EDITOR’S NOTE: This is one of a series of articles on gun rights. Each addresses a common anti-gun trope.


“We must close the gun show loophole!”

Most of us have heard the adage “a little knowledge is a dangerous thing,” but how many of us actually respect the caution it suggests?

Far too few, I’m forced to conclude, especially when people who advocate greater infringements on gun rights start talking. The topic of this Gun Rights Lesson is a classic case in point. If you’ve debated the gun issue even a bit, you’ve very likely heard of the gun show loophole. And, I bet, a good number of you, no matter which side of the issue you stand, do not really know what this “loophole” is or is about.

The remedy to the “a little knowledge (actually, a little learning)…” is more knowledge, and here I offer you just that: an explanation of the gun show loophole. Or, more accurately, an explanation of why it’s a deceptive misnomer.

I’ve touched on this matter in Gun Rights Lessons 765 and 831, and elaborated on it in Laws and Execution, and in Universal Background Checks, so regular readers probably know all this already. But, for those who haven’t, lets start with the basics.

To purchase a firearm from a licensed dealer in the United states, an individual must, at minimum, complete a Firearms Transaction Record (commonly known as ATF Form 4473), which asks certain questions that must be answered and attested to, and must pass a NICS background check. Some states and localities have additional rules and requirements, but these are absolute. Let me repeat: every person purchasing a firearm from a licensed dealer MUST pass a background check.

Where the “loophole” idea arises is from the lack of such a requirement for private transactions. Just as there are fewer rules regarding your selling your own car to someone than there are for an auto dealer selling a car, there isn’t an all-encompassing requirement that you, as a private citizen, run a background check on someone to whom you wish to sell a gun. As before, there are some state- and local-level rules, especially when it comes to registered firearms (e.g. pistols in many states), but, generally speaking, you as a non-dealer are not required to run a background check on the person you sell to. HOWEVER, there are laws prohibiting your selling to someone not permitted to possess a firearm e.g. a felon in every state and at the federal level. So, if your buddy Charlie just finished a 3 year stretch at Attica or Folsom, and you sell him a deer rifle when he gets out, you may end up in Attica yourself.

So, we’ve got rules about licensed dealer sales, and we’ve got rules about private sales. Where do gun shows enter into the mix?

There is nothing special about a gun show. There are no exceptions, no rules, no loopholes written into any law book or registry of regulations. What there is, is the idea that private buyers and sellers can find each other at gun shows. Of course, they can also find each other on Craigslist, on a host of Internet websites, at a rifle or pistol range, at a church social, at a community garden, at a bake sale, at a yard/tag/garage sale, at a block party, at a museum fundraising event, at your friend Louie’s weekend barbecue, or at any other place where people get together to socialize.

The notion of the “loophole” stems from the idea that a private individual might set up a table at a gun show and sell guns without possessing a FFL (federal firearms license). Thing is – and given the hostility towards guns in this country – gun show organizers that allow this open themselves up to a world of trouble, and I’ve never been to a gun show that had anything but licensed dealers selling. In fact, every gun show I’ve ever been to has giant signs prohibiting the non-FFL sale of guns, either at the show or in the parking lot.

Thus, the “gun show loophole” is neither a loophole nor about gun shows. It’s singling out one place of many where private citizens can buy and sell guns from and to each other.

Whether you think this is a problem that needs addressing is a different matter. I address the practicality of imposing a mandate for background checks in private transfers in depth here and here, but the short version is that, with hundreds of millions of guns in the US, without a national registry that tracks all of them, and with tens of millions of citizens who won’t (for very good reason) comply with a universal registration mandate, there’s no way to enforce background checks on private transfers. But, as I said, that’s its own issue, and its own debate.

So,

Gun rights lesson #804: The so-called gun show loophole is neither a loophole nor about gun shows. It’s a misleading phrase, intended to deceive people into thinking there’s a whole special chunk of gun society dedicated to selling guns to criminals. In fact, nothing could be further from the truth.

Peter Venetoklis

About Peter Venetoklis

I am twice-retired, a former rocket engineer and a former small business owner. At the very least, it makes for interesting party conversation. I'm also a life-long libertarian, I engage in an expanse of entertainments, and I squabble for sport.

Nowadays, I spend a good bit of my time arguing politics and editing this website.

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