Wednesday, May 13, 2026

AI Could Turn ATF’s 4473 Stockpile Into the Gun Registry Congress Banned

Featured image generated by Grok Imagine, built by xAI.
Featured image generated by Grok Imagine, built by xAI.

American gun owners should be up in arms over any federal gun registration scheme. The threat of artificial intelligence only makes the danger worse.

For decades, Second Amendment supporters have warned that ATF’s growing stockpile of firearm transaction records could become the national gun registry Congress explicitly banned in 1986. ATF’s excuse has always been that its records are not searchable by a buyer’s name. That was never much comfort. In the age of AI, it is almost meaningless.

That is the warning at the center of a new Firearms Research Center paper by Del Schlangen, titled “Congress Banned a Gun Registry; AI Inference May Render the Prohibition Obsolete.” The paper argues that the long fight over ATF’s digitized firearm transaction records may already be behind the technology curve. The old question was whether ATF’s database is “searchable.” The new question is whether artificial intelligence can make that excuse irrelevant.

AmmoLand readers know the background. We have been covering ATF’s out-of-business dealer record stockpile for years, including the agency’s 920-million-plus record holdings, the digitization of those records, and the obvious concern that the Bureau is sitting on the building blocks of a national gun registry. AmmoLand previously reported that ATF acknowledged holding 920,664,765 firearm records, with almost all already scanned or digitized.

That number has only become harder to dismiss. In 2026, AmmoLand covered Senate testimony warning that ATF has nearly one billion firearm records, with 94 percent already digitized. GOA’s Erich Pratt told senators the system is “not a registry in name only” but “a confiscation list waiting to be used.”

ATF’s defense has been just as familiar: the records supposedly cannot be searched by purchaser name. That was never good enough. Now, in an AI world, it borders on absurd.

Congress banned federal gun registration in the Firearm Owners’ Protection Act of 1986. The law, codified at 18 U.S.C. § 926(a), prohibits “any system of registration of firearms, firearms owners, or firearms transactions.”

Schlangen’s paper focuses on “any system” because the Bureau’s argument has always leaned on technical hair-splitting. Former ATF Director Steven Dettelbach said ATF pays to remove search functionality from Adobe files to comply with Congress’s ban. Schlangen points out what that really means: ATF has the underlying data. Names, addresses, dates of birth, firearm descriptions, and serial numbers are visually present in the files. The claimed safeguard is a disabled software feature.

That is not a constitutional firewall. It is a software toggle.

The paper says ATF’s Out-of-Business Records Imaging System, or OBRIS, holds about 921 million digitized transaction records from dealers who closed or surrendered their licenses. These are images of Form 4473s, the forms Americans fill out when buying guns from licensed dealers. They contain the exact information gun owners have always feared the government would centralize: name, address, date of birth, firearm description, and serial number.

The old ATF talking point assumes that preventing text-based search prevents data extraction. Schlangen argues that modern AI destroys that assumption. Multimodal AI systems can process document images as visual objects. They do not need a normal PDF search bar. They can read, extract, structure, and connect data from images. A handwritten serial number on a 4473 is not invisible to AI just because Adobe search is disabled. That should end the “not searchable” excuse.

ATF does not need a neat alphabetical list to have a registry problem. If AI can extract names and serial numbers from scanned 4473s, connect them to other records, and produce person-to-firearm associations, then the government has created the functional equivalent of what Congress banned.

Schlangen calls this “registry-equivalent knowledge.”

The concept is simple. A traditional registry tells the government who owns what. An AI-inferred registry may do the same thing without being stored as a traditional registry. The paper identifies three dangerous capabilities: the ability to type in a person’s name and receive a likely firearms profile; the ability to generate lists of probable gun owners in a geographic area or population group; and the ability to connect a firearm, serial number, model, or ballistic clue to a likely owner outside the traditional trace process.

Any one of those should alarm every gun owner in America. All three together would be a shadow registry in everything but name.

It is a warning that the data, the technology, and federal AI policy are converging. Waiting until the switch is flipped would be a reckless way to defend the Second Amendment.

The danger also goes beyond OBRIS. ATF maintains multiple sales reports. It uses eTrace for firearm tracing. NIBIN contains millions of ballistic images. The NFA registry already tracks suppressors, machine guns, short-barreled rifles, and other restricted items. Each of those systems may be defended as limited, separate, or lawful on its own. But AI is built to connect dots.

A billion records, processed through AI, tied to trace data, ballistic data, dealer records, and other government inputs, can produce something far more dangerous than any single filing cabinet.

It can produce a gun-owner dossier.

This is where ATF’s long-running registry problem gets more serious. AmmoLand has already covered the Bureau’s push to digitize massive volumes of private firearm records and the concern that the agency is moving one step closer to a national gun registry. Prior coverage noted that Biden-era record-retention changes ended the old 20-year destruction limit and moved FFL records toward permanent retention.

AI makes that permanent stockpile more dangerous.

Schlangen also explains why the legal landscape is better for future challenges than it once was. The old NRA v. Reno case upheld temporary NICS record retention, but that involved a limited audit-retention system, not a permanent billion-record archive that could be processed with modern AI. More importantly, Reno was decided under Chevron deference, when courts often deferred to federal agencies. After Loper Bright, courts no longer have to accept ATF’s self-serving interpretation of what counts as “any system of registration.”

A post-Loper Bright court can read § 926(a) for itself. If Congress said “any system,” courts do not have to pretend the law only covers a database that looks like it came from 1986. A repeatable AI process that uses OBRIS images, eTrace data, multiple-sale reports, and other inputs to output firearm ownership associations is a system in the ordinary meaning of the word.

