DOJ Warns Virginia on Gun Bills as Harmeet Dhillon Expands 2A Civil Rights Push

The Department of Justice has launched an unprecedented campaign to dismantle state and local gun restrictions across the country, deploying the federal government’s civil rights apparatus in defense of Second Amendment rights.

Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon, who leads the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division, has publicly declared her intention to challenge every state regulation inconsistent with pro-Second Amendment Supreme Court precedent, aiming to have them struck down, settled, or withdrawn before she leaves office.

The latest battleground is Virginia, where Gov. Abigail Spanberger faces a direct federal challenge over a sweeping package of more than 25 gun reform bills passed by the Democrat-controlled General Assembly during its 2026 legislative session.

Dhillon tweeted a pointed warning to the new governor. “@SpanbergerForVA is on notice: 2A rights SHALL NOT BE infringed. We are closely watching—in the event any unlawful legislation is enacted, we will sue. @CivilRights will protect the 2A rights of law-abiding citizens in Virginia. 2A Section Lawyers are standing by…”

On April 10, 2026, Dhillon sent a formal letter to Governor Spanberger putting her and the Commonwealth “on notice.” The letter stated plainly that “This letter provides formal notice that the Civil Rights Division will commence litigation in the event the Commonwealth of Virginia enacts certain bills that unconstitutionally limit law-abiding Americans’ individual right to bear arms.” Dhillon specifically cited President Trump’s Executive Order 14206, which directed the administration to actively protect Second Amendment rights.

The centerpiece of Virginia’s gun package is SB 749 and its companion HB 217, which would criminalize the purchase, sale, manufacture, import, or transfer of AR-15-style rifles in Virginia starting July 1, 2026. Other bills targeted ghost guns, expanded red flag laws, restricted firearms in public spaces and hospitals, and tightened rules around domestic abusers. Many of these same bills had been vetoed by the previous Republican governor, Glenn Youngkin.

Despite the DOJ warning, Spanberger proceeded to sign a batch of gun bills, including ghost gun regulations, domestic violence firearm protections, and gun industry liability legislation. On the night of April 13, facing her legislative deadline, Spanberger declined to sign or veto the assault weapons bill and instead sent it back to the General Assembly with amendments — a move that keeps the bill’s central framework intact while making some adjustments to its definition of “assault firearm.”

Dhillon’s confrontation with Virginia is part of a broader strategy that has reshaped the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division. In December 2025, she created an entirely new Second Amendment Section within the division — a first in DOJ history. The concept treats the Second Amendment as a civil right equivalent to speech or religion, deploying the DOJ’s litigation power to challenge state-level gun restrictions.

The DOJ has already filed lawsuits against Washington, D.C., the U.S. Virgin Islands, Los Angeles County over their gun restrictions. The division is also monitoring Colorado, New Jersey, and New York for potential legal action.

Dhillon has been hiring aggressively, building what she calls a “cadre of lawyers trained in enforcing these laws all over the country.” Recent additions include Barry Arrington, the former Texas Gun Rights Board Chairman and Chief Legal Counsel for the National Association for Gun Rights.

Dhillon’s campaign rests on a series of Supreme Court decisions that have dramatically expanded Second Amendment protections over the past two decades. The 2008 District of Columbia v. Heller ruling established that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to possess firearms for self-defense in the home, overturning D.C.’s handgun ban.

The 2022 New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen decision went further, striking down New York’s “proper cause” requirement for concealed carry permits and mandating that all gun regulations must be rooted in the nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation going back to 1791. This standard has rendered many existing state laws, rooted in twentieth-century public safety logic, legally vulnerable.

Dhillon’s letter to Spanberger also cited the Court’s June 2025 ruling in Smith and Wesson v. Estados Unidos Mexicanos — a PLCAA liability case that incidentally described AR-15s as “widely legal and bought by many ordinary consumers” — and Justice Kavanaugh’s statement on the Court’s denial of certiorari in Snope v. Brown, in which he wrote that “tens of millions of Americans own AR–15s” and called the Fourth Circuit’s upholding of Maryland’s AR-15 ban “questionable.”

The Supreme Court has not yet issued a definitive national ruling on “assault weapons” bans, but Dhillon and pro-gun advocates believe the Court’s existing language strongly suggests such bans are unconstitutional. The Illinois case Barnett v. Raoul at the 7th Circuit, where Dhillon personally argued in September 2025, could accelerate clarity on this question.

