Gun-rights groups and firearms manufacturers decried a rule proposed by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) at the request of President Joe Biden that would deem most firearms with stabilizing pistol braces illegal, saying that millions of lawfully abiding gun owners would be affected.
And Aidan Johnston, the director of federal affairs of gun-rights group Gun Owners of America, wrote that the proposal is a “gross abuse of executive authority.”
The ATF’s proposed rule would define a handgun as a short-barreled rifle if it is equipped with a stabilizing pistol brace, which, according to the ATF’s own estimate, is a popular accessory.
“Altering the classification of firearms equipped with stabilizing braces would likely affect millions of owners,” the Congressional Research Service previously concluded.
The new proposed rule would also make most guns equipped with a stabilizing brace illegal under the National Firearms Act, and it would require firearms owners to forfeit, disassemble, or register their weapons—otherwise, they could potentially be charged with a felony.
“When individuals use accessories to convert pistols into short-barreled rifles, they must comply with the heightened regulations on those dangerous and easily concealable weapons,” the Department of Justice on Monday about the rules. The DOJ also argued that the braces allow people to easily “convert pistols into these more dangerous weapons” without going through a background check or meeting other requirements.
Biden said in April that recent mass shootings were part of “an epidemic” and “has to stop.”
At the time, a number of gun-rights and industry groups such as the National Rifle Association and Firearms Regulatory Accountability Coalition panned the executive order. Gun-control groups including Everytown for Gun Safety praised the move.