The Second Amendment concern is just as obvious. Schlangen points to First Amendment cases recognizing that government knowledge of constitutionally protected activity can chill the exercise of rights. The paper acknowledges that courts have not yet fully extended that chilling-effect doctrine to the Second Amendment, but the principle should not be hard to understand.

If Americans believe the federal government can quietly build firearm ownership profiles from dealer records, background-check residue, trace systems, and AI inference, some will hesitate before buying, selling, or keeping arms. That chill is not hypothetical. Registration has always been sold as paperwork. In practice, it tells the government who has what.

Once the government knows who has what, the next step is targeting for confiscation.

Gun owners do not oppose registries because they are paranoid. They oppose registries because history keeps proving them right. Registration is how governments move from regulating arms to tracking them. Tracking is how they move from tracking to confiscation, selective enforcement, or political intimidation.

The paper’s conclusion is blunt. ATF is a federal agency. Its firearm transaction records are government data. Federal AI policy is moving toward broad data ingestion. One of the publicly known barriers between ATF’s records and a searchable registry is disabled search functionality. In an age of OCR, entity extraction, record linkage, and AI inference, that is a fragile shield for a statutory command.

Congress needs to close the gap now.

The fix should be direct: amend § 926(a) so the registry ban applies not only to formal databases, but also to any AI system, machine-learning model, computational process, or inferential tool that allows the government to derive firearm ownership information from federal data. Congress or the Executive Branch should also wall off firearm transaction records from federal AI-ingestion and model-training programs. ATF should be forced to publish a public AI-governance policy and explain what it is doing with gun-owner data.

No registry means no registry.

Not a paper registry.

Not a searchable registry.

Not a billion-record “non-searchable” archive.

And not an AI-powered shadow registry built from 4473s, trace data, ballistic records, multiple-sale reports, or any other government stockpile of lawful gun-owner information.

ATF Gun Registry Exposed, Senate Hearing Raises Alarm Over 1 Billion Records


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.Duncan Johnson




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PSA, NAGR Ask Supreme Court To Review ATF’s NFA Abuse In Adamiak Case

Patrick “Tate” Adamiak is serving 20 years in federal prison. Not for possessing functional weapons, but for possessing items that the government’s own witnesses said could not fire a projectile.

Cut-up parts that required welding to function. Grenade-launcher components stored separately with multiple lawful uses. Two tubes stamped “INERT” and “TRAINING AID DUMMY” with a hole drilled through them.

That is what the federal government turned into a National Firearms Act conviction.

The federal government did not just “stretch” the National Firearms Act in the Patrick “Tate” Adamiak case. According to a new Supreme Court amicus brief, federal prosecutors treated cut-up parts, separated components, and inert training tubes as if they were functioning NFA weapons, then used that theory to help send a decorated Navy veteran with no prior criminal history to federal prison for 20 years.

This is the administrative gun-control machine doing what it does best: taking vague or elastic federal definitions, pushing them beyond recognition, and punishing ordinary American citizens for exercising their rights.

Now, Palmetto State Armory, the National Association for Gun Rights, and the Right to Bear Association are asking the U.S. Supreme Court to step in.

The case is Patrick Tate Adamiak v. United States, No. 25-1190. The Supreme Court docket shows the petition was filed April 10, 2026, docketed April 16, and distributed for the Court’s May 14, 2026 conference. The United States waived its right to respond unless the Court asks for one.

The May 11 amicus brief filed by NAGR, Right to Bear, and PSA cuts straight to the point: the Fourth Circuit affirmed Adamiak’s conviction after disposing of his as-applied Second Amendment claim in a single sentence, calling it “squarely foreclosed” by circuit precedent. The amici argue the court did not examine the actual conduct, did not grapple with the actual items, and did not require the government to identify any historical tradition supporting this kind of prosecution.

That is exactly the kind of lower-court evasion Bruen was supposed to stop.

The Government Treated Inoperable Objects Like Working Weapons

The facts described by the amici should alarm every collector, parts-kit owner, surplus buyer, reenactor, museum, veteran, and gun owner who has ever relied on the difference between a working weapon and a nonfunctional object.

The brief says Adamiak was sentenced to 20 years for items the government’s own witnesses acknowledged could not fire a projectile. The PPSh-pattern remnants charged in Counts One and Two had been cut into pieces and required welding to function. The grenade-launcher components in Counts Three and Four were separated and stored apart, and the government allegedly conceded the receivers had been lawfully purchased through a federal firearms licensee and had multiple lawful uses. The two RPG-7-pattern launchers in Count Five were marked “INERT” and “TRAINING AID DUMMY,” lacked firing mechanisms, and had a hole drilled through the tube.

An inert, nonfiring RPG that was owned by Patrick “Tate” Adamiak. The ATF replaced dozens of internal parts in the nonfiring device in order to get it to fire one 7.62x39mm round. As a result, Adamiak was charged federally with owning real rocket-propelled grenade launchers. (Photo courtesy of Adamiak).
An inert, nonfiring RPG that was owned by Patrick “Tate” Adamiak. The ATF replaced dozens of internal parts in the nonfiring device in order to get it to fire one 7.62x39mm round. As a result, Adamiak was charged federally with owning real rocket-propelled grenade launchers. (Photo courtesy of Adamiak).
Holes drilled into Adamiak’s inert RPGs are located where an operator’s face would be when firing. (Photo courtesy of Adamiak).

