ATF Exceptions Reversed?

(May 30, 2013) The Federal Appeals Court for the 6th Circuit has rejected the appeals of George Dodson and left standing his conviction and enhanced sentence for a variety of firearms violations under the National Firearms Act.  In doing so, the court has placed a number of firearm owners and their guns at serious risk by, in effect, nullifying policies of the BATF “grandfathering” certain firearms when it established that the design constituted a machinegun.  The court case dealt primarily with Drop-In Auto Sears (DIAS) for AR rifles, but the conclusions are much more far-reaching.

The court’s ruling clearly defines all DIAS’s, regardless of when they were manufactured, as machineguns which, if not registered as such, are illegal to possess.  The court ruling also reminds us that any de-milled machinegun that was not de-milled to BATF’s current specifications, is still a machinegun under NFA, and if not properly registered, is illegal to possess.  But the most troublesome aspect of the court’s ruling is how their interpretation of laws to reach their conclusions about DIAS’s might affect other, long-standing BATF rules.

In the case of DIAS’s, BATF decided to reclassify them as machineguns back in 1981.  In their ruling, BATF declared that, “[w]ith respect to the machine gun classification of the auto sear under the National Firearms Act, pursuant to 26 U.S.C. 7805(b), this ruling will not be applied to auto sears manufactured before November 1, 1981.”  This was understood to mean that any DIAS made prior to November 1, 1981 was legal to sell and possess, though it was pretty well understood that it would be illegal to install one that was not registered into a gun.  But according to the courts, BATF only has legal authority to exempt existing owners from tax liability, not statutory provisions of law.  In other words, BATF has regulatory authority to waive excise and transfer taxes for existing owners, but has no authority to waive the law requiring that these items, which are now defined as machineguns, from statutory requirements to be registered and handled as NFA firearms. 

The court raised “public safety” concerns and stated; “Automatic weapons are just as dangerous whether they were manufactured in 1981 or 2011,” then concluded, speaking of the 1986 ban, that, “The ATF does not have the ability to redefine or create exceptions to Congressional statutes, and surely cannot do so before those statutes were passed.”

Continue reading ATF Exceptions Reversed?

You’re the Target

Dustin Reininger is serving a five-year sentence with a three-year minimum before he’s eligible for parole.  His crime?  Pulling off the highway to get some rest during a long drive.

Reininger, a veteran of both the Army and the Air Force, and a former police officer, was moving from Maine back to Texas, but only made it as far as New Jersey.  He got tired and parked behind a building in Readington Township, NJ.  Had he held out for another 20 minutes, there wouldn’t be a story about Dustin Reininger because he wouldn’t have had a problem in Pennsylvania, but he was tired so he stopped in New Jersey.

Police found him asleep in his SUV early that morning.  Reininger just wanted to move on down the road, but officers thought something in the back seat looked like a gun case and considered that probable cause for a search.  They found several rifles, shotguns, and handguns, as well as hollow point bullets, and a “high-capacity” magazine.

Of course, all of that is perfectly legal in Maine and in Texas – or even 24 miles up the road in Pennsylvania – but it’s not legal in New Jersey without a permit.  Federal law provides safe passage for someone transporting guns through a restrictive jurisdiction, but the jury didn’t get to hear about that law.  An appeals court panel said that law didn’t apply because it specifies that the guns should be locked in the trunk, and Reininger’s SUV didn’t have a trunk.  They also ruled that officers were justified in searching Reininger’s car because they recognized the gun cases as evidence of a crime.  The case could go to the State Supreme Court, but I wouldn’t make any bets on the chances of a new trial.

Continue reading You’re the Target

Lies, Lies, and More Lies

The Gun Control Lie

Gun control advocates are compulsive liars.  They have to be because the truth doesn’t support their agenda.  Even the names of gun control groups – suggesting “violence policy,” “violence prevention,” and “gun safety” – are all lies.  And the term “gun control” itself is a lie.  Virtually everything coming from gun control advocates today is a lie.

