CHARLESTON — Attorney General Patrick Morrisey today announced that West
Virginia and 25 other states and one territory have filed an amicus, or
friend of the court, brief with the U.S. Supreme Court opposing a
federal government attempt to prosecute legal gun owners who wish to
sell a weapon to another person who can legally own and purchase
firearms.
“Our Office is proud to lead a bipartisan group of 27 states and
territories in this brief to oppose the U.S. Department of Justice’s
attempt to unilaterally create a federal restriction on firearm sales
between law-abiding citizens,” Attorney General Morrisey said. “We
believe that every legal gun owner in this state and nation should be
interested in the outcome of this case.”
The case, Abramski v. United States of America, challenges whether
federal law prohibits citizens who legally buy a firearm from a licensed
dealer with the intention of then selling that gun to another private
citizen who also may legally own and purchase firearms. The Obama
administration argues that the citizen who buys and then sells the gun
is acting as a “straw purchaser,” which they claim is illegal under
several federal statutes.
The States, however, argue that Congress has never passed a federal law
that prohibits such purchases. At most, the laws relied on by the
United States prohibit private citizens from selling guns to people who
are prohibited from owning firearms, such as minors, convicted felons,
or people who have been diagnosed as having mental illnesses. It is up
to the States and their citizens to decide whether to implement
additional regulations on private gun sales.
West Virginia is joined in this brief by attorneys general representing
Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Guam, Idaho,
Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri, Montana,
Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina,
South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and Wyoming.
“This case is important to West Virginia citizens who wish to practice
their Second Amendment rights and sell firearms to other legal West
Virginia gun owners,” Morrisey said. “The State of West Virginia does
not discourage private gun sales, but the Department of Justice wants to
ensnare innocent West Virginian gun owners in a web of criminal laws if
they try to sell their guns. This federal overreach is a blatant
attempt to overstep state regulations and Congress in order to steer
more gun sales to federally licensed dealers, who then make federal
records of every transaction.”
The states’ amicus brief is in support of a former Roanoke, Va., police
officer, Bruce Abramski, who purchased a gun in 2009 using a law
enforcement discount and sold it to his elderly uncle, who lived in
Pennsylvania. Both Abramski and his uncle could legally own firearms
and made the transaction in accordance with Pennsylvania gun laws,
including a background check of the purchaser. However, federal
authorities prosecuted Abramski on the grounds that he made false
statements on the gun purchase form.
In January 2013, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
upheld Abramski’s conviction, saying that such “straw purchases” are
illegal under federal law. In October, the Supreme Court agreed to
review the conviction.
“Our Office is very concerned about the federal government’s targeting
of law-abiding gun buyers,” Morrisey said. “The federal government is
attempting to circumvent Congress and set aside state regulations that
don’t prevent private gun sales, and instead make sure there is a
federal record of every gun bought or sold in the United States. While
no one wants guns to end up in the hands of a potential or real
criminal, the administration’s interpretation oversteps the law and
could make criminals out of innocent citizens.”
Oral arguments are scheduled for Jan. 22, 2014, with a decision to come by the end of the court’s session in June.
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