President Joe Biden on Tuesday took part in one of the most enduring traditions for presidents. Ten people are dead in Boulder, Colorado. They were killed Monday while grocery shopping, when a man with a gun designed to kill people shot lead into their bodies. With the Atlanta-area shootings just a week ago, the number of mass public shootings this year has already equaled the number during all of 2020.
In his statement on Tuesday, the president called for Congress to tighten gun control laws. If he and congressional Democrats really want to use all the tools the federal government has to bring down the number of people killed with guns each year, unfettering the Justice Department’s Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, or ATF, has to be part of the solution.
Back in 2013, Mother Jones published a piece in which freelance writer Alan Berlow laid out how the National Rifle Association had systematically weakened ATF with the support of congressional Republicans. It has stuck with me through the years, as the bureau’s impotence has continued to be on full display.
The restrictions have all focused on the bureau’s mandated tasks: issuing licenses for federal firearm licensees, which then have to use the FBI’s National Instant Criminal Background Check System when making sales; inspecting gun dealers for compliance with the law; and cracking down on illegal gun sales.
Those would be challenging enough, but ATF has to rely on a patchwork of laws to prevent illegal gun trafficking, since there’s no comprehensive federal law against gun trafficking. And as Berlow’s piece explained, over the years Congress has included a number of “riders,” or “bits of permanent law tacked onto an appropriations bill,” to the ATF’s funding.
Some of the most restrictive are the Tiahrt Amendments, which seem perfectly tailored to keep ATF small and ineffective. These riders block ATF from centralizing records it gets from licensed gun dealers, keep ATF from disclosing to anyone the contents of a federal database that tracks guns that authorities recover from crime scenes, make it illegal for ATF to require gun dealers to create a paper trail of how many guns they have in inventory and require the FBI to have a way to destroy any identifying information in a background check within 24 hours of clearing a gun sale.
These provisions can be undone only with an affirmative act of Congress. And don’t think about trying to transfer anything that ATF should be doing to another government body — there are riders blocking any funding for that, too. As things stand, ATF is so weak that it can’t even strip licenses from gun dealers effectively, even after multiple infractions:
For gun dealers to lose their licenses, the A.T.F. must prove they “willfully” violated the Gun Control Act. Violating the law is not enough to justify the loss of a license; inspectors must prove that store owners knew they were acting illegally. “Other regulatory statutes don’t have that,” said Adam Winkler, an expert on constitutional law and gun policy. “This is part of a larger pattern in the federal gun laws that make it hard for A.T.F. to enforce.”
Aside from passing laws to hamstring the bureau, Congress has also ensured that there has been a Senate-confirmed ATF director for only two of the last 15 years. The job began needing Senate approval only in 2006, at the urging of the NRA and other gun lobby groups. Almost every nominee has been met with a filibuster ever since, leading to a string of acting directors.
Meanwhile, ATF has been unable to enforce background check laws on unfinished gun frames, which must be registered and tracked. The current law is so weak that CNN reported in 2019 that the feds dropped a case against a seller for fear that a judge’s ruling would make it legal for even convicted felons to acquire all the parts needed to put together an AR-15-style gun and other weapons.
None of the restrictions came in the aftermath of the “Fast and Furious” scandal, a misguided scheme to trace the flow of illegal weapons into Mexico, which Republicans have hammered Democrats with for years. But that didn’t help reverse years of vilification of the bureau by gun dealers and lobbyists.