I’m not talking about simple distortions or cases of “my statistics are better than your statistics,” these are intentional, calculated, bald-faced deceptions, foisted on the American public by ideologically motivated zealots trying to force an agenda of citizen disarmament and government control.  That’s not to say that everyone who supports gun control is driven by the same ideology, or that there are no honest, passionate, idealistic, true believers among the ranks of gun control advocates.  There are some very good, honest, sincere people who promote gun control, but unfortunately these misguided souls are steeped in emotion and inculcated with the never ending lies of the professional gun haters.

Let’s dissect some of the lies:

Continue reading Lies, Lies, and More Lies

Gun Control

The Gun Control Lie

Gun control advocates are compulsive liars.  They have to be because the truth doesn’t support their agenda.  Even the names of gun control groups – suggesting “violence policy,” “violence prevention,” and “gun safety” – are all lies.  And the term “gun control” itself is a lie.  Virtually everything coming from gun control advocates today is a lie.

I’m not talking about simple distortions or cases of “my statistics are better than your statistics,” these are intentional, calculated, bald-faced deceptions, foisted on the American public by ideologically motivated zealots trying to force an agenda of citizen disarmament and government control.  That’s not to say that everyone who supports gun control is driven by the same ideology, or that there are no honest, passionate, idealistic, true believers among the ranks of gun control advocates.  There are some very good, honest, sincere people who promote gun control, but unfortunately these misguided souls are steeped in emotion and inculcated with the never ending lies of the professional gun haters.

Let’s dissect some of the lies:

1.  Over 90% (almost 90%, close to 90%) of Americans support “universal background checks,” as do various large percentages of gun owners and NRA members.

Anyone with a brain should realize that these statistics were fraudulent based solely on the fact that there is almost nothing that 90% of Americans agree on.  But this lie has gotten bigger as time has gone by.  More recent polls place support for any gun control at less than 50%, and approval of the Senate’s rejection of expanded background checks at almost 40% – yet gun control advocates and politicians continue to declare that 90% of Americans support universal background checks.  It is a lie.

2.   Almost 40% of firearms sales occur without a background check.

That lie was a stretch when it was presented in late December, and it was soon declared to be a distortion by the fact check column in the Washington Post – garnering “2 Pinocchios.”  The bogus statistic was then called out by several other watchdog centers, but Obama and company have continued to preach it as Gospel, right up to this very day.  That earned Mr. Obama an extra “Pinocchio” from the Post.  When you say something that’s not true, even after you know it’s not true, that’s called a lie.

3.   Gun control is needed to “make our children and our communities safer.

This presumes that guns serve only evil purposes, and that passing laws prevents criminal violence.  There has never been a supportable study proving, or even strongly suggesting, that gun control does anything to reduce criminal violence or even suicide.  Reviews of existing literature going back to the 1970s have consistently found no positive connection between gun control and crime.  On the other hand, there are several peer-reviewed studies which show that guns in private hands are used to stop crimes much more often than they are used to commit crimes, and that the prevalence of guns appears to result in reduced violent crime.  Claims of improved safety with gun control are lies.

4.   About 30,000 lives are lost to “gun violence” each year in the US, and; “Thirteen children a day are killed in gun violence.”

The 30,000 number is based predominantly on suicides.  Suicide is not “gun violence” and gun control doesn’t reduce suicide.  Guns are much more prevalent in the US than Canada, and are used more frequently in suicides here than there, yet the suicide rate in the US is only slightly higher.  Reducing guns doesn’t reduce suicide – saying it does is a lie.

The “13 a day” statistic includes “children” up to 24.  The peak age range for criminal activity is 16 to 27.  That is also a peak age range for suicide.  Virtually all of the guns used by these young people are obtained illegally.  The 30,000 and 13 a day claims are intentional lies.

5.  There is an epidemic of violent crime and mass murder sweeping the nation.

No there isn’t.  Crime is at its lowest rate in decades.  It has gone down as gun ownership and concealed carry have gone up.  Atrocities like Sandy Hook and the Batman movie massacre tend to run in copycat cycles based largely on media play.  There is no growing epidemic.  Claims otherwise are lies.