That is the government’s theory in plain English: cut-up remnants became machinegun evidence, separated components became launcher evidence, and inert tubes became destructive-device evidence.

The ATF and federal prosecutors did not merely push the outer edge of the NFA. As the amici frame it, the government treated nonfunctional items as if they satisfied the NFA’s definitions in the first place. That is a much bigger problem than “overregulation.” It is the government using its own interpretation of technical firearms definitions to manufacture criminal liability out of objects that could not fire in the condition possessed.

PSA made the same point in its public video on the filing. The company described Adamiak as a decorated Navy veteran who served overseas for more than a decade and now sits in federal prison “not for possessing functional weapons,” but for possessing items government witnesses said could not fire a projectile. PSA described the Fourth Circuit’s treatment of the case as “no examination of the actual items, no historical analysis, no demand that the government prove its case.”

The Fourth Circuit Gave The Government A Shortcut

The Supreme Court’s Second Amendment cases are not complicated on this point. Heller recognized the individual right to keep and bear arms. McDonald applied that right against the states. Bruen told lower courts how to analyze modern gun restrictions: if the Second Amendment’s plain text covers the conduct, the government bears the burden of proving the restriction is consistent with the nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.

The Fourth Circuit, according to the amici, skipped that work.

It relied on Bianchi v. Brown, a so-called “assault weapon” case, and United States v. Hunt, a felon-in-possession case, to reject Adamiak’s as-applied claim. But those cases did not involve cut-up PPSh parts, separated launcher components, inert RPG-style training tubes, or nonfunctional military relics.

If a court can ignore the actual object and simply say “foreclosed,” then Bruen becomes optional. The Second Amendment becomes a right that exists in Supreme Court opinions but disappears when ATF classifications and federal prosecutors enter the room.

No other constitutional right gets treated this way. A First Amendment case requires courts to examine the actual speech. A Fourth Amendment case requires courts to examine the actual search. A Second Amendment case should require courts to examine the actual arms, parts, or objects at issue, especially when the government is seeking decades in federal prison for possesion of those arms.

The Fourth Circuit did not do that.

“Dangerous And Unusual” Does Not Cover Inert Training Aids

The amici also confront one of the government’s favorite escape hatches: Heller’s reference to “dangerous and unusual” weapons.

The brief argues that the test is conjunctive. The government must show both. Not dangerous or unusual. Dangerous and unusual.

Under the facts described by the amici, the items Adamiak was charged for possessing were neither.

An item that cannot fire a projectile is not “dangerous” in the relevant constitutional sense. An item openly sold to collectors, museums, veterans, reenactors, historical societies, and ordinary Americans is not “unusual.” The amici argue that these prosecuted items cannot satisfy either prong, much less both.

PSA’s video put it more directly: items that cannot fire a projectile are not dangerous, and items sold openly to collectors and museums are not unusual.

That is the point federal gun regulators want to blur. They want the emotional reaction to the object – “RPG,” “launcher,” “machinegun” – to replace the legal question. But the legal question is not whether an inert tube looks scary in a photo. The question is whether the object actually meets the statutory definition and whether the government’s prosecution survives the Second Amendment test required by Bruen.

If the government can call a correctly marked inert training tube a destructive device, then the limiting principle is gone.

American History Is On The Side Of Collectors, Not The ATF

The historical section of the amicus brief is especially damaging to the government’s position. NAGR, Right to Bear, and PSA argue that America does not have a historical tradition of criminalizing civilian possession of military-pattern relics, surplus arms, demilled items, or inert training devices. The historical record points the other direction.

The brief traces civilian possession of military-pattern arms from the Founding generation’s private cannon and privateers, through the post-Civil War surplus market, through the federal Civilian Marksmanship Program, and into federal statutes that recognize surplus, antiques, curios, relics, and items not designed or redesigned as weapons.

The Civilian Marksmanship Program is especially important. The brief notes that for more than 120 years, the federal government has treated civilian possession of former military arms not merely as lawful, but as a positive object of national policy. The same section points to the NFA’s own destructive-device definition, which excludes devices “neither designed nor redesigned for use as a weapon” and includes a surplus-ordnance carve-out.

That undercuts the government’s position at its foundation. If functional former military arms have long been lawfully transferred to civilians through federal policy, then inert and demilled versions are on even stronger ground. The brief argues there is no historical regulation “in any era of American law” that criminalized possession of an inert relic merely because it bore the outward form of a once-functional military weapon.

That is the history Bruen requires courts to examine. The Fourth Circuit did not require the government to confront it.

This case is about more than Patrick Tate Adamiak.

It is about whether the ATF can misread the NFA’s own definitions until cut-up remnants become “machineguns,” inert tubes become “destructive devices,” and a nonfunctional object becomes the basis for a 20-year federal sentence.

It is about whether federal prosecutors can lean on technical firearms classifications, blur the line between parts and weapons, and then tell the courts the Second Amendment has nothing to say about it.

It is about whether collectors and gun owners can rely on the law as written, or whether they must live under a system where ATF interpretation, prosecutorial discretion, and judicial rubber-stamping decide their fate after the fact.

That is not the rule of law. That is the ATF’s NFA registration racket in action and a Biden-era enforcement machine taking definitions that were already constitutionally suspect, twisting them beyond recognition, and using that interpretation to obtain a 20-year conviction over objects the government’s own witnesses said could not fire a projectile.

This is what happens when an agency shaped by anti-gun politics is allowed to decide, after the fact, that parts are weapons, inert tubes are destructive devices, and a collector is a criminal. The Second Amendment cannot survive if federal prosecutors can win convictions by relabeling nonfunctional objects and then hiding behind judicial shortcuts.

