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  3. DOJ Sues D.C. Over AR-15 Ban, Registration Restrictions

DOJ Sues D.C. Over AR-15 Ban, Registration Restrictions

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    DOJ Sues D.C. Over AR-15 Ban, Registration Restrictions

    This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult with a qualified attorney regarding firearms laws in your jurisdiction.

    Why it matters: The feds just flipped the script on D.C.'s gun laws—the same city that gave us the Heller decision is back in court, and this time DOJ is playing offense instead of defense.

    The Department of Justice filed suit against Washington, D.C. yesterday, targeting the city's AR-15 ban and what they're calling unconstitutional registration stonewalling. It's the new Second Amendment Section's first big swing, and they're not holding back.

    The legal reality: D.C. officials have been playing games with registration for years—approving some applications while mysteriously rejecting others for "protected firearms" that should be legal under Heller. The DOJ alleges Metro PD has established "a pattern and practice of refusing to register protected firearms," forcing residents into costly lawsuits just to exercise their rights.

    That's bureaucratic warfare at its finest. You file the paperwork, they find excuses to deny it, and suddenly you're risking arrest for possessing something that should be perfectly legal.

    Between the lines: This isn't just about D.C.—it's a signal that the Trump administration plans to use federal litigation as a battering ram against restrictive gun laws nationwide. The timing and aggressive language suggest they're testing how far Second Amendment protections extend beyond the basic handgun ownership established in Heller.

    The lawsuit hits two main targets:

    • Platform bans: D.C.'s prohibition on AR-15s and similar rifles
    • Administrative obstruction: Using registration red tape as a backdoor ban

    What this means for you: If you're in D.C., this could finally open the door to legally owning modern sporting rifles. If you're anywhere else with similar restrictions, watch closely—the precedent here could ripple nationwide.

    The case specifically references Dick Anthony Heller, the D.C. cop who sued back in 2003 for the right to keep a handgun at home. Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon noted they're ensuring "the very rights D.C. resident Mr. Heller secured 17 years ago are enforced today."

    The bottom line: D.C.'s unique federal jurisdiction means court rulings here carry outsized weight in firearms law. Success would force the city to allow AR-15 registration and establish precedent that registration systems can't function as de facto bans through administrative games.

    For residents who've been locked out of owning common rifles by some of the nation's most restrictive laws, this represents real hope for relief.

    What's next: The outcome depends on how federal courts interpret Second Amendment scope beyond basic home defense. But the message is clear—sometimes the feds do come to help, just not always the way local politicians expect.


    Read the original article in The Handbook | By BGC Staff


    Join the Discussion

    Given that D.C.'s restrictions have been in place for years, what's your take on whether this lawsuit actually changes anything practically for gun owners there, or is it more about the legal principle at this point?

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