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Supreme Court to hear arguments in challenge to ATF’s ghost gun rule

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Washington — The Supreme Court on Tuesday will convene to hear arguments Tuesday over the Biden administration’s efforts to regulate unserialized firearms called ghost guns, considering for the second time in a matter of months whether the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Tobacco went too far when it took unilateral action to curb gun violence.

Brought by a group of firearms owners, gun rights groups and manufacturers, the challengers are seeking to invalidate the regulation that seeks to subject ghost guns to the same requirements as commercially made firearms.

But the Biden administration has warned that striking down the rule would give criminals, minors and others who are legally barred from having guns access to kits that can be assembled into a functioning, untraceable firearm in less than 30 minutes.

The question in the case, known as Garland v. VanDerStok, isn’t whether Second Amendment rights were violated, but whether the ATF exceeded its authority when it issued the regulation in 2022. The rule clarified the definition of “firearm” in the Gun Control Act of 1968 to include a weapon parts kit that can be assembled into an operational firearm, and the incomplete frame of a handgun and receiver of a rifle.

The measure aims to address a surge in crimes committed using ghost guns, which can be made from 3D printers or kits and parts available online. Because these firearms don’t have serial numbers or transfer records, it’s difficult for law enforcement to trace them to their buyers, making them especially attractive to people who can’t legally buy firearms or plan to use them in crimes.

Ghost guns are displayed at the headquarters of the San Francisco Police Department on Nov. 27, 2019.
Ghost guns are displayed at the headquarters of the San Francisco Police Department on Nov. 27, 2019.

Haven Daley / AP


But by clarifying the definition of “firearm” in the Gun Control Act to cover these kits, the manufacturers and sellers of ghost guns must be licensed, mark their products with serial numbers, run background checks on prospective buyers and maintain transfer records, all things commercial gun makers must do.

A group of 20 major cities told the Supreme Court in a filing that the rule appears to have been effective at reducing the use of ghost guns in their municipalities and around the country. In New York, for example, ghost gun recoveries dropped last year for the first time in four years. In Baltimore, they decreased in 2023 for the first time since 2019.

The gun owners, advocacy groups and kit manufacturers sued the Biden administration over the rule shortly after it took effect, arguing that when Congress wrote the 1968 law, it didn’t give the ATF the power to change the definition of firearm to cover kits. A federal district court judge invalidated the regulation. A panel of three judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit also struck down the regulation, finding that only finished firearms, or complete frames or receivers, are covered by the Gun Control Act.

The Biden administration then asked the Supreme Court to review that decision, arguing that the rule just ensures that ghost guns comply with the same “straightforward and inexpensive administrative requirements” that apply to commercial firearms sales.

The 5th Circuit’s decision, Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar wrote, “ignores the words Congress wrote and would effectively nullify the act’s careful regulatory scheme by allowing anyone to anonymously buy a kit online and assemble a fully functional gun in minutes — no background check, records, or serial number required.”

She also argued that the lower court’s interpretation of the law frustrates its design by transforming the definition of firearm into an invitation to evade its requirements.

But the challengers said the ATF’s clarification cannot be reconciled with the plain text of the Gun Control Act and “risks upending the regulation of popular semiautomatic firearms.”

They told the high court in a filing that any change in the regulatory approach to privately made firearms must come from Congress, not the ATF.

“The decisive fact in this case is Congress’s decision, in the GCA, to focus on the commercial firearm market rather than the private making of firearms for personal use. Accordingly, the GCA does not reach the items used in private firearm making that ATF attempts to regulate,” the gun owners, led by Jennifer VanDerStok of Texas, said.

The Supreme Court has been asked to intervene in the legal dispute before, but in an earlier stage in the litigation. In August 2023, the high court agreed to allow the Biden administration to enforce the ghost gun rule until it issues a decision on its legality, likely by the end of June 2025. 

The Supreme Court divided 5-4 in halting the district court order that struck down the measure, with Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett joining the three liberal justices in the majority.

Roberts and Barrett’s earlier votes make them key justices to watch, though they do not mean they’ll vote to uphold the measure now that the Supreme Court is considering the merits of the case.

The high court will consider the ghost gun rule just months after it invalidated a separate measure that banned bump stocks, a firearms accessory that increases a semi-automatic rifle’s rate of fire to hundreds of rounds per minute. 

In striking down the rule, the Supreme Court’s six-justice conservative majority ruled the ATF exceeded its authority when it issued the ban in 2018 after a mass shooting at a music festival in Las Vegas, the deadliest in U.S. history.



