81_FR_1314 81 FR 1307 - Commerce in Firearms and Ammunition-Reporting Theft or Loss of Firearms in Transit (2007R-9P)

81 FR 1307 - Commerce in Firearms and Ammunition-Reporting Theft or Loss of Firearms in Transit (2007R-9P)

DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 7 (January 12, 2016)

Page Range1307-1318
FR Document2016-00112

The Department of Justice is amending the regulations of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) concerning the statutory reporting requirement for firearms that have been stolen or lost. The final rule specifies that when a Federal firearms licensee (FFL) discovers a firearm it shipped was stolen or lost in transit, the transferor/sender FFL must report the theft or loss to ATF and to the appropriate local authorities within 48 hours of discovery. The rule also reduces an FFL's reporting burden when a theft or loss involves a firearm registered under the National Firearms Act (NFA) and ensures consistent reporting to ATF's NFA Branch. In addition, the rule specifies that transferor/sender FFLs must reflect the theft or loss of a firearm as a disposition entry in their required records not later than 7 days following discovery of the theft or loss; moreover, if an FFL reported the theft or loss of a firearm and later discovers its whereabouts, the FFL must advise ATF that the firearm has been located and must re-enter the firearm into its required records as an acquisition or disposition entry as appropriate.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 7 (Tuesday, January 12, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 7 (Tuesday, January 12, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 1307-1318]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-00112]


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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE

Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives

27 CFR Part 478

[Docket No. ATF 40F; AG Order No. 3607-2016]
RIN 1140-AA41


Commerce in Firearms and Ammunition--Reporting Theft or Loss of 
Firearms in Transit (2007R-9P)

AGENCY: Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF); 
Department of Justice.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: The Department of Justice is amending the regulations of the 
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) concerning 
the statutory reporting requirement for firearms that have been stolen 
or lost. The final rule specifies that when a Federal firearms licensee 
(FFL) discovers a firearm it shipped was stolen or lost in transit, the 
transferor/sender FFL must report the theft or loss to ATF and to the 
appropriate local authorities within 48 hours of discovery. The rule 
also reduces an FFL's reporting burden when a theft or loss involves a 
firearm registered under the National Firearms Act (NFA) and ensures 
consistent reporting to ATF's NFA Branch. In addition, the rule 
specifies that transferor/sender FFLs must reflect the theft or loss of 
a firearm as a disposition entry in their required records not later 
than 7 days following discovery of the theft or loss; moreover, if an 
FFL reported the theft or loss of a firearm and later discovers its 
whereabouts, the FFL must advise ATF that the firearm has been located 
and must re-enter the firearm into its required records as an 
acquisition or disposition entry as appropriate.

DATES: This rule is effective February 11, 2016.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Denise Brown, Office of Regulatory 
Affairs, Enforcement Programs and Services, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, 
Firearms, and Explosives, U.S. Department of Justice, 99 New York

[[Page 1308]]

Avenue NE., Washington, DC 20226; telephone: (202) 648-7070.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