Gun control groups are based in lies.  They call themselves “violence prevention” and “gun safety” groups even though the only violence prevention and gun safety policies they espouse are restrictions on legal access to firearms.   They lie about who they are, what they stand for, and what they want.  They use lies to press their agenda, and they lie about what that agenda is and what impact it would have.  They are liars through and through, and it is ridiculous that the media and politicians promote and parrot the lies.

The truth is, Gun Control Doesn’t.

Permission to reprint or post this article in its entirety is hereby granted provided this credit and link is included.    Text is available at www.FirearmsCoalition.org.    To receive The Firearms Coalition’s bi-monthly newsletter, The Knox Hard Corps Report, write to PO Box 1761, Buckeye, AZ  85326.  Copyright © 2013 Neal Knox Associates – The most trusted name in the rights movement. 

Radical NRA Members

Radical NRA Members Out of Step – Unanimously

The National Rifle Association broke all previous records at their Annual Meeting and Expo last weekend in Houston.  Over 86,000 NRA members and friends showed up during the 4-day event, and NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre announced during the Saturday members meeting that membership in the organization had, for the first time ever, topped 5 million.

A personal highlight for me during the meeting was the adoption of a resolution I authored calling for unwavering opposition to any and all efforts to expand gun control restrictions or infringements on the Second Amendment.  The resolution was adopted with a unanimous vote of the members present, prompting Matt Gertz, Research Director for the “progressive” (read  loony left) web organization Media Matters for America, to comment on how “out of step” the activists in attendance are with the American people and the broader NRA membership.

Continue reading Radical NRA Members

The Printable Gun – It’s not what you think

Note from the future (August 5, 2018)

I interviewed Cody Wilson more than five years ago, before the Liberator, the 3D-printed design published by Defense Distributed, had seen the light of day.  At that time the idea was a prize being offered for a crowd-sourced gun.  I don’t know whether my mention of the WWII Liberator had any bearing on how the 21st Century model got its name — I rather doubt it; the name is obvious to anyone who knows the history of gun development.  But I like being at least among the first to mention it.
My final thoughts on the then-conceptual Wiki Weapon still hold today:

The only way that the Wiki Weapon can be banned is to ban the expression of an idea. Should the government ever attempt to truly ban that expression, we’ll know that it’s time to start printing a bunch of the Wiki Weapons, as well as running off the tools described at thehomegunsmith.com and cncguns.com, for it is at that point that government will have crossed the line from merely a pain, into tyranny. The Wiki Weapon is a canary in a coal mine.

By Chris Knox

(May 10, 2013) For over a century, every advance in firearms technology has brought with it some measure of hysteria.  In the 1860s, the threat of repeating arms falling into the hands of plains Indians caused writers of the day to spill gallons of worried ink.  In the 1930s, it was the machine gun which led to the National Firearms Act of 1934. Around the same time, a “freakishly powerful” weapon was also considered for the prohibitively expensive NFA tax.  It was the .357 Magnum. Today, we are on the verge of seeing a “printed” gun, one that can be produced on a 3D printer. In 3D printing, plastic is heated and sprayed, much like an ink jet printer, and the material built up layer by layer to produce a three-dimensional plastic part.  The idea has not yet been fully realized – current 3D printed materials won’t stand the pressure generated by a gun, but those are current materials. Tomorrow’s materials will be better than today’s.

A group called Defense Distributed is raising funds to “crowdsource” and produce the world’s first fully printable gun. They call it the “Wiki Weapon.”  They are sponsoring a design contest and hope to purchase or rent time on a 3D printer to create and test the various entries. Defense Distributed plans to make the printer files available on the Internet under an Open Source license, much like other freely downloadable software.  The implications are profound in some ways, yet in others, nothing has changed. But first some context.

Back in the middle and late 1980’s a revolutionary new generation of plastic guns would, it was feared, defeat existing airport security checkpoints rendering air travelers vulnerable to terrorists.  The press was in a panic. “Undetectable Guns an Alarming Issue,” intoned the Chicago Tribune.  “Defend America:  Ban plastic handguns,” shrieked the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.  All this over a full-size duty pistol that contained more than a pound of steel but also sported a polymer frame.  

