SCOTUS Showdown Over Gun Suppressors Looms After Appeals Court Creates "Circuit Split" - š The Liberty Daily
(The Daily Caller)āA federal appeals courtās Thursday ruling could force the Supreme Court to decide if suppressors and magazines fall under the definition of āarms.ā
The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ruled Thursday in Comeaux v. United States that suppressors fall under the category of āarmsā and are protected under the Second Amendment. The Second Amendment Foundation noted the ācircuit split,ā when two appellate circuits disagree on similar cases, in a series of posts on X, while SAF Director of Legal Research and Education Konstadinos Moros specifically mentioned the Ninth Circuit case Duncan v. Bonta.
ADVERTISEMENTāThere is now a circuit split on whether suppressors are arms,ā Moros posted. āThis is of critical importance to those of us in states that totally ban them. While everyone else is arguing about whether registration is constitutional, we canāt even register them under the NFA if we wanted to!ā
The National Firearms Act, passed in 1934, imposed a $200 tax on suppressors, fully-automatic firearms, āshort-barreledā rifles and shotguns and other weapons and required they be registered with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF).
A surprise second major ruling to cover today, because the Fifth Circuit just became the first to agree that suppressors are "arms" under the Second Amendment.
This is of massive importance considering that other circuits have ruled the opposite, and it puts further pressure on⦠https://t.co/e8XXu2XRSK pic.twitter.com/Cy7EytEe3s
ā SAF (@2AFDN) June 18, 2026
When a ācircuit splitā occurs, the Supreme Court tends to be more likely to hear the case to resolve the disagreement among the lower courts. The Fifth Circuit ruling decisively rejected the Justice Departmentās arguments that suppressers were not arms in the unanimous ruling.
āFirst, Bruen explained that Second Amendment āArmsā need not be necessary for a firearmās functioning but instead must only āfacilitate armed self-defense,ā the opinion said. āAnd second, the Supreme Court has cautioned lower courts against the trapped-in-amber approach that the government attempts to use by limiting the definition of āArmsā to those devices required for militia service at the Founding. Silencers are āArms.āā
The Supreme Court invalidated New Yorkās āgood causeā requirement for pistol permits in June 2022 via a 6-3 ruling in New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen. Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, who authored the courtās opinion, cited historical gun laws and the debate around the ratification of the 14th Amendment as reasons New Yorkās law was unconstitutional.
While the Fifth Circuit found that suppressors were protected under the Second Amendment, it upheld the conviction of Comeaux because the National Firearms Act of 1934 operates similarly to a āshall issueā system for administering applications for concealed carry permits.
In another sign that the high court could take this case up, the Ninth Circuit case Moros cited as causing the potential āsplit,ā Duncan v. Bonta, has been relisted 21 times as of Thursday, according to the Supreme Courtās docket.
In that case, a federal district court initially found Californiaās ban on detachable magazines holding more than ten rounds unconstitutional, but was overturned on appeal by an āen bancā panel at the appellate court, which has a long-standing reputation as one of the most left-leaning federal appellate courts in the country.
The Supreme Court has overturned almost four out of every five decisions the Ninth Circuit has issued since 2007, according to the Pacific Research Institute, with the high court reversing 94% of the circuitās rulings in the term ending in June 2021. The Trump administration has sought to prod the Supreme Court to hear more Second Amendment cases.
āWeāre identifying places where we can help make new law or create a circuit split for purposes of ultimate Supreme Court determination,ā Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon told the DCNF in a previous interview.
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