Supreme Court’s Illusory Consensus on Ghost Guns
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The New York Times |
Administration officials had said the popularity of the weapons had soared in recent years, particularly among criminals barred from buying ordinary guns.
KHOU 11 |
The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld a Biden administration regulation on the nearly impossible-to-trace weapons called ghost guns, clearing the way for serial numbers, background checks and age ver...
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The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld government regulation of self-assemble firearm kits that produce untraceable weapons known as "ghost guns."
The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday kept a Biden administration regulation on so-called ghost guns which allowed people to obtain parts via online sellers to build a firearm.
In a rare ruling that reins in gun rights, the Supreme Court has figured out that a gun is a gun, whether you buy it ready-made or build it from a kit.
This article was update on March 26 at 2:04 p.m. The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld a Biden-era rule regulating so-called “ghost guns” – untraceable weapons without serial numbers, assembled from components or kits that can be bought online.
The Supreme Court ruling affects ghost guns, the largely untraceable firearms used in a growing number of crimes over the past decade.
Washington — The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld a Biden administration rule that regulates unserialized firearms called ghost guns, delivering a win for federal efforts to curb gun violence.
The Supreme Court upheld the Biden administration’s regulation of “ghost guns” in a 7-2 decision Wednesday, rejecting a challenge brought by gun rights groups and several manufacturers. The
W ASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld a Biden administration regulation on the nearly impossible-to-trace weapons called ghost guns, clearing the way for continued serial numbers, background checks and age verification requirements to buy them in kits online.
WASHINGTON—The Supreme Court held Wednesday that federal firearms laws cover so-called ghost guns, weapons that are assembled from kits that law enforcement says are becoming the go-to choice for armed criminals.