🚨@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… 🚨 pic.twitter.com/h2DfXwgaKC
— AAGHarmeetDhillon (@AAGDhillon) April 10, 2026
For years, gun owners have watched blue-state politicians pass one unconstitutional restriction after another while the federal government mostly stood on the sidelines. That may be changing.
In a April 10, 2026, letter to Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger, Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon put the Commonwealth on formal notice: if Virginia enacts a slate of anti-gun bills now sitting on the governor’s desk, the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division is prepared to sue.
That is the federal government warning a state executive, in writing, that certain proposed gun-control measures appear to violate the Second Amendment and will trigger litigation if signed into law.
The biggest target named in the letter is SB 749, which DOJ says would force Virginia law enforcement agencies to participate in “a practice of unconstitutionally restricting the making, buying, or selling of AR-15s and many other semi-automatic firearms in common use.”
For ordinary gun owners, this is the heart of the issue. Anti-gun lawmakers have incessantly sought to ban the most popular rifles in America as “public safety” measures. AR-15 pattern rifles are not rare, unusual, or outside the American tradition of lawful ownership. They are among the most commonly owned rifles in the country, used for home defense, recreation, training, and competition by millions of law-abiding citizens.
Dhillon’s letter cites the Supreme Court’s 2025 decision in Smith & Wesson Brands, Inc. v. Estados Unidos Mexicanos, noting the Court described AR-15s as “both widely legal and bought by many ordinary consumers.” She also cites Garland v. Cargill, including Justice Sotomayor’s dissent, for the proposition that AR-15s are “commonly available, semiautomatic rifles.” The letter then points to Justice Kavanaugh’s statement respecting denial of certiorari in Snope v. Brown, which referenced arms possessed by “literally tens of millions of Americans.”
In a footnote, the letter acknowledges that the Fourth Circuit currently has contrary precedent, citing Bianchi v. Brown, the case upholding Maryland’s ban on so-called assault weapons. But DOJ flatly says that the case was wrongly decided. That is a major statement. Federal agencies do not lightly send a governor a formal warning letter saying a controlling appellate decision in that circuit was wrong.
The letter also goes beyond rifle bans. Dhillon warns that bills requiring constitutionally protected firearms to be kept in an inoperable state are unconstitutional under District of Columbia v. Heller.
Gun-control advocates love to market storage mandates as “common sense,” but the actual effect is often to make a defensive firearm less useful when seconds matter most. Heller dealt with that problem directly when it struck down a requirement that firearms in the home be rendered and kept inoperable at all times. A gun locked up in a way that prevents ready access for self-defense is not much use when someone kicks your door in at 2 a.m.
Dhillon says Virginia lawmakers have sent the governor several bills that would mirror restrictions struck down in Heller or otherwise interfere with the lawful use of protected arms for self-defense. She then broadens the warning further, stating that the General Assembly has forwarded “over 20 bills” restricting Second Amendment rights.
The Civil Rights Division has now formally created a Second Amendment Section and has already begun bringing Second Amendment cases in federal district and appellate courts. States like Virginia may no longer be able to assume they can pass whatever they want and dare private plaintiffs to spend years and fortunes challenging it.
Under Harmeet Dhillon, the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division has already begun treating the Second Amendment like an actual civil right instead of a constitutional orphan. Her division sued the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department over concealed-carry permit delays after reviewing thousands of applications, sued the District of Columbia over its ban on registering AR-15s and other common semiautomatic firearms, and sued the Virgin Islands Police Department over licensing practices DOJ said reduced the right to bear arms to a “virtual nullity.”
Dhillon’s Civil Rights Division has also filed amicus briefs backing gun owners in major appellate fights, including California’s ammunition background-check case in Rhode v. Bonta and the New Jersey challenge to bans on AR-15s and standard-capacity magazines. In other words, Virginia is not hearing empty talk. It is hearing from a DOJ Civil Rights Division that has already started building a record of intervening when governments treat the Second Amendment as optional.
Of course, gun owners should stay realistic. This letter is not a court order. It is not an injunction. It does not prevent Virginia from enacting these bills on its own. If the Governor Spanberger signs them, litigation will still take time, no matter how aggressive the DOJ chooses to be. It also does nothing to solve the news that the ATF and DOJ plan to enforce Biden-era gun control, as well as a long list of recent betrayals.
