Another Executive Order has hit the Fan!!!!

Apr 8, 2011
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Tx
And this one may put you in jail or worse..... Check it out...... as I'm also a Gun smith depending on the details it may get very hard to work on firearms.....

This all came from SASS Single Action Shooting Society....... I guess more details will surface as we find them....

Howdy pards, you might want to check out the Team SASS page and check out the latest anti-gun executive order that came down last Friday. The way I read it is if you do ANYTHING to a gun to improve it or make it more accurate you need a special government permit that's quite expensive. This applies even if you do it to only 1 gun. Scary stuff.

Continued... Posted Today, 11:30 AM

Please do a search on this topic. Obama Gunsmith Executive Order. Sorry guys I would give you more but I'm not feeling well. Anyway, its not good. Its a very ambiguously written order that will put gunsmiths in a hard place to stay in business. Haven't seen anything else here on the wire. Basically says anything a gunsmith does that improves accuracy, machining, drilling, etc. Will be treated as a manufacturing process, and require registration under new guidelines with new fees. Please read what you can find.

Continued.....Posted Today, 11:41 AM
Here is an article from nraila.org posted this morning. -- GIT

On Friday, July 22, just as members of his party were gathering in Philadelphia to coronate Hillary Clinton as their presidential nominee, the Obama Administration once again released a sweeping gun control measure by executive fiat. This time the bad news came via the U.S. State Department’s Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC), which is primarily responsible for administering the Arms Export Control Act (AECA) and its implementing rules, the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR). The upshot is that DDTC is labeling commercial gunsmiths as “manufacturers” for performing relatively simple work such as threading a barrel or fabricating a small custom part for an older firearm. Under the AECA, “manufacturers” are required to register with DDTC at significant expense or risk onerous criminal penalties.

As with prior executive actions on guns, the administration released its dictate suddenly and without advance warning to or prior input from affected businesses, completely bypassing the normal formalities associated with a significant rulemaking. The guidance is also likely to result in more confusion than clarity and may significantly chill heretofore legal conduct associated with gunsmithing.
By way of background, the AECA and ITAR concern rules by which military materiel is exported from, and imported to, the United States. The so-called “defense articles” governed by the AECA/ITAR are compiled in what is known as the U.S. Munitions List and include some, but not all, firearms and ammunition, as well as their parts and components. Thus, for purposes of the regime, a spring or floorplate from the magazine of a controlled firearm is subject to the same regulatory framework as the firearm itself.

The AECA/ITAR require anybody who engages in the business of “manufacturing” a defense article to register with DDTC and pay a registration fee that for new applicants is currently $2,250 per year. These requirements apply, even if the business does not, and does not intend to, export any defense article. Moreover, under ITAR, “only one occasion of manufacturing … a defense article” is necessary for a commercial entity to be considered “engaged in the business” and therefore subject to the regime’s requirements.

Adding to the confusion, the Gun Control Act of 1968 and its amendments (GCA) also regulate firearm manufacturing, importing, and exporting. Both of the laws also use the same or similar terms but apply them in different ways. Thus, what triggers the legal requirement for an entity to be registered as a “manufacturer” under the AECA/ITAR may or may not also bring that entity within the scope of the GCA, and vice versa.

DDTC’s new “guidance” only makes this situation worse by coming up with a confusing and counterintuitive list of activities that it considers “gunsmithing” versus “manufacturing” (despite the fact that it insists it relies on the “ordinary, contemporary, common meaning” of those terms).
For example, DDTC generally labels procedures that involve cutting, drilling, or machining of an existing firearm in order to improve its accuracy or operation or to change its caliber as “manufacturing,” even if they do not create a new and distinct firearm. This includes threading a muzzle for a muzzle brake or blueprinting that requires machining of a barrel.

On the other hand, DDTC contends that gunsmithing includes only very simple procedures, such as the one-for-one drop-in replacement of parts that do not require cutting, drilling, or machining for installation. But even then, if the parts “improve the accuracy, caliber, or other aspects of firearm operation,” “manufacturing” may occur. Finishing treatments for firearms generally are not considered manufacturing under the guidance, nor are cosmetic flourishes such as engraving. Meanwhile the mounting of a scope that involves the machining of new dovetails or the drilling and tapping of holes may or not be “manufacturing,” depending on whether the scope improves the accuracy of the firearm beyond its prior configuration.

For those who are confused by the guidance, DDTC offers the option of requesting an advisory opinion through the agency. The regulation providing for such opinions, however, states they “are not binding on the Department of State, and may not be used in future matters before the Department.” Moreover, the request involves typical bureaucratic hoops to negotiate, including providing both an original and seven copies of the request and supporting information in hardcopy form.

DDTC’s move appears aimed at expanding the regulatory sweep of the AECA/ITAR and culling many smaller commercial gunsmithing operations that do not have the means to pay the annual registration fee or the sophistication to negotiate DDTC’s confusing maze of bureaucracy. Like ATF’s early “guidance” this year on the GCA’s licensing requirement for firearm “dealers,” it is also likely to have a significant chilling effect on activity that would not even be considered regulated.

The administration’s latest move serves as a timely reminder of how the politicized and arrogant abuse of executive power can be used to suppress Second Amendment rights and curtail lawful firearm-related commerce. That lesson should not be forgotten when voters go to the polls this November.

That's what I have so far..... but what I'm finding here and there is not good....... They're determined to kill all the guns or start a Civil War!!! And we've been buying ammo by the container..Load!!!!

 
Hussein has six more months. If he can not start a race war he will try to start a civil war over gun control. Hopefully Trump will win and repeal Hussein's rule changes. If Hillery wins America will continues it's down hill slide to Socialism. It sure worked out well for Venezuela.
 
Hopefully there's enough "gray" area in the wording "Manufacturer" to allow astute lawyers the ability to fight this, IF the govt tries to prosecute anyone under the new BS amendment obama recently slipped through under the radar somehow...:AGGHH:
 
They are playing the cigarette manufacturing sue card with the weapons manufacturers. It is all about the money like always. More tax from a back door deception for legal products! Citizens should be outraged by such shenanigans. Hillary will do everything she can to see that only the elite will be able to protect themselves from a society they've created themselves.
 

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