The object of the press frenzy was, of course, the now-commonplace Glock, variations of which are today the standard duty weapon of a majority of police departments in this country, and are routinely used by civilians for sports and self-defense.  The Glock was never undetectable using standard airport metal detectors, although the panic did illuminate the fact that in 1986 many airport checkpoints were running dated equipment that might not detect some compact metal guns. A federal bill ostensibly aimed at yet-to-be invented “plastic guns” was simply a warmed-over version of old “Saturday Night Special” bills that would have driven little handguns out of legal channels and into the underground market where they would, of course, be readily available to anyone who was willing to break the law.  Polymer-framed guns are today offered by a host of mainstream manufacturers.

In recent years polymer technology has produced another revolution of sorts in firearms technology, but that revolution has been under the covers.  This second revolution is happening in design shops. Designers routinely use 3D printers to create quick prototypes that don’t have to bear working loads, but can operate mechanically.  

In one sense, 3D printing has already gone to the next level with at least one hobbyist maker producing a functional AR15 lower receiver.  Under federal law, the lower receiver is considered the gun, so technically, a printed “gun” already exists. Being just a lower, it requires a bunch of parts, including a stock, the guts of the hammer, trigger, and magazine release, an upper receiver and barrel.  The printed AR15 certainly would not be undetectable, nonetheless, it has the appealing feature of being free – not “free” like beer, in the sense that it doesn’t cost anything – the equipment and materials needed are fairly expensive – but “free” in the sense of being outside government control.  The equipment needed to produce a functional lower receiver or pistol frame – legal firearms – now sits in the garage and basement workshops of millions of tinkerers, and manufacturing one – or a hundred – for personal use, is completely legal in most states.

The next giant step in this brave new world of 3D-printing is to print a complete, fully functional gun.  

That brings us to the Wiki Weapon and Defense Distributed, fronted by University of Texas law student Cody Wilson.  Chris spoke with Cody about the project recently. Here are some of the high points from that discussion:

Chris Knox: Why are you doing this?

Cody Wilson:  There are so many layers.  It’s about being able to literally and figuratively realize inalienable rights – in this case, self-defense.  It’s technology, but it’s also a philosophical statement. And it’s a political statement. Anyone with any sense knows you can go to Home Depot and get the materials for a perfectly serviceable zip gun and have change from a $10 bill.  The idea here is to put out on the Internet the intellectual capital that can create – in one or two steps – a functional weapon from nothing more than the printer. It makes realization of inalienable rights an in-your-face fact. It does away with the “liberal ennui” of shaded meanings to everything.  This is a concrete, indisputable fact. Mao got a lot of things wrong, but he said “Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun,” and he was right on that.

Knox:  Among the things you’re raising money for is a reward for truly printable designs.  What kind of requirements for the gun are you laying out?

Wilson:  Really, it’s open-ended.  We’re looking for a functional firearm that can be printed in its entirety.  We’re talking the most basic elemental gun – single-shot, but no restrictions on caliber, or even cartridge.  We’ve even thought of some non-cartridge ideas, like being charged with black powder and primed with match heads.  We’re not even looking at durability requirements. If firing it once or twice destroys the gun, that might even be an advantage.  It depends on what you need to do with it. There are so many things we haven’t thought of yet and they keep popping up.
Knox:  It brings to my mind the Liberator pistol from WWII – it’s a gun to get a gun.
Wilson:  Exactly. It’s a psychological operation on one level.  The Liberator didn’t even get used like it was intended, but it made the occupying armies worry.  Again, it’s a political statement. We want to put it out there in the face of the opposition that gun control is now obsolete.
Knox:  There are those of us who think it’s obsolete already.
Wilson:  Like I said, it’s an in-your-face statement.  This is a shift in the whole perspective of the need for an infrastructure to create a weapon – and other things.  It’s a move away from the idea of a centralized authority for everything and toward a decentralized world that gives power to the individual.