However, it is still significant that a formal warning from the Civil Rights Division was sent before the bills were signed into law. It tells Virginia lawmakers and the governor that they are not just picking a fight with gun-rights groups anymore. They may be picking a fight with the federal government as well.
That is exactly what should happen when a state moves to ban some of the most common firearms in America and restrict the ability of law-abiding citizens to keep usable arms for self-defense.
For too long, anti-gun politicians have behaved as though the Second Amendment is the one constitutional right they can regulate, narrow, and insult without consequence. Virginia may be about to learn that this approach comes with consequences after all.
If Governor Spanberger signs these bills, the next fight may not just be in Richmond. It may begin with the Department of Justice walking into federal court and telling a judge that Virginia crossed a constitutional line.
About Duncan Johnson:
Duncan Johnson is a lifelong firearms enthusiast and unwavering defender of the Second Amendment—where “shall not be infringed” means exactly what it says. A graduate of George Mason University, he enjoys competing in local USPSA and multi-gun competitions whenever he’s not covering the latest in gun rights and firearm policy. Duncan is a regular contributor to AmmoLand News and serves as part of the editorial team responsible for AmmoLand’s daily gun-rights reporting and industry coverage.

If they are going to sue Virginia, why haven’t they sued Connecticut yet? AR-15’s and 10+ mags have been banned here since 2013 ! Come on, get under Gov. Lamont’s skin, send him a warning letter.
Great. When will they write to scotus and demand the cases on the NFA are heard? Where are their amicus briefs?
The DOJ should take a look at all the UNCONSTITUTIONAL laws Colorado has put into effect. Everything from requiring a permit to purchase a firearm to increased and expensive training for a concealed carry permit. The DemocRAT controlled legislature is raging anti-2nd Amendment. The DOJ should put an end to it, NOW !!
Unfortunately, It is irrelevant if Spanberger signs the legislation. She must veto them, or they they automatically become law, without her signature. The other option is for her to amend the legislation. Then it goes back to the Senate and runs the process again.
I am happy to see the feds jumping into the fray. VCDL, GOA, & the rest, only have so many resources. It’s going to be a long, dirty fight.
It would be nice to have link to “the Letter”.
All of the anti gun states us the same approach “they can pass whatever they want and dare private plaintiffs to spend years and fortunes challenging it”. More like decades. *Commiefornia is the worse with their 11% excise tax on guns, ammo, and parts. *Have to buy all of the aforementioned through an FFL*Ban on magazines over 10 rounds*limit on AR-15 configuration to no mag release, folding stock, pistol grip, flash suppression, must be “featureless” (no pistol grip, flash hider, or folding stock) with a detachable 10-round magazine, or utilize a “fixed magazine” mechanism that requires breaking the action to… Read more »
“A gun locked up in a way that prevents ready access for self-defense is not much use when someone kicks your door in at 2 a.m.” Storage / inaccessible guns is only PART of the problem. That “someone” busting in your door at 2 a.m. is going to be a recidivist thug who the soft-on-crime dems paroled early or probationed instead of incarcerated. Idiot dems got us going and coming. A—-holes. No kids in my house, so firearms are staged throughout, no more than 2 seconds from anywhere I would be. Thugs beware. Quick self-defense brings high odds of a… Read more »
Another day, another Ammoland newsletter detailing 3 or 4 new 2A lawsuits between the fedgov and the blue states. Notice this lawfare battle never ends, even after the Supreme Court rules in favor of 2A? And you also see another half-dozen emails asking you to give money to protect your 2A rights? This is the biggest shakedown, next to the military industrial complex, run by and for the profit of lawyers. And most all politicians also happen to be lawyers.
Sue with Iead. The Founding Fathers did, and it worked.
All fine and well. But why hasn’t that been done with other restrictive states like Illinois? Illinois leads the way in 2nd Amendment bans. Since Bruen, the supremes have not supported many challenges to these states restrictive laws.
Another thing to add to the list of what all the Trump administration has done or is doing for American gun owners.