I. Background

    The Gun Control Act of 1968 (GCA), as amended by the Violent Crime 
Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, requires each licensed 
importer, licensed manufacturer, licensed dealer, or licensed collector 
of firearms to report the theft or loss of a firearm from the 
licensee's inventory or collection to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, 
Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) and to the appropriate local authorities 
within 48 hours after the theft or loss is discovered. See 18 U.S.C. 
923(g)(6) (requiring licensees to report thefts or losses to the 
Attorney General and to the appropriate local authorities); 28 CFR 
0.130(a) (delegating the Attorney General's functions and powers to the 
Director of ATF).
    The regulation that implements section 923(g)(6) is 27 CFR 478.39a. 
This regulation provides that each Federal firearms licensee (FFL) must 
report the theft or loss of a firearm from the FFL's inventory 
(including any firearm which has been transferred from the FFL's 
inventory to a personal collection and held as a personal firearm for 
at least 1 year), or from the collection of a licensed collector, 
within 48 hours after the theft or loss is discovered. FFLs must report 
such thefts or losses by telephoning 1-888-930-9275 (nationwide ATF 
toll-free number) and by preparing a Federal Firearms Licensee Firearms 
Inventory Theft/Loss Report, ATF Form 3310.11 (Form 3310.11), in 
accordance with the instructions on the form. The FFL must also report 
the theft or loss of a firearm to the appropriate local authorities.
    When there has been a theft or loss of a firearm registered under 
the National Firearms Act (NFA), 26 U.S.C. 5801 et seq., such as a 
short-barreled rifle or short-barreled shotgun, silencer, machinegun, 
or destructive device, see 26 U.S.C. 5841, 5845, 27 CFR 479.141 imposes 
a separate and additional reporting requirement. Section 479.141 states 
that whenever any registered NFA firearm is stolen or lost, the person 
who has lost possession must, immediately upon discovery of such theft 
or loss, make a report to the Director of ATF showing the following: 
name and address of the person in whose name the firearm is registered; 
kind of firearm; serial number; model; caliber; manufacturer of the 
firearm; date and place of theft or loss; and complete statement of 
facts and circumstances surrounding such theft or loss. Accordingly, 
when an FFL loses possession of an NFA firearm, it has reporting 
obligations under both 27 CFR 479.141 and 27 CFR 478.39a.
    Currently, an FFL reporting the theft or loss of a registered NFA 
firearm prepares and submits Form 3310.11 to ATF's National Tracing 
Center (NTC), the receiving office designated on the form, to meet the 
27 CFR 478.39a requirements. In addition, the FFL must submit a 
separate notification to the Director of ATF to meet the requirements 
of 27 CFR 479.141. Because no form is directly associated with the 
separate notification to the Director, FFLs submit a letter to the NFA 
Branch of ATF, as directed in the ``Important Notice'' section of Form 
3310.11. As a backup to this requirement, when NTC receives a completed 
Form 3310.11 involving the theft or loss of an NFA firearm, it 
currently forwards a copy of the completed form to the NFA Branch, as 
the completed form often contains more information than the letters 
FFLs submit to the NFA Branch. Form 3310.11 does not, however, ask for 
the name and address of the person in whose name the firearm is 
registered, which is required to be reported under 27 CFR 479.141. 
Therefore, the NFA Branch may not currently be receiving consistent and 
complete information regarding the theft or loss of a registered 
firearm.
    The instructions on Form 3310.11 also provide that FFLs must 
reflect the theft or loss of a firearm as a disposition entry in the 
Record of Acquisition and Disposition (A&D Record) required by subpart 
H of 27 CFR part 478 (formerly 178). The disposition entry should 
indicate whether the incident is a theft or loss, the ATF-Issued 
Incident Number, and the Incident Number provided by the local law 
enforcement agency. The instructions further state that should any of 
the firearms be located, they should be re-entered into the A&D Record 
as an acquisition entry. In addition, the ``Important Notice'' section 
on Form 3310.11 provides that an FFL who reports a firearm as missing 
and later discover its whereabouts should advise ATF that the firearm 
has been located.
    The text of the statutory reporting requirement, 18 U.S.C. 
923(g)(6)--which obligates licensees to report the theft or loss of a 
firearm ``from the licensee's inventory''--does not clearly address the 
reporting of a firearm that has been stolen or lost in transit. That 
is, the statute does not expressly address whether such a firearm 
should be considered part of the inventory of the transferring/shipping 
FFL, a recipient FFL, or the common carrier transporting the firearm. 
Similarly, current regulations do not address reporting requirements 
arising from firearms stolen or lost in transit, including whether the 
firearms are considered stolen or lost from the inventory of the 
sending or receiving FFL. This gap in the regulations likely results in 
no one reporting the theft or loss of a firearm stolen or lost in 
transit--an anomalous result that the Department believes is contrary 
to congressional intent in mandating the reporting of thefts and losses 
generally. Clarifying this responsibility is thus important to the 
effective administration of the GCA and NFA. Congress delegated the 
authority to prescribe necessary rules and regulations to carry out the 
provisions of the GCA and NFA to the Attorney General, who has 
delegated to ATF the authority to investigate, administer, and enforce 
those laws. See 18 U.S.C. 926(a); 26 U.S.C. 7801(a)(2)(A)(i), 7805(a); 
28 CFR 0.130(a).