Nothing Cody says is truly new, nor even that revolutionary.  Only the crowdsourced design of the Wiki Weapon project is new, and only in the sense that it is being applied to firearms.  Using the Internet as a repository for firearms technology is also an old idea. The late Philip Luty’s wonderful site, thehomegunsmith.com has been around for at least a decade.  Luty was an Englishman who, in the face of his government’s gun-banning ways, created his site as a repository of plans for all kinds of weapons, including zip guns and a submachine-gun.  Likewise, posting operational computer files that will build a gun is not new. Another site, cncguns.com, offers data files to construct all sorts of guns on a computer-controlled CNC milling machine.  Lock a billet of the right material into the vise and the machine will shape a perfect AR15 lower, an M1911 frame, or critical components of other guns.

In the final analysis, the Wiki Weapon project is not about gun control.  It isn’t about revolution. It really isn’t even really about guns. It’s about ideas, especially those ideas that can be dangerous.  On the Defense Distributed web site (defensedistributed.com/) the “Manifesto” contains a few dozen quotes from founders and other thinkers, plus a link to .Areopagitica, John Milton’s famous defense of unlicensed press.  The only way that the Wiki Weapon can be banned is to ban the expression of an idea.  Should the government ever attempt to truly ban that expression, we’ll know that it’s time to start printing a bunch of the Wiki Weapons, as well as running off the tools described at thehomegunsmith.com and cncguns.com, for it is at that point that government will have crossed the line from merely a pain, into tyranny.  The Wiki Weapon is a canary in a coal mine. We’re watching it closely – we’re sure Eric Holder is too.

-30-

Boston Terrorists

The Terrorists Won in Boston

That demented, hate-filled terrorists could build bombs and detonate them in a crowded public place should not have come as news to anyone.  That’s what terrorists have been doing around the world for decades – centuries.  That it could be done in the US by people we had welcomed with open arms, should also have been no surprise.  Islamist extremists have been promising, and perpetrating attacks in the US since the 1970s.  Other extremists, from anarchists, to White supremacists, to Puerto Rican separatists, to anti-abortion activists, to radical leftists have perpetrated acts of terror on our soil since the foundation of the republic.  Indeed, American revolutionaries of the 1700s were considered terrorists by the British.  The use of violence as a means of advancing a social or political goal is as old as society itself.  How it is remembered generally depends on who wins and is around to write the history.  Nonetheless acts of terror, particularly when perpetrated against civilians, generally backfire and engender hate and loathing for the assailant’s cause rather than sparking the desired changes in policy.

So there were no new lessons to be learned from the actual bombing of the Boston Marathon.  In a free society, extremists will always have the ability and opportunity to inflict harm on the innocent.  We know this.  We’ve seen it.  We’ve mourned with the victims and families.  At most, this bombing serves as a reminder to be aware, be prepared, and to take precautions.

Continue reading Boston Terrorists

Resolution of NRA Members

Resolution submitted to the Annual Meeting of the National Rifle Association, 4 May, 2013 by Jeff Knox, NRA Endowment Member and Director of The Firearms Coalition, calling for a continued uncompromising stance against encroaching gun control. 

The resolution passed unanimously.

WHEREAS, gun control extremists exploited a terrible tragedy and launched an unprecedented assault on the rights of responsible citizens during the first quarter of this year; and

WHEREAS, these extremists and their media allies played heavily on the public’s emotions and lack of knowledge about firearms and firearms laws; and

WHEREAS, there were high expectations for several, seriously restrictive and prohibitive bills to be passed by the US Senate; and

WHEREAS, none of the gun control proposals offered would have prevented or mitigated any of the recent atrocities that were used to fuel the assault on Americans’ rights; and

Continue reading Resolution of NRA Members

Illinois Hoplophobes

Illinois Hoplophobes Over a Barrel
Let ‘em Roll!

The state of Illinois is the only state in the union that does not offer provisions for regular citizens – those who are not law enforcement or security guards – to carry a gun in public. 

Last December, the US Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit ruled that the ban is unconstitutional and gave the state 180 days to come up with an acceptable framework for citizen carry.  Now, if the legislature and governor do not implement a plan June 8 of this year, the laws banning carry will simply become null and void effectively giving the state “Constitutional Carry,” i.e. unregulated carrying such as currently exists in Vermont, Alaska, and Arizona.  Chances of that happening are slim, however the journey from the current prohibition to the final system promises to be an interesting journey.