The anti-gun bureaucracy has always depended on complexity. Make the statutes dense. Make the definitions technical. Make compliance expensive. Leave grey areas intentionally to allow for politically-motivated “interpretations” to lead to life-altering convictions.

The Second Amendment is not a second-class right, and inert relics are not working weapons because the ATF wants a conviction.

The Supreme Court should grant review.

SAF Urges Supreme Court To Review Adamiak Case, Warns Courts Are Dodging Bruen


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.Duncan Johnson




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Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Armed Citizen Intervention Not the ‘Myth’ Antis Claim; Cambridge Proves It

Close up view of hand holding a pistol / handgun taking aim for target. iStock-1175500022
Another armed citizen helped save the day in Cambridge, Mass. It happens more often than anti-gunners care to admit. iStock-1175500022

In the aftermath of the May 11 shooting incident in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the gun prohibition lobby would have America believe that intervention by armed private citizens in such cases is rare.

That it happened at all in Massachusetts—a state known for restrictive gun control laws—is far rarer, while elsewhere around the country, according to the Crime Prevention Research Center, “defensive gun uses are 5.06 times more (likely) than firearms used in crime.”

And it happened just three weeks prior to an upcoming first-of-its-kind Firearms Advocacy Conference, scheduled for Saturday, May 30, at Castle of Knights, 1599 Memorial Dr., Chicopee, Mass. More about this in a moment.

The accused gunman, identified as Tyler Brown, 46, of Boston, was brought down by shots fired by a Massachusetts state trooper and an armed private citizen. (Media reports insisted on describing the armed citizen as a “civilian” to apparently provide some distinction between the Marine Corps veteran and law enforcement officers who also responded. Reporters have routinely overlooked the fact that American civilian law enforcement is not a branch of the military.)

Brown’s violent criminal past is now widely known, and his rampage has brought up some interesting questions, so far raised only by Alan Gottlieb, chairman of the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms. In a statement reacting to the shooting—and hailing the heroic actions of the legally armed veteran—Gottlieb observed:

“We’re appalled this guy was even on the street, in possession of a firearm he should not have had, and some reports say he was on parole and supposedly under the supervision of Massachusetts authorities. It might be a good time for those authorities to examine their supervision program.”

As noted by the CCRKBA, the suspect was armed with an “assault-style rifle” in a state with some of the toughest gun control laws in the country. Gottlieb called this another example of restrictive gun laws “failing miserably to live up to their advertising.”

Likewise, Jim Wallace, executive director of the Massachusetts Gun Owners Action League (GOAL), posted on that group’s website, “This terrorist like attack was completely preventable. The attacker should have still been in prison. People would say that the system is broken, but I won’t say that any longer because this IS the system! We have all three branches of the Commonwealth’s government that pander to criminals, but look to punish average citizens in every way. This crime, and countless more like it, are the direct results of catastrophic policies by our government officials and somehow we have to hold them accountable.”

The suspect was sentenced to six years in prison back in 2021 for shooting at a Boston police officer. He was, as noted above, under supervision, yet there he was firing between 50 and 60 rounds at passing motorists on a Cambridge street.

By remarkable coincidence, on May 30, the first-ever Firearms Advocacy Conference, will convene for a Saturday event in Chicopee, Mass., with representatives from gun rights organizations throughout New England. They include GOAL, the Connecticut Citizens Defense League, Gun Owners of Maine, New Hampshire Firearms Coalition, Rhode Island 2nd Amendment Coalition, the Civil Rights Coalition, and Vermont Federation of Sportsmen’s Clubs. The Second Amendment Foundation and National Rifle Association Institute for Legislative Action will also be represented, as will CCRKBA. It should not be hard to imagine one of the topics of discussion.

Speaking of CCRKBA, Chairman Gottlieb referred to ongoing efforts by Massachusetts lawmakers—primarily Democrats—to make gun ownership in the Bay State as difficult as possible. He pointed to this irony: “Apparently they’re determined to accomplish what British troops couldn’t 250 years ago, right there in Massachusetts, where the revolution started over efforts to seize firearms. It didn’t work then, and it should not be tolerated now.”

When the suspect in Monday’s rampage was confronted by the trooper and armed citizen, they both shot him several times, according to Middlesex District Attorney Marian Ryan. According to WCVB News, the mayhem erupted just after 1 p.m. At least two men were seriously wounded before the gunman was brought down.

The Gun Mag.com referred to several previous incidents in which armed citizen intervention stopped tragedies. Included in the roundup were these events:

  • In July 2022, then-22-year-old Elisjsha Dicken drew his pistol after a gunman opened fire at the Greenwood Park Mall in Greenwood, Indiana. Two people were fatally wounded before Dicken, firing across the food court, struck the shooter several times, killing him.
  • Also in 2022, in Charleston, W. Va., an armed female bystander fatally shot a man identified as Dennis Butler, with a lengthy criminal history, who had opened fire on people attending a birthday party.
  • In December 2019, an armed volunteer security team member, Jack Wilson, fatally shot a man who had opened fire during services at the West Freeway Church of Christ in White Settlement, Texas. Two people were killed before Wilson, firing across the distance of the sanctuary, fatally shot the gunman. It was all captured on video because the service was being streamed live.
  • In July 2018, an armed citizen fatally shot a carjacker in the parking lot of a Walmart in Tumwater, Washington. The gunman had been involved in at least five carjackings across three locations leading up to the fatal confrontation.

