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WASHINGTON (AP) - A federal appeals court panel Friday unanimously upheld an Obama administration requirement that dealers in Southwestern border states report when customers buy multiple high-powered rifles.

The firearms industry trade group, the National Shooting Sports Foundation, and two Arizona gun sellers had argued that the administration overstepped its legal authority in the 2011 regulation, which applies to gun sellers in California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas.

The requirement, issued in what is known as a demand letter, compels those sellers to report to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives when anyone buys- within a five-day period- two or more semi-automatic weapons capable of accepting a detachable magazine and with a caliber greater than .22. The ATF says the requirement is needed to help stop the flow of guns to Mexican drug cartels.

Judge Karen LeCraft Henderson, writing for the three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, said the agency was within its legal authority when it issued the demand letter. She said that the Gun Control Act of 1968 "unambiguously authorizes the demand letter."

Henderson, who was appointed by Republican President George H.W. Bush, was joined by Judges Judith W. Rogers, an appointee of Democratic President Bill Clinton, and Harry T. Edwards, an appointee of Democratic President Jimmy Carter.

Congress annually passes legislation banning the ATF from establishing a national firearms registry, but Henderson rejected arguments from the challengers that the requirement unlawfully created one.

Because ATF sent the demand letter to only 7 percent of federally licensed gun dealers and required information about only a small number of transactions, "the July 2011 demand letter does not come close to creating a `national firearms registry,'" she wrote.

The National Shooting Sports Foundation had argued that even if the ATF had the legal authority to issue the requirement, its decision to impose it on every retailer in the border states was arbitrary and capricious. In its appeal brief, the group wrote, "There is no rational law enforcement connection between the problem ATF sought to address- illegal firearms trafficking from the United States to Mexico- and merely conducting a lawful retail firearms business from premises located in one of the border states."

But the panel dismissed this challenge as well. Henderson wrote that an agency has "wide discretion" in making line-drawing decisions, and that the problem ATF sought to address is most severe in Arizona, California, New Mexico and Texas.

Larry Keane, general counsel of the National Shooting Sports Foundation, said in a telephone interview Friday that his group has always encouraged gun sellers to fully cooperate with law enforcement and report any suspicious activity.

"We simply do not believe that Congress gave the ATF carte blanche authority to demand records from licensees for any reason it wants for as long as it wants," he said.

Keane added that there are two other appeals pending on the ATF requirement in other judicial circuits.

Richard Gardiner, an attorney for the two Arizona gun dealers that had challenged the requirement, J&G Sales, Ltd., of Prescott, Ariz., and Foothills Firearms, LLC, of Yuma, Ariz., said he was disappointed with the ruling but hasn't decided yet whether to file an appeal or not.

___

Follow Fred Frommer on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ffrommer


(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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  • Abuse
    OneWonders wrote...
    So because
    of the failed federal fast and furious gun running program (actually this might be considered a success to the left even if countless people are murdered in Mexico), these responsible store owners suffer the consequences.
    Equal Justice, Not Social Justice.
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    This modest requirement, intended to
    thwart trafficking to the cartels, troubles gun sellers who consider cartel business to be their most lucrative form of indirect sales. Just as it doesn't trouble gun nuts to see assault style weapons with high capacity magazines fall into the hands of child mass murderers, neither does it bother them to see the same weapons trafficked into the hands of Mexico's slaughterers.
  • Abuse
    az83 wrote...
    A new White House petition
    asking President Obama to keep his promise of not taking our guns and to keep his oath of office. If not, to please step down. Please sign and distribute link. Copy and paste into browser. wh.gov/Pbb0
  • Abuse
    yrreta wrote...
    I don't see what the problem
    is with reporting a sale of multiple high-powered rifles to a single purchaser. I would think that someone who comes in and purchases 10 high-power rifles would be out of the norm and should raise a red flag. Oh, I'm giving them away as Christmas gifts...yeaaah right. On the other hand, how about reporting purchases of large quantities of ammunition...
  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    Who do the guns stores report to
    when its the Federal Government who allow purchases to flow into Mexico.
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    Whiny gun sellers can't be bothered
    to report on what must be a minuscule number of odd transactions. From the ruling: "Searching records for multiple sales of a particular type of firearm to the same customer...is nothing new for FFLs. Since 1975, an FFL who sells 'two or more pistols or revolvers [to the same person] at one time, or during any five consecutive business days' has been required to submit a report to ATF similar to the one at issue..." "...there is nothing preventing an FFL from maintaining records in a less burdensome (in this case, chronological) manner."
  • Abuse
    yrreta wrote...
    "fall into the hands of child mass murderers"
    Comments like these beg the question, how exactly do you tell who is going to be a child mass murderer and who isn't? Better yet, how do you prevent this...question on a form-"Have you ever been convicted of mass murder?"...Inkblot tests?...Psych test?...Gentic engineering?...DNA testing that looks for the "mass murder" gene? Somehow I get the feeling that no amount of background check, registry, etc will ever prevent and/or foresee what a person will do after they have a weapon.
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    More than two million criminal
    possessors have so far been prevented from their initial efforts to illegally get guns. who knows how many of these two million would have gone on to commit violent gun crims idf our current inadequate system was not in place. The Court ruling in question addresses the sepearate matter of licensed gun sellers taking simple steps to alert authorities to questionable transactions. Prident public safety, not gun nut hysteria.
  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    Obama is exempt of course
    He enacted a law based on his own criminal actions.
  • Abuse
    Linebacker wrote...
    So was Eric Holder reported for allowing guns
    to be purchased and taken to MEXICO? ATF told the store owners it was ok for the purchases even though the store owners did not want to make the sale. Again Obummer do as I say not as I do.

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