BREAKING!!! Supreme Court 5-4 Emergency Order Just Changed The Second Amendment ATF Fight!

Published on February 13, 2024
Duration: 10:04

The ATF has filed for Supreme Court review in the Vanderstock v. Garland case concerning their rule on unfinished frames and receivers, often referred to as 'ghost guns'. This action follows a Fifth Circuit decision that partially upheld a lower court's ruling invalidating the ATF's rule, but found a nationwide vacatur too broad. The Supreme Court's prior 5-4 emergency stay prevented the vacatur from taking full effect, and the ATF is now seeking a definitive ruling on the merits.

Quick Summary

The ATF has filed for Supreme Court review in the Vanderstock v. Garland case concerning their rule on unfinished frames and receivers ('ghost guns'). This follows a Fifth Circuit decision that partially invalidated the rule. The Supreme Court's prior 5-4 emergency stay has kept the rule in effect pending further review.

Chapters

  1. 00:00ATF Files for Supreme Court Review in Frames and Receivers Case
  2. 00:18Introduction and Support for Paul Harrell
  3. 01:07Vanderstock v. Garland Case Overview
  4. 01:35Fifth Circuit Decision and ATF's Hand Forced
  5. 02:24Lawsuit History: Preliminary Injunctions
  6. 03:24Summary Judgment and Nationwide Vacatur
  7. 03:49ATF Appeals to Fifth Circuit and Seeks Stay
  8. 04:08ATF's First Emergency Application to Supreme Court
  9. 04:47Supreme Court's 5-4 Emergency Stay
  10. 04:52Companies Seek New Preliminary Injunction
  11. 05:25ATF's Second Emergency Application to Supreme Court
  12. 06:17Fifth Circuit Decision on the Merits
  13. 06:58ATF's Options and Decision to Go to Supreme Court
  14. 07:50ATF's Arguments in Supreme Court Petition
  15. 08:37Prediction: Supreme Court Will Grant Review
  16. 09:02Vanderstock Case Heads to Supreme Court
  17. 09:25Major Developments and Channel Support

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Vanderstock v. Garland case about?

The Vanderstock v. Garland case concerns the ATF's rule regulating unfinished frames and receivers, often referred to as 'ghost guns'. The ATF is seeking to have this rule upheld by the Supreme Court.

What was the Fifth Circuit's decision in the frames and receivers case?

The Fifth Circuit partially upheld a lower court's ruling that the ATF's rule was invalid. However, they found that a nationwide vacatur of the entire rule was too broad and remanded the case for a more limited scope of relief.

Has the Supreme Court intervened in the Vanderstock case before?

Yes, the Supreme Court previously issued a 5-4 emergency stay in favor of the ATF. This stay prevented a nationwide vacatur of the frames and receivers rule from taking full effect while the Fifth Circuit reviewed the appeal.

Why is the ATF asking the Supreme Court to review the frames and receivers rule?

The ATF is seeking Supreme Court review because the Fifth Circuit's decision partially invalidated a key regulation. They argue that the interpretation adopted by the Fifth Circuit would nullify central provisions of the law and allow untraceable firearms.

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