There are more, as Ammoland News found with just a cursory search.

In August 2018, only months after the school shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, an armed citizen shot a gunman who opened fire at an back-to-school cookout in Titusville, Fla.

An armed citizen fatally shot a gunman in downtown Seattle in May 2025 after the thug shot two people in the Pioneer Square area.

In El Paso, Texas in February 2023, an armed citizen shot a gunman at the Cielo Vista Mall killed one person and wounded three others.

Back in January 2017, a wounded Arizona state trooper was saved by a passing armed motorist who shot and killed the person who had shot the lawman. This occurred on Interstate 10 about 40 miles west of Phoenix.

While anti-gunners claim intervention by armed citizens “is a myth” or “never happens,” the facts prove otherwise.

In all of these armed citizen interventions, there is one common thread the media never discusses. It’s the silence from the gun prohibition lobby, a quiet that is almost deafening.

ATF Draft Form 4473 Changes Marijuana Question, Opens Door to Direct Gun Shipping


About Dave Workman

Dave Workman is a senior editor at TheGunMag.com and Liberty Park Press, author of multiple books on the Right to Keep & Bear Arms, and formerly an NRA-certified firearms instructor.Dave Workman




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NICS Denial Alert Turns Into 14 Days in Jail for Florida Gun Owner

A Florida gun owner says he spent two weeks in jail because the government’s background-check machinery treated an old Kentucky misdemeanor as if it were a felony.

That should bother every American who values due process, the right to keep and bear arms, and basic competence from the people who have the power to put citizens in handcuffs.

William Michael Brewer tried to buy a Glock 26 from Lotus Gunworks in Jensen Beach, Florida. According to the Civil Rights Lawyer on YouTube, Brewer said he filled out the paperwork, paid for the firearm, and waited for the call that his background check had cleared. Instead, he was told the transaction had been denied.

That denial set off a chain of events that should never have gone this far.

WPTV reported that the failed background check was flagged by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, alerting the Martin County Sheriff’s Office. Deputies believed Brewer was a felon trying to buy a gun. Brewer and his attorney say he was not. The problem, according to WPTV, came from the FBI’s National Crime Information Center database, where Brewer’s Kentucky record showed a felony arrest from more than a decade ago, while Kentucky court documents confirmed the charge had been reduced to a misdemeanor. That update was not reflected in NCIC.

Brewer was later pulled over by Martin County deputies. In the video, Brewer says he had a firearm in his work bag and told officers about it. The video shows him repeatedly trying to explain that he was not a felon, that he had a Kentucky concealed carry license, and that he had passed other background checks. The deputies arrested him anyway.

Body-camera video showed Brewer pleading with deputies not to arrest him after they pulled him over, believing he was a felon in possession of a firearm. Brewer told WPTV he was taken out of the vehicle, handcuffed, and told he was under arrest as a felon in possession.

Brewer’s own words from the video cut through the legal fog: “Do you understand how scary it is to not be a felon and then you get arrested as a felon?”

Not a paperwork inconvenience. Not a minor “oops” in a government database. Not a harmless background-check hiccup. A man was jailed for 14 days because officials treated a database flag as proof rather than a lead that needed verification.

WPTV confirmed Brewer spent 14 days in jail. His attorney, Andrew Strecker, said his team produced original documents establishing Brewer was not a felon, but the remedy offered was a bond reduction and release on an ankle monitor. Prosecutors eventually dropped the case after receiving certified records showing the misdemeanor conviction.

Brewer has now sued the Martin County Sheriff’s Office and the deputies involved in his arrest, accusing them of false arrest, false imprisonment, and malicious prosecution, according to WPTV.

A NICS Denial Is Not A Conviction

During the arrest, Brewer said,”so, because I tried to purchase a firearm, I got pulled over for it, and it red-flagged or something.” 

This case points to a dangerous flaw in the modern background-check regime. The FBI says NICS checks are conducted when a Federal Firearms Licensee contacts NICS by phone or electronically after a prospective buyer completes the required form. The background check is supposed to determine whether the buyer is prohibited from receiving or possessing a firearm.

Since October 1, 2022, the FBI has been required by law to report NICS denied transactions to state, local, or tribal law enforcement within 24 hours. The FBI says those notifications are sent based on the location of the FFL and, when different, the attempted buyer’s home address.

But here is the key point every gun owner, every cop, every prosecutor, and every lawmaker needs to understand: the FBI’s own law-enforcement page says the law does not require agencies to take action when they receive those denial notifications. The FBI also says its NICS Section will not ask them to take action.

That means a denial notice is not a command to arrest. It is not a court judgment. It is not proof beyond a reasonable doubt. It is not even necessarily proof that a crime occurred. It is a notification. That is all.

In Brewer’s case, WPTV reported that the State Attorney’s Office, FDLE, and the sheriff’s office all saw the same NCIC record showing a felony severity and guilty disposition, but the NCIC record had no mention that the felony charge had been amended down to a misdemeanor. Kentucky State Police later told WPTV that the electronic record reflected a felony charge, but the disposition section indicated the charge was later amended to a misdemeanor.

Wrongful NICS Denials Are Not A Theoretical Problem

Brewer’s case is not an isolated incident.

AmmoLand previously reported that records obtained through a FOIA request showed the FBI said 27.7% of NICS appeals received during the requested period were overturned, and the firearm transactions were allowed to proceed. GOA argued that even that number understates the real problem because many denied buyers never appeal, either because they do not know how, cannot afford help, or simply give up.

