One of the Few Actually Significant Casualties of the Government Shutdown Hurts Gun Buyers

You may (or may not) be aware that the federal government shut down at midnight last night. Yeah, we’re really broken up about it, too. The thought of all of those IRS agents sitting at home in their sweats watching Dancing With the Stars with one hand buried in a party-size bag of Doritos rather than diligently working at their desks is enough to bring a tear to the eye.

Anyway, while very few of us — aside from actual FedGov employees — give a flying fornication about such a catastrophic turn of events, this situation isn’t totally without a negative impact on at least one important government function…NFA approvals.

We regret to inform you that Forms 2, 3, and 4 are now languishing in the ATF’s NFA division system and won’t be processed again until the current impasse is resolved.

During previous shutdowns, of course, no one would have even noticed. The last time the .gov stopped functioning (try not to laugh) was in 2019. Back then, the typical wait time to process a Form 4 was probably somewhere between nine and 12 months. If you were lukcy. And since the average government shutdown typically lasts a few days, maybe a couple of weeks at most, no one really cared. If you had a suppressor in jail waiting for your tax stamp, you’d never even know that it took slightly longer due to inherent legislative dysfunction.

Today, however, we live in an entirely different world. NFA approvals virtually fly through the system now. Here’s the latest data from our friends at Silencer Shop who track these things:

NFA eform approval times silencer shop

The median number of days it now takes to get approval for a silencer or SBR purchase is a mere three days. So if the current politician-fueled stupidity drags out for even just a week or so, people who have approvals in process are going to feel it.

We hate to start your October off with bad news like this, but we’d have been remiss if we didn’t pass that along. Now you know who to blame and, we hope, will act accordingly the next time you’re in the voting booth.

 

 

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8 thoughts on “One of the Few Actually Significant Casualties of the Government Shutdown Hurts Gun Buyers”

    1. I hope the federal government stays shut down.

      Just like many libertarians liberals and leftists supported the police being ordered to stand down.

  1. Seems to me that this could be used as another argument to declare the NFA unconstitutional.
    It puts a burden on a Right that can be shut down by the Government, causing irreparable harm.

  2. How about National Instant Criminal Background Check system (e.g. NICS)? Is that shut down as well? If it is shut down, then law abiding citizens who have no criminal record are unable to purchase firearms at licensed public firearm sellers.

    Fun question: if the NICS is shut down, can licensed public firearm sellers proceed with sales anyway after the statutorily defined three day maximum wait time for an NICS response?

    1. “How about National Instant Criminal Background Check system (e.g. NICS)? Is that shut down as well? If it is shut down, then law abiding citizens who have no criminal record are unable to purchase firearms at licensed public firearm sellers.

      Fun question: if the NICS is shut down, can licensed public firearm sellers proceed with sales anyway after the statutorily defined three day maximum wait time for an NICS response?”

      The submission to NIC;s for a firearms sale does not actually go strait to NIC’s. NIC;s its self never closes even in a shut down, and is still available for states and law enforcement and government.

      The submission to NIC;s for a firearms sale actually goes to an ATF ‘middle man’ system that interfaces with NIC’s. If the ATF ‘middle man’ system processing is shut down due to the shut down then a few possible scenarios can take place:

      1. The ATF system will accept a submission but its put into a status of ‘open’ in which case there is a 30 day limit and if there is no ‘proceed’ during that 30 day period then the transfer can not take place.

      2. The ATF system will accept a submission but its put into a status of ‘delayed’ in which case there is a 3 day limit (not counting the day of submission, weekends, or federal holidays) and after that 3 day expiration the transfer can take place.

      3. The ATF system IS NOT accepting submissions at all. Now this is a tricky one. If the federal government ‘refuses’ (by the government shut down) to accept submissions – Generally, (if state law allows it) a state can direct its state level law enforcement, or all law enforcement, departments in the state to conduct firearm transfer background checks via their access to NIC’s – but this is where it gets tricky, although the state can direct its state level law enforcement (i.e. highway patrol) to do it, it can’t actually make non-state level law enforcement do it (i.e. a city police department). Little do people know, but during 2021, for a few days in March, the ATF shut down the submission system acceptance from some states (yes, ‘red states’) so there were a bunch of ‘open’ responses – and some states did pick up the slack and started running checks their selves when this happened so the checks did not go through the ATF system so the ATF had no visibility over them as they were just straight NIC’s checks like police would run on anyone, and the sales happened (yes, a state can do this kind of check to have a firearm sale happen) so the ATF put the system back on line as soon as they realized they had lost visibility over 4473 checks forgetting that states can do this too through straight-to-NIC;s checks. So the shut down for those states lasted two days.

      But, in the complete absence of either state or federal government checks, unless state law dictates otherwise (because there is no federal law for this) – the 10th Amendment; The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, OR TO THE PEOPLE.

    2. I went into a local sporting goods store today intending to purchase an inexpensive hunting item on sale for $20. I was surprised to see a rifle on sale that I have been wanting to purchase for the last two years. I can confirm with absolute authority that NICS is very much up and running today during the federal government shutdown.

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