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Obama says Black men should be supporting Kamala Harris over Trump

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Obama says Black men should be supporting Kamala Harris over Trump – CBS News


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Former President Barack Obama spent Thursday on the campaign trail in Pennsylvania where he delivered a blunt message to Black men about why he believes they should be supporting Vice President Kamala Harris over former President Donald Trump. CBS News campaign reporter Taurean Small has more.

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Scope of Hurricane Milton damage emerges as power outages and fuel shortages remain in Florida

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Florida residents repaired damage from Hurricane Milton and cleaned up debris Friday after the storm smashed through coastal communities and tore homes to pieces, flooded streets and spawned a barrage of deadly tornadoes. At least 16 people deaths are linked to the storm, officials told CBS News. 

Arriving just two weeks after the devastating Hurricane Helene, the system flooded barrier islands, tore the roof off the Tampa Bay Rays’ baseball stadium and toppled a construction crane. Dozens of rescues have been conducted across the area.

Tampa evacuee Lillian Bicart, 80, told “CBS Mornings” that flooding severely damaged her home. 

“I have to sit down and think what I’m going to do, because I lose everything, everything too wet,” Bicart said. “I never think about this. This is a bad dream, very bad.” 

Tornadoes also left a swath of damage across Central and Southern Florida. 

Hurricane Milton Climate
Neighborhoods with debris from tornadoes are visible in the aftermath of Hurricane Milton, Oct. 10, 2024, in Fort Pierce, Fla.

Gerald Herbert / AP


“Even with the hurricanes, it’s never been this bad ever,” Jashanti Williams, whose family hid in the bathroom as the tornadoes ripped through the neighborhood, told “CBS Mornings.” 

As residents assessed damage to their property, over 2.5 million customers in Florida remained without power Friday morning, according to poweroutage.us

A flood of vehicles headed south Thursday evening on Interstate 75, the main highway that runs through the middle of the state, as relief workers and evacuated residents returned to assess the aftermath. Bucket trucks and fuel tankers streamed by, along with portable bathroom trailers and a convoy of emergency vehicles.

As residents raced back to find out whether their homes were destroyed or spared, finding gas was still a challenge. Fuel stations were still closed as far away as Ocala, more than a two and a half hour drive north of where the storm made landfall as a Category 3 near Siesta Key in Sarasota County on Wednesday night.

Hurricane Milton Weather
A truck drives down a flooded street in Siesta Key, Fla., following Hurricane Milton, Thursday, Oct. 10, 2024.

Rebecca Blackwell / AP


Natasha Ducre and her husband, Terry, were just feeling lucky to be alive. Milton peeled the tin roof off of their cinderblock home in their neighborhood a few blocks north of the Manatee River, about a 45-minute drive south of Tampa. She pushed to leave as the storm barreled toward them Wednesday night after he resisted evacuating their three-bedroom house where he grew up and where the couple lived with their three kids and two grandchildren. She believes the decision saved their lives.

They returned to find the roof of their home scattered in sheets across the street, the wooden beams of what was their ceiling exposed to the sky. Inside, fiberglass insulation hung down in shreds, their belongings soaked by the rain and littered with chunks of shattered drywall.

“It ain’t much, but it was ours. What little bit we did have is gone,” she said. “It’s gone.”

APTOPIX Hurricane Milton Weather
Natasha Ducre surveys the kitchen of her devastated home, which lost most of its roof during Hurricane Milton, in Palmetto, Fla., Thursday, Oct. 10, 2024. 

Rebecca Blackwell / AP


With shelters no longer available and the cost of a hotel room out of reach, they plan to cram into Terry Ducre’s mother’s house for now. After that, they’re not sure.

“I don’t have no answers,” Natasha Ducre said. “What is my next move? What am I going to do?”

Meanwhile, Florida theme parks including Walt Disney World, Universal Orlando and SeaWorld planned to reopen Friday after an assessment of the effects of the storm.

Orlando International Airport, the state’s busiest, said departures for domestic flights and international flights would resume Friday, after resuming domestic arrivals Thursday evening. The airport had minor damage, including a few leaks and downed trees.



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The Vatican’s Orphans | Sunday on 60 Minutes

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The Vatican’s Orphans | Sunday on 60 Minutes – CBS News


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From 1950 to 1970, the Vatican sent thousands of Italian children to American Catholics for adoption. The children came on orphan visas — but most of them were not orphans; they were the children of unwed mothers, many of whom were alive. Bill Whitaker speaks with the American adoptees still searching for their Italian families, Sunday on 60 Minutes.

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