Second Amendment researcher John Lott has gone further, arguing that the overwhelming majority of initial NICS denials are false positives. He also points to the very low rate of prosecutions after NICS denials as evidence that many denied transactions are not real criminal cases.

The Database Cannot Be The Constitution

Gun-control advocates want Americans to trust the background-check systems as if it were clean, complete, and infallible.

Brewer’s case shows the danger of that fantasy.

When the government builds a system that can deny a gun purchase, trigger police notification, launch an investigation, produce an arrest, and put a citizen in jail based on stale or incomplete records, the burden cannot be shoved onto the citizen after the handcuffs are already on.

The government should have to prove the prohibition before it strips a man of his freedom and treats him like a criminal.

Brewer’s attorney said in the video that officials could have verified Brewer’s status by checking with Kentucky, the clerk, the prosecutor’s office, or law enforcement there. He said his office did that and found the case was not a felony.

WPTV reported that Sheriff John Budensiek defended the deputies, saying they did their job and used the mechanisms in place, while noting that bad information in the database was not input by the Martin County Sheriff’s Office. Assistant State Attorney Kristen Chase told WPTV that prosecutors needed certified official records from Kentucky, which can take time, and said the system did what it was supposed to do.

That defense will not satisfy gun owners. If the “system” can jail a man for two weeks before the government confirms whether he is actually a prohibited person, then the system is not working for citizens. It is working for bureaucracy.

Gun Owners Should Pay Attention

This is what happens when government databases become the gatekeepers of constitutional rights and local officials treat those databases as gospel. More to the point: where is the historical analogue for background checks at the time of the Founding? 

The right to keep and bear arms does not depend on a clean data entry. Due process does not begin after two weeks in jail. A NICS denial should never be treated as a conviction, and a database flag should never replace basic police work.

Brewer said in the video that he is speaking out because he does not want anyone else to go through what he went through.

If bad data can turn a lawful gun owner into a jailed “felon” in Florida, it can happen anywhere the government is allowed to treat a background-check denial like proof of guilt instead of a reason to investigate carefully.

April NICS Report: Gun Sales Steady, NFA Demand Explodes 130%


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.Duncan Johnson




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Monday, May 11, 2026

George Peterson’s NFA Suppressor Case Exposes the Danger of Federal Gun Registries

George Peterson was a law-abiding citizen and federal firearms licensee (FFL) who believed in the principles of the United States Constitution. He was raising his children in his Louisiana home, living the American dream. He had a loving family and his dream of owning a firearms business. Nothing could be any better.

That all changed one Thursday morning in 2022, just days after former President Joe Biden signed the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act (BSCA) into law. It started with a knock on the door. Then a rush of 50 to 100 Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) agents and local law enforcement officers barged into the home that Peterson shared with his wife and juvenile children. These agents came in with ballistic helmets and body armor, armed with M4 rifles. The agents of the federal government held the man’s children, ages 12, 16, and 18, at gunpoint. At the same time, his FFL business was also raided.

“So, this happened back in 2022, where it was just a typical Thursday morning, and knock on the door, next thing I know, we have 50 to 100 ATF agents and local law enforcement in my home and in my office, where my FFL was, my little shop was,” Peterson told AmmoLand News. “And basically they came in with ballistic helmets, body armor, pointing M4 machine guns, assault weapons at my children and me, my juvenile children, ages 12, 16, and 18. They had machine guns pointed at them. And this was all over paperwork basically.”

The raid would be understandable if he were a dangerous, violent criminal, but Peterson was a family man with no criminal record. The show of force was out of the blue.

Mr. Peterson didn’t know what was going on. His first thought was that it was over a tax issue. He was a little behind on paying sales taxes. This was a one-man show, and his taxes got complicated by local, online, and gun-show sales. He has been working with an accounting firm to get up to date.

“I was a little bit behind on my sales taxes, but I had an accounting firm that was working with me to get things caught up, you know, because it’s a complex business,” Peterson told AmmoLand News. “You know, you have online sales, you have your local sales, you have your gun show sales, you have your uh concealed carry classes. It can get a little complicated. And I was basically a one-man show at the time. And so I had an accounting firm helping me to kind of get things caught up. But that’s what I thought it was.”

Little did Peterson know that taxes were the least of his concerns. They accused him of straw purchases, making too many trace requests, and failing to keep his paperwork up to date. With two bomb squad trucks parked on his front lawn, the agents started their search of his property with Assistant US Attorney Charles Struss Jr. on-site and calling the shots of the raid.

“Assistant US attorney Charles Strauss Jr,” Peterson said. “He was actually on site for the raid. He actually orchestrated and coordinated the raid. It wasn’t done with law enforcement. It was done through the prosecution. So, the prosecution actually was the ones who did the raid, orchestrated it, and it was because of the bipartisan Safer Communities Act…the US assistant US attorney, actually told my attorney that Peterson will never traffic firearms again. That was one of his statements.”

After the raid, George Peterson was arrested. He wasn’t arrested for anything listed in the affidavit. During the raid, the ATF and local law enforcement forced their way into a safe in the man’s bedroom. Law enforcement found a solvent trap that had been milled into a suppressor. The item lacked a serial number, so agents considered its existence a violation of the National Firearms Act (NFA).

“So, the only thing I was charged with, even though the affidavit for the ATF had all these allegations, you know, like straw purchases and, too many, too many times to crime trace requests,” Peterson said. “They, I never filed any of those Fourth Amendment violations. The multi-handgun reports and my paperwork were sloppy. The only thing that they charged me with was the possession of a uh solvent trap suppressor that was in my safe in my bedroom.”