II. Initial Notice of Proposed Rulemaking

    On August 28, 2000, in ATF Notice No. 902, ATF published in the 
Federal Register a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) proposing 
several amendments to the firearms regulations. 65 FR 52054 (Aug. 28, 
2000). Among those amendments, ATF proposed specifying that, when a 
firearm is stolen or lost in transit between licensees, for reporting 
purposes, the firearm is considered stolen or lost from the 
transferor's/sender's inventory. ATF noted that in Fiscal Year (FY) 
1999, there were 1,271 crime gun traces in which an FFL claimed to have 
never received the firearm shipped to it and no one reported the theft 
or loss to ATF.\1\ As proposed in 2000, a firearm stolen or lost in 
transit between licensees, for reporting purposes, would be considered 
stolen or lost from the transferor's/sender's inventory. Further, as 
proposed, the transferor/sender of the stolen or missing firearm would 
have been required to report to ATF and to the appropriate local 
authorities the theft or loss of the firearm within 48 hours after the 
transferor/sender discovered the theft or loss. In addition, to enable 
the transferor/sender of the stolen or lost firearm to obtain the 
knowledge necessary to comply with the theft or loss reporting 
requirements and fulfill the statutory responsibility of maintaining 
accurate records, ATF proposed that the transferor/sender be

[[Page 1309]]

required to have or establish commercial business practices that 
confirm whether the transferee/buyer of the firearm ultimately received 
the firearm.
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    \1\ A crime gun is any firearm that is illegally possessed, used 
in a crime, or suspected by law enforcement officials of having been 
used in a crime or act of terrorism.
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    As a result of the comments received in response to various issues 
addressed in the document, the Department decided to study the issues 
further, and it subsequently withdrew these proposals. See 69 FR 37757 
(June 28, 2004).

III. 2014 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking

    On August 12, 2014, ATF published in the Federal Register another 
NPRM proposing to amend the regulations in subpart C of part 478, 
section 478.39a (ATF Notice No. 40P) (``2014 NPRM'' or ``proposed 
rule''). See 79 FR 47033. The proposed rule was intended to clarify 
that, when an FFL discovers a firearm that it shipped was stolen or 
lost in transit, that transferor/sender FFL would be the one 
responsible for reporting the theft or loss to ATF and to the 
appropriate local authorities.
    The NPRM specified a time period within which to reflect the theft 
or loss of a firearm as a disposition entry--i.e., not later than 7 
days following the discovery of the theft or loss--and required, rather 
than recommended, that the disposition entry in the FFL's A&D Record 
include specified information. Under the regulations as proposed, if an 
FFL reported a firearm stolen or lost and later discovered its 
whereabouts, the FFL would be required to advise ATF that the firearm 
has been located and re-enter the firearm into the required records as 
an acquisition or disposition entry as appropriate. The proposed rule 
was intended to reduce an FFL's reporting burden when a theft or loss 
involves a firearm registered under the NFA by having the FFL submit 
one Form 3310.11 to ATF to satisfy the requirements of both 27 CFR 
478.39a and 27 CFR 479.141.
    The proposed rule retained the same general approach for 
transferor/sender FFLs to report thefts or losses in transit as the 
2000 NPRM, although there are some important differences. Unlike the 
2000 NPRM, the 2014 NPRM did not propose to require FFLs to establish 
commercial business practices that would enable the FFL to verify that 
the transferee/buyer of a shipped firearm actually received the 
firearm. The 2014 NPRM merely solicited comments on whether a 
transferor/sender FFL should be required to obtain and retain 
confirmation of receipt. In addition, unlike the 2000 NPRM, the 2014 
NPRM proposed to reduce the reporting burden with respect to NFA 
firearms. The 2014 NPRM also clarified that firearms lost or stolen in 
transit between FFLs and non-FFLs (not just between FFLs) would be 
included in the transactions that must be reported by a transferor/
sender FFL. Finally, the proposed rule would require the A&D Records to 
be updated within 7 days of discovery of the theft or loss.
    As stated in the 2014 NPRM, theft or loss of firearms in transit 
continues to be a problem. In its 2000 NPRM, ATF stated that in FY 
1999, there were 1,271 crime gun traces in which an FFL claimed to have 
never received the firearm shipped to it and no one reported the theft 
or loss to ATF. More recent data from NTC shows that from FY 2010 
through FY 2014, there was an average of 1,333 crime gun traces per 
year where the firearm was traced back to an FFL that claimed it never 
received the firearm allegedly shipped to it, but no theft or loss was 
reported to ATF. ATF recognizes that this figure may include some 
firearms lost or stolen at the licensed premises while not in transit 
(i.e., prior to or after shipment). However, because there are numerous 
firearms lost or stolen that have not been traced, the full count of 
firearms lost or stolen in transit may be significantly higher. The 
omission in the regulations regarding reporting the theft or loss of a 
firearm in transit adversely affects ATF's and local law enforcement's 
investigative and tracing capabilities. For those reasons, the 
Department proposed amending the regulations to specify who is 
responsible for reporting the theft or loss of a firearm in transit.
    As previously noted, the statutory provision requiring licensees to 
report lost or stolen firearms, 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(6), does not clearly 
address situations in which a firearm is lost or stolen in transit. The 
Department proposed to interpret section 923(g)(6)'s requirement that a 
licensee ``report the theft or loss of a firearm from the licensee's 
inventory'' to include a responsibility to report a theft or loss that 
occurs once the licensee has placed a firearm in shipment. Accordingly, 
the proposed rule specified that, when a firearm is stolen or lost in 
transit on a common or contract carrier,\2\ for reporting purposes the 
firearm is considered stolen or lost from the transferor's/sender's 
inventory. The proposed rule would apply to transfers from a licensee 
to a nonlicensee, including interstate shipments for firearms repair 
and replacement, qualified interstate shipments to law enforcement 
officers for official duty, and intrastate transactions under 18 U.S.C. 
922(c), 27 CFR 478.96, and ATF Procedure 2013-2. In all such 
transactions, the transferor/sender would be the only FFL involved in 
the transaction, and it would be reasonable for that FFL to assume 
responsibility to make a report to ATF if the shipment is lost or 
stolen in transit before the transferee acquires possession. The 
proposed rule would not require transferor/sender FFLs to establish 
commercial business practices to affirmatively verify or retain 
confirmation of receipt; instead, the rule would allow a transferor/
sender FFL to rely on notification by the transferee/buyer, the common 
or contract carrier, or any other person that the shipment was not 
received. Only upon receiving such notification would the FFL be 
required to report the theft or loss and change its records 
accordingly.
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    \2\ For purposes of this rule, the Department considers the U.S. 
Postal Service a ``common or contract carrier.''
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    The 2014 proposed rule retained most of the current procedures for 
licensees reporting the theft or loss of firearms subject to the GCA, 
in accordance with the instructions on Form 3310.11. For example, 
Instruction 7 on Form 3310.11 provides that FFLs must reflect the theft 
or loss of a firearm as a disposition entry in the A&D Record that is 
required by subpart H of part 478 (formerly 178). The form also 
provides that the disposition entry should indicate whether the 
incident is a theft or loss, include the ATF-Issued Incident Number, 
and include the Incident Number provided by the local law enforcement 
agency. The proposed rule set out these procedures in a new paragraph 
(e) of 27 CFR 478.39a with two modifications: (1) The rule would 
prescribe a time period to reflect the theft or loss of a firearm as a 
disposition entry (i.e., not later than 7 days following discovery of 
the theft or loss); and (2) it would require, rather than recommend, 
that the disposition entry include specified information. The proposed 
7-day time period for reporting would be consistent with the firearms 
receipt and disposition reporting requirement for licensed dealers in 
27 CFR 478.125(e), which requires the ``sale or other disposition of a 
firearm'' to be recorded ``not later than 7 days following the date of 
such transaction.'' The Department considers a theft or loss to be a 
disposition that must be reported within this time period.
    In addition, the ``Important Notice'' section of Form 3310.11 
provides that licensees who report firearms as missing and later 
discover their whereabouts should advise ATF that the firearms

