Gun Owners of America
ATF Raids Ares Armor, Collects Gun Buyers’ Lists
Take the GOA poll and send a message to Congress
By now, you may have heard about the raid on Ares Armor by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF).
Ares Armor is a gun parts store that carries a lower receiver of an AR-15 which is considered only 80% of a completed firearm (and, hence, is not classified as a firearm).
Nevertheless, Karras got a temporary restraining order (TRO) against the ATF. But the agency got the TRO overturned by lying to the judge about Karras' product -- which, again, is not classified as a firearm.
During the raid, the ATF stole much of his inventory of the 80% lower receivers and his customer list. That latter item -- the Ares Armor customer list -- appears to be what the ATF especially wanted.
Since the AR-15 lowers are not firearms, the ATF should, technically, have no authority in the matter at all.
Even the ATF’s own rule making does not consider the 80% lower receivers to be firearms, so they should have no authority to regulate or confiscate them.
The AR-15 lowers have no serial numbers and they are not registered with the ATF by means of a background check. (Customers buy the other 20% and assemble the gun for their own use, which is legal.)
Sadly, on March 15, the ATF exhibited its infamous lawlessness by conducting what many gun owners consider to be an illegal raid.
GOA’s related foundation (Gun Owners Foundation) stands with Ares Armor against ATF's arbitrary exercise of power to punish law-abiding businesses and create a gun registry, and should the need arise, our experienced legal team stands ready to assist the Ares Armor legal team.
As a result of this recent confiscation of gun owners’ names, Gun Owners of America is conducting a poll of its members and activists.
The Poll Question: Do you believe the ATF is illegally collecting gun owner names from 4473’s and other gun records -- in order to illegally compile a national gun registry?
ARGUMENTS PRO:
We saw that, in just the past week, the ATF did a slimy end-run around a restraining order to order to seize Ares Armor's computers containing its customer list.
In addition, many, many members have told us that the ATF is copying 4473's and bound books during its annual FFL inspections.
ARGUMENTS CON:
Federal law prohibits a compilation of a gun registry by the ATF. In order to compile a de facto gun registry, even if stored in regional computers, the ATF -- a federal law enforcement agency -- would have to violate federal law.
The results will be shared with Congress.
(NOTE: While we will keep your name confidential, you are certainly free to withhold it.)
The real kicker is Ares got a temporary restraining order against the ATF and they lied to a judge about it to get it rescinded.