Mr. Peterson, through his attorney, negotiated a contingent plea agreement with the prosecution. He would plead guilty to the charge as long as he had a right to appeal. Mr. Peterson was sentenced to 24 months’ imprisonment for committing a victimless crime.

“So, my local attorney, uh, my good friend Rick Toffen, actually negotiated with the prosecution and the court to do a contingent plea agreement where we would plead guilty to the charge as long as we have the right to appeal,” Peterson said. “So, we didn’t even really have a trial, per se.”

Mr. Peterson would appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, where he would lose before a three-judge panel. In response to the request for an en banc hearing, the Department of Justice (DOJ) would make an astonishing claim: suppressors are not arms and are not protected by the Second Amendment.

This statement sparked outrage across the firearms and political worlds. This opinion flies in the face of even the ATF’s opinion. Less than a week after the court filing, the DOJ withdrew its brief.

“The acting US attorney filed some documents agreeing with the court, you know, agreeing that you know the district court that suppressors are not protected by the Second Amendment,” Peterson told AmmoLand News. “They’re just accessories.”

This is when the Firearms Policy Coalition (FPC) and the law firm of Cooper and Kirk stepped in to help Peterson. They would represent him in front of the full bench of the Fifth Circuit during an en banc rehearing if granted. The DOJ’s lawyers would argue that the NFA is constitutional because it imposes only a modest burden on a constitutional right, even though modest burdens are not allowed under other amendments.

The Fifth Circuit would deny an en banc hearing, relying heavily on Footnote Nine of the Supreme Court’s Bruen decision. Footnote Nine states that a permitting system is not necessarily unconstitutional. Even though Peterson’s charges didn’t have anything to do with concealed carry. This ruling meant Peterson would need to rely on the United States Supreme Court to grant a writ of certiorari to remain free.

Amicus briefs poured in from across gun rights groups, urging the Supreme Court to take the case. Unfortunately for Peterson, the Supreme Court would deny cert. This denial would be the end of the road for Cooper and Kirk, but Peterson hasn’t given up. He plans to launch a habeas corpus collateral challenge. This is a long shot, but it is his best chance of avoiding prison. Right now, he is waiting to find out when he reports for his two-year sentence.

Federal Judge Orders More Briefing in Challenge to NFA Registration Scheme


About John Crump

Mr. Crump is an NRA instructor and a constitutional activist. John has written about firearms, interviewed people from all walks of life, and on the Constitution. John lives in Northern Virginia with his wife and sons, follow him on X at @right2bear, or at www.crumpy.com.

John Crump




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The “Accessory” Gambit: Why the Eleventh Circuit’s Mechanical Logic Fails the Second Amendment

By Sean Maloney, Esq.

Machinegun conversion device / “Glock switch” examples shown in an ATF/DOJ fact sheet. Image cropped and composited from DOJ/ATF source material.
Machinegun conversion device / “Glock switch” examples shown in an ATF/DOJ fact sheet. Image cropped and composited from DOJ/ATF source material.

In the recently published decision of United States v. Alsenat (2026), the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a conviction involving Machine Gun Conversion Devices (MCDs), specifically “Glock switches.” The panel rested its holding on the claim that machineguns are not protected arms in common lawful use. However, the district court also accepted the government’s fallback theory that unattached conversion devices are mere “accessories” or “accoutrements,” not protected “Arms.”

That accessory framing should alarm gun owners.

To the casual observer, this may seem like a minor semantic point. To a firearm attorney, it is a transparent attempt to deconstruct the Second Amendment by its parts.

As one of the attorneys who represented the Buckeye Firearms Association in our successful suit against the City of Cincinnati regarding their bump stock ban, I have seen this “accessory gambit” before. It failed in Ohio, and it should fail in the federal courts as well.

Lessons from Buckeye Firearms Association v. City of Cincinnati

When Cincinnati attempted to bypass Ohio’s firearm preemption law (R.C. 9.68) to ban bump stocks, their primary legal tactic was to argue that a bump stock was a mere “accessory” and not a “component” or “part” of a firearm. They believed that by changing the label, they could evade the state’s “uniform laws” mandate.

Our legal team challenged this head-on. We argued that a device that interacts with the fire-control group to enable a specific cycle of fire is, by definition, part of the firearm. The Court of Common Pleas agreed, and the First District affirmed, providing a definitive rebuke to the City’s logic. The court recognized a fundamental truth: you cannot regulate the function of an arm by arbitrarily declaring its internal timing and fire-control components to be “accessories.” The ruling stated clearly that components like a bump stock are included within the definition of “firearms.”

The Mechanical Truth of the Glock Switch

The Alsenat court pretends a machinegun conversion device is a bolt-on trinket, leaving the base pistol untouched. That’s fiction in engineering; function defines firearm components. The switch replaces the factory slide cover plate, a static cover in stock form. Once installed, it transforms that “spot” into the active sear and striker-timing mechanism.

If you extract it from a tuned setup, you are left with a gutted slide, an inert striker, and a brick. This brings us to the point that you can’t call a heart an “accessory” to a human body just because it can be transplanted. Similarly, you shouldn’t call a sear or a timing mechanism an accessory just because it can be swapped. By any “Mechanical Essentiality Test,” the part is integral: absent the part, the configured arm fails to operate as intended. If a part is necessary for the firearm to function in its current configuration, that part is the firearm.

Deconstructing the “Arm”

The heart of the Alsenat error lies in the definition of a “Fire Control Group” (FCG). In any machine, the parts that maintain synchronization, like the timing belt in an engine are internal components, not optional decorations. By labeling the component that dictates the timing and release of the striker as an “accessory,” the court suggests that a firearm’s most vital “organs” can be stripped of constitutional protection.