[[Page 1310]]

have been located, and Instruction 8 provides that licensees should re-
enter these located firearms into the A&D Record as an acquisition 
entry. The proposed rule combined and set out these procedures in a new 
paragraph (f) of 27 CFR 478.39a with three modifications. The proposed 
rule would: (1) Change the phrase ``should advise ATF'' to ``shall 
advise the [ATF] Director''; (2) change the phrase ``should re-enter'' 
to ``shall re-enter''; and (3) specify that the re-entry is to be 
recorded as an acquisition or disposition entry as appropriate. Making 
mandatory both the advising of ATF and the re-entry of the located 
firearm into the A&D Record would help to improve the accuracy of NTC 
data, which would greatly assist law enforcement in solving violent 
crimes and enhancing public safety.
    The proposed rule would also reduce a licensee's reporting burden 
to ATF for the theft or loss of a registered NFA firearm by allowing 
submission of one Form 3310.11 to meet the requirements of 27 CFR 
478.39a and 27 CFR 479.141. Currently, if a licensee's registered NFA 
firearm is lost or stolen, the licensee prepares and submits Form 
3310.11 to ATF's NTC to comply with the 27 CFR 478.39a requirements, 
which specify that Form 3310.11 be used. The licensee also provides to 
ATF's NFA Branch a separate notification--typically in the form of a 
letter--to comply with 27 CFR 479.141. The proposed rule would revise 
27 CFR 478.39a to stipulate that a licensee's submission of a completed 
Form 3