transfer tax, go through the approval process, and comply with all the NFA rules for owners of NFA firearms.

The Biden reinterpretation of short-barreled rifles was shot down by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. However, the vacature was based on the ATF’s violation of the Administrative Procedures Act; the Second Amendment issues weren’t really addressed.

The Rush case is on appeal from the Seventh Circuit, which relied heavily on the Supreme Court’s 1939 ruling in United States v. Miller, a case involving a couple of bank robbers and a sawed-off shotgun.

What I find curious is the Seventh Circuit’s choice of precedent. Sonzinsky v. United States would have been a better choice. Not only did the Supreme Court uphold the NFA as a revenue measure, it took great pains to show a tax could have a regulatory effect yet remain a tax without any Second or Tenth Amendment implications.

Justice James MacReynolds’ majority opinion in Miller referred to Sonzinsky:

“Considering Sonzinsky v. United States and what was ruled in sundry causes arising under the Harrison Narcotic Act, the objection that the Act usurps police power reserved to the States is plainly untenable.”

It may be that the Seventh Circuit cited Miller because of the Supreme Court’s discussion of sawed-off shotguns:

“In the absence of any evidence tending to show that possession or use of a ‘shotgun having a barrel of less than eighteen inches in length’ at this time has some reasonable relationship to the preservation or efficiency of a well regulated militia, we cannot say that the Second Amendment guarantees the right to keep and bear such an instrument. Certainly, it is not within judicial notice that this weapon is any part of the ordinary military equipment, or that its use could contribute to the common defense.”

The Seventh Circuit reasoned that short-barreled rifles were like short-barreled shotguns: Not protected by the Second Amendment. The irony here is use in or suitability for militia service as a standard. While short-barreled rifles and shotguns might not make the grade, the right to keep and bear machine guns would easily pass constitutional muster. Gotta love the very clueless Seventh Circuit.

From the outside, it’s impossible to be absolutely sure of the DOJ’s motives in filing its brief in Rush v. United States. The smart money is on a desire to avoid a repeat of Rahimi v. United States and Chief Justice John Roberts’ Bruen-diluting majority opinion.

Merrick Garland, Biden’s attorney general, pushed hard for the Supreme Court to hear Rahimi instead of similar cases because of Zackey Rahimi’s record and history of violent behavior.

Jamond Rush is another Rahimi. The details surrounding his arrest will ensure a chilly reception in any court and place our recent wins – and our hopes for Supreme Court action in the 2025-2026 term – in jeopardy.

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About Bill Cawthon

Bill Cawthon first became a gun owner 55 years ago. He has been an active advocate for Americans’ civil liberties for more than a decade. He is the information director for the Second Amendment Society of Texas.Bill Cawthon


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Deplorable Bill

I was once issued and qualified with a car-15, a very short barreled M-16 some 48 years ago. Standard M-4 barrel is 14″. Also qualified with an M-79 Thump Gun, a 40 mm grenade launcher which also shot buckshot rounds when you could get them. It might have had a 12″ barrel. Same thing with a M-203 which was an M-16 with a 40mm grenade launcher under the hand guard. The point is there are lots of military weapons that are sbr’s.

Arm up and carry on

Matt in Oklahoma

Unfortunately it seems the NFA is where this administration has chosen to draw the ”I support the 2A” line. A couple of times now they’ve shown they want no changes. There has been good and bad which is better than the all bad we’ve had but far short of what we had hoped.

safcrkr

The Miller case is an interesting one for several reasons. First of all, for those who don’t know, nobody showed up in SCOTUS to argue Miller’s position, as he was presumed dead. Miller had won in the lower courts, and the ban on short barreled shotguns had been declared unconstitutional at the district court level. His case was dismissed. It was the government that appealed it to SCOTUS. The case proceeded before SCOTUS totally one sided, nobody arguing for Miller. The government’s position in Miller was that short barrelled shotguns with barrels less than 18″ were not suitable for militia… Read more »

Last edited 2 months ago by safcrkr
nitehntr

this is a really bad case to try and overturn the NF with. this guy is a multiple convicted felon and in the case at hand he shot at an occupied building. no matter who appointed them judges are human.

Texican

Remember George Zimmerman. Not surprised Blondi fails on 2A.
I think Trump let one of his BIG donors pick her.

Nick2.0

Once again, Bondi proves she’s anti 2A. And by extension, Trump because he appointed her.
Meanwhile the 2A groups can’t bring themselves to use all the “influence” they claim to have with Trump to get him to do some good.
Oh, and the Second Amendment Task Farce? Where are they? And why is no 2A group pushing to have a seat at it to help steer Trump’s/Bondi’s 2A policy in the right direction?

Roland T. Gunner

A tax can have a regulatory effect on firearms without having any 2A ramifications? What an ethically bankrupt pile of bull crap.

Why is DoJ allowed to fight and appeal ANYTHING? They are not supposed to have a dog in the hunt, simpky to enforce the law AS WRITTEN!

DIYinSTL

The brief from DoJ clearly spells out that Rush is a dirtbag “[and] this case would be a poor vehicle for addressing those issues.” But even though the brief ends with: “Other types of cases —for instance, cases involving state laws banning AR-15 rifles, see Snope, 145 S. Ct. at 1534 (statement of Kavanaugh, J. — would provide better vehicles for clarifying the appropriate framework for discerning what types of arms the Second Amendment protects.” I am not convinced they would concede to let SBRs, and certainly not SBSs, slip from the NFA. Maybe suppressors, maybe not. Maybe they will surprise… Read more »

HK Beats Glock

I love the problem Miller presents to gun grabbers, who refer to the AR-15 as a weapon of war. Because if that’s the case, then according to Miller, it CAN’t be banned, precisely because it would have applicability in a militia or wartime service. As well, there are a lot of SBR, in use in the military,and I bet the military can tell us exactly how many of them are/were in use the last 20 years or so