If the courts are permitted to redefine integral fire-control components as “accessories,” they grant the government the power to deconstruct any modern firearm into a series of “unprotected” pieces. Under this logic, a trigger assembly, a bolt carrier group, or even a barrel could be reclassified as an “accessory” to circumvent the Second Amendment.

The Constitutional Sleight-of-Hand

The Eleventh Circuit used Heller’s “dangerous and unusual” idea to avoid checking the real mechanics of Glock switches. It is a convenient shortcut. Instead of engaging with the rigorous history-and-tradition test established in Bruen, the court relied on wordplay.

If the Supreme Court seeks to reverse Alsenat, it cannot rest on a faulty mechanical foundation alone. The Court must ground its reasoning in Bruen’s history or Heller’s core protections, unmasking the “accessory” label as constitutional sleight-of-hand. Rahimi and Bruen require the government to show a historical analogue for such bans, not just a clever new vocabulary.

Conclusion

Cincinnati proved it: parts that make a gun work aren’t add-ons; they’re the gun. Law must match how guns actually function.

When a court calls a firing mechanism an “accessory,” it isn’t just misinterpreting engineering—it is eroding the very definition of the “Arms” we have a right to keep and bear.

ATF Revised Machine Gun Definition Does Not Go Far Enough


About Sean Maloney

Sean Maloney is a criminal defense attorney, co-founder of Second Call Defense, and an NRA-certified firearms instructor. He is a nationally recognized speaker on critical topics, including the Second Amendment, self-defense, the use of lethal force, and concealed carry. Sean has worked on numerous use-of-force and self-defense cases and has personally trained hundreds of civilians to respond safely and legally to life-threatening situations. He is a passionate advocate for restoring the cultural legitimacy of the Second Amendment and promoting personal responsibility in self-defense.

Sean Maloney




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Friday, May 8, 2026

ATF Draft Form 4473 Changes Marijuana Question, Opens Door to Direct Gun Shipping

NICS Background Check Marijuana Exclusion ATF Form 4473 Firearms Transaction Record Question. iStock-919659526
ATF’s draft revised Form 4473 would shorten the firearms transaction record and change several buyer questions affecting gun owners and FFLs. iStock-919659526

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) has released a draft of its new “Firearms Transaction Record” form (ATF Form 4473), which has been shortened and simplified.

The first change to the form is the removal of “Non-Binary” under “Sex.” There are now only two choices: “Male” or “Female.” Some have claimed that the elimination of “Non-Binary” is a de facto transgender gun ban, but that claim doesn’t square with reality. Gun buyers are instructed to choose the sex they were assigned at birth. Since everyone is born either male or female, the question doesn’t prevent anyone from buying a gun.

In its current form, the 4473 asks the potential firearms buyer whether they are the “actual transferee/buyer” of the item in question. The way the question is worded makes it seem like you cannot legally buy a gun for another person.

That is not and never has been the law.

The new change to the question specifically calls out straw purchasing, which is against federal law. The change addresses concerns among family members and friends about buying firearms as gifts for others.

The ATF added a section that asks about the purpose of the firearms transfer. The new options are a transfer for oneself, where the transferee uses their own money to purchase the firearm as a gift for someone who is not a prohibited person, where someone is picking up a firearm as a gift or reward, or picking up a repaired firearm for someone else who is not prohibited.

Question 21 b. has also been removed from the 4473. That question asked if you intended to “sell or otherwise dispose of any firearm listed” on the form. It is not illegal to sell a privately owned firearm. This question can lead many to believe that selling a gun is illegal. The ATF rolled up the original intent of that rule into the new rule about “straw purchases.”

Question 21 f. has also changed. This question has largely remained intact with one big caveat. The old question used to imply that using marijuana for any reason, including medical use. Even if it is decriminalized in your state, it would disqualify a potential buyer from purchasing a gun. The new question removes references to medical marijuana. It only highlights the use of recreational marijuana.

This change consists of the rescheduling of the drug “Schedule I” to a “Schedule III” controlled substance, which is much less restrictive than the original scheduling.

ATF-4473-Update

The ATF Form 4473 removes the check box to specify if a firearm is a “long gun,” “handgun,” or “other.” The old form also had a redundant box where the federal firearms licensee (FFL) had to write the type of firearm being transferred. The new form eliminates redundancy to prevent mismatches. The new form includes checkboxes at the top for “Firearms handler check only” and “Private party transfer only.”

The most exciting thing about the new form is the options at the bottom of page three.

This option allows the FFL to choose an option for “Non-over-the-counter transactions.” This option covers ordering firearms online and having them shipped to a gun buyer’s door without the need to go to the gun shop of the transferer, if the transferer is in the same state. The rule for non-over-the-counter was published in the Federal Register yesterday and has been the most popular change for the Second Amendment community.

ATF-4473-Transfer-update

The new form has eliminated three pages from the current form, reducing it to four pages from seven. The simplification of the form, along with other changes, should lead to fewer paperwork errors, which the Biden administration used to revoke many FFLs through its zero-tolerance policies.

ATF Revised Machine Gun Definition Does Not Go Far Enough


About John Crump

Mr. Crump is an NRA instructor and a constitutional activist. John has written about firearms, interviewed people from all walks of life, and on the Constitution. John lives in Northern Virginia with his wife and sons, follow him on X at @right2bear, or at www.crumpy.com.

John Crump




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