US Supreme Court skeptical of challenge to 'ghost guns' regulation

Confiscated 'ghost guns' displayed at a news conference in New York by city officials (SPENCER PLATT)
Confiscated 'ghost guns' displayed at a news conference in New York by city officials (SPENCER PLATT) (SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES/Getty Images via AFP)

The US Supreme Court appeared poised on Tuesday to uphold recent federal regulation that tightened control of "ghost guns" -- firearms sold in easy-to-assemble kits.

Gun manufacturers and gun rights groups are challenging a 2022 Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) rule that requires ghost guns, like other firearms, to have serial numbers and their purchasers to undergo background checks.

The ATF rule also requires commercial sellers of what are known as "buy-build-shoot" kits to be licensed and maintain records.

"Those basic requirements are crucial to solving gun crimes and keeping guns out of the hands of minors, felons and domestic abusers," Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, representing the administration of President Joe Biden, told the court.

"But in recent years, companies like the respondents here have tried to circumvent those requirements," Prelogar said, marketing ghost guns as "ridiculously easy to assemble" and boasting that buyers can go "from opening the mail to having a fully functional gun in as little as 15 minutes."

"Those untraceable guns are attractive to people who can't lawfully purchase them or who plan to use them in crimes," she said. "As a result, our nation has seen an explosion in crimes committed with ghost guns."

Prelogar said she had put one of the kits together herself and -- despite being "someone who struggles with IKEA furniture" -- she found it quite easy, involving only a couple of steps, including drilling a few holes.

Peter Patterson, representing the gun manufacturers and gun rights groups objecting to the ATF rule, argued that the federal agency had "exceeded its authority."

"ATF has expanded the definition of firearm to include collections of parts that are not weapons," Patterson said, adding that a kit should not be considered a firearm under the Gun Control Act passed by Congress in 1968.

- 'Seems a little made up' -

The conservative-dominated Supreme Court has expanded gun rights in previous cases, striking down a ban on bump stocks -- devices which allow semi-automatic rifles to fire like a machine gun -- but the justices did not appear inclined to do so in the ghost gun case.

Patterson said the home assembly kits, which sometimes include parts made by 3D printers, were popular among gun hobbyists, "like individuals who enjoy working on their car every weekend."

That drew a wry response from Chief Justice John Roberts, one of several conservative justices on the bench who, along with the three liberals, appeared skeptical of the challenge to the ATF rule.

"Drilling a hole or two, I would think, doesn't give the same sort of reward that you get from working on your car on the weekends," Roberts said.

Justice Amy Coney Barrett, another conservative, took issue at one point with Patterson's reading of the Gun Control Act, saying it "seems a little made up."

According to ATF figures, nearly 20,000 ghost guns were recovered at crime scenes in the United States in 2021 -- a tenfold increase from 2016. Solicitor General Prelogar said the number has dropped dramatically since the 2022 rule went into force.

The Biden administration appealed to the Supreme Court after a district court struck down the ATF rule and its ruling was upheld by a conservative-dominated appeals court panel.

The Supreme Court, by a 5-4 vote, stayed the order of the lower courts striking down the ATF rule and decided to hear the case.

It is expected to deliver a decision before the end of June 2025.

cl/bjt