Dhillon’s office is targeting several specific types of state obstruction. In Los Angeles, the DOJ’s investigation revealed that the Sheriff’s Department had approved only 2 out of more than 8,000 concealed carry applications, with interview wait times stretching up to two years after receipt of a completed application.

The U.S. Virgin Islands required home inspections and “proper cause” showings nearly identical to what the Supreme Court already struck down in Bruen. Massachusetts bans the commercial sale of many common handguns, including popular Glock models, through its “Approved Firearms Roster” scheme, which the DOJ argues is flatly unconstitutional.

Washington D.C.’s categorical ban on AR-15s and similar semi-automatic rifles prompted a direct DOJ lawsuit, with Dhillon arguing these are the most commonly owned rifles in America and thus constitutionally protected.

For gun rights advocates, the DOJ’s intervention represents a historic shift. Pro-gun activists have spent years litigating against state governments largely as private plaintiffs. Having the full weight of the U.S. Department of Justice argue alongside them, and even initiate suits on their behalf, is unprecedented.

The confrontation with Virginia encapsulates this new reality. The federal government, acting through its civil rights enforcement apparatus, is now actively threatening to sue states that enact gun restrictions the administration considers unconstitutional. Governor Spanberger and other Democratic governors face a choice between their policy preferences and the prospect of expensive federal litigation.

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About José Niño

José Niño is a freelance writer based in Charlotte, North Carolina. You can contact him via Facebook and X/Twitter. Subscribe to his Substack newsletter by visiting “Jose Nino Unfiltered” on Substack.com.

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Deplorable Bill

That is some good news. We will have to see if lawsuits follow and we will see if prosecutions follow. Shall not be infringed means exactly that. Infringements must stop and be reversed, if not, then prosecutions. If not prosecutions, I guess that maybe they should have read the constitution they swore to uphold and maybe they should have looked at the flag they claim to uphold. Tyranny and treason come with a capitol price tag. I will keep my bucket of tar, my feather pillows and my rope — just in case. Freedom or death — to tyrants. Arm… Read more »

musicman44mag

Harmeet, please send a letter to OreGONEistan regarding HB2005 and 114.
Thank you.

Make OreGONEistan OreGUN again!!!!!!

HLB

Dhillon needs to issue Letters of Marque and Reprisal to 2nd Amendment citizens. While these were issued per Article I, Section 8, Clause 11 of the U.S. Constitution to privateers to take enemy ships, I am sure they could be used against rogue state and territorial governments if you wear a fouled anchor emblem on your cap. I will take one to Puerto Rico and one to the Virgin Islands. It should take a couple of months to clean those places up and then I will be back.

HLB

Mayor of Montvale

Boy, oh boy is this welcome. Once Spanberger is shut down, she will turn to her base and say, “Oh, well. You know I was doing the right thing when this happened.” She will be wrong about the “right thing”, of course, but that’s what she will say. And her base will support her, maybe even louder. For now, this DOJ/Civil Rights Division action has relieved some of the tension I’ve been feeling in my chest.

CourageousLion

Remember this people. It is the ENFORCERS that are the real tyrants. That follow orders to violate our rights and are willing to shoot your kid in the back your wife in the head and burn your church down with 17 little children inside we all should be concerned with. PERIOD. Without them these idiotic “laws” wouldn’t exist. We need Sheriffs in EVERY county in the US that will say NO to any infringements on the citizens of his/her county. That will be willing to swear in Posse members to defend the rights of the citizens of the county. Then… Read more »

brnfree in CT

I think this is a good thing but overall I strongly believe in the old saying time will tell.

Diamondback

Why rattle sabers with Virginia when she could DRAW them against a state that’s already enacted a ban?

Dhillon has a history as a tiger on 2A and general conservative lawfare; I wonder if BS Barbie and now Blanche aren’t tying her hands some.

Old Dog

Way to go Dhillon, don’t be afraid to kick them when they are down. She has turned into one of my favorite people.

Nanashi

Until Jeffery Bodell is prosecuted for perjury, this is all talk.

M.J.

I’ll believe it when/if it happens. 51+% of Virginians just sold their soles to the devil.