Continue reading Illinois Hoplophobes

Senate Vote Chart

Senate Gun Control Votes April 17, 2013.  Compiled by The Firearms Coalition

State

Senator 1

AW

MB

CW

BC

Senator 2

AW

MB

CW

BC

Alabama:

Sessions (R)*

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Shelby (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Alaska:

Begich (D)* 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Murkowski (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Arizona:

Flake (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

McCain (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Yea

Arkansas:

Boozman (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Pryor (D)*

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

California:

Boxer (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Feinstein (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Colorado:

Bennet (D) 

Nay

Yea

Nay

Yea

Udall (D)* 

Nay

Yea

Yea

Yea

Connecticut:

Blumenthal (D)   

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Murphy (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Delaware:

Carper (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Coons (D)* 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Florida:

Nelson (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Rubio (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Georgia:

Chambliss (R)** 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Isakson (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Hawaii:

Hirono (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Schatz (D)* 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Idaho:

Crapo (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Risch (R)* 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Illinois:

Durbin (D)* 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Kirk (R)

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Indiana:

Coats (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Donnelly (D) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Yea

Iowa:

Grassley (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Harkin (D)* 

Yea

Nay

Nay

Yea

Kansas:

Moran (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Roberts (R)* 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Kentucky:

McConnell (R)* 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Paul (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Louisiana:

Landrieu (D)* 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Yea

Vitter (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Maine:

Collins (R)* 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Yea

King (I) 

Nay

Yea

Nay

Yea

Maryland:

Cardin (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Mikulski (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Massachusetts:

Cowan (D)*** 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Warren (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Michigan:

Levin (D)** 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Stabenow (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Minnesota:

Franken (D)* 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Klobuchar (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Mississippi:

Cochran (R)*? 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Wicker (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Missouri:

Blunt (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

McCaskill (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Montana:

Baucus (D)* 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Tester (D) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Yea

Nebraska:

Fischer (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Johanns (R)** 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Nevada:

Heller (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Reid (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Nay

New Hampshire:

Ayotte (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Shaheen (D)* 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

New Jersey:

Lautenberg (D)**

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Menendez (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

New Mexico:

Heinrich (D) 

Nay

Yea

Yea

Yea

Udall (D)* 

Nay

Yea

Yea

Yea

New York:

Gillibrand (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Schumer (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

North Carolina:

Burr (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Hagan (D)* 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Yea

North Dakota:

Heitkamp (D) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Hoeven (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Ohio:

Brown (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Portman (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Oklahoma:

Coburn (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Inhofe (R)* 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Oregon:

Merkley (D)* 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Wyden (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Pennsylvania:

Casey (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Toomey (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Yea

Rhode Island:

Reed (D)* 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Whitehouse (D)  

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

South Carolina:

Graham (R)* 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Scott (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

South Dakota:

Johnson (D)** 

Nay

Yea

Nay

Yea

Thune (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Tennessee:

Alexander (R)* 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Corker (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Texas:

Cornyn (R)* 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Cruz (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Utah:

Hatch (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Lee (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Vermont:

Leahy (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Sanders (I) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Virginia:

Kaine (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Warner (D)* 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Yea

Washington:

Cantwell (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Murray (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

West Virginia:

Manchin (D) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Yea

Rockefeller (D)**

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Wisconsin:

Baldwin (D) 

Yea

Yea

Nay

Yea

Johnson (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Wyoming:

Barrasso (R) 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Enzi (R)* 

Nay

Nay

Yea

Nay

Red Vote = Wrong Vote (Supporting Gun Control)                           Red State = All Wrong Votes from Senators

AW = Feinstein “Assault Weapons” Ban                                                 MB = Lautenberg Magazine Ban

CW = Cornyn CCW Reciprocity                                                                    BC = Toomey-Manchin Background Check

* = Running for Reelection in 2014           ** = Retiring, Open Seat               *** = Special Election June, 2013

Permission to reprint and post is granted as long as the following copyright and web address are included.

© 2013 Neal Knox Associates, The Firearms Coalition  www.FirearmsCoalition.org  

Ammunition for the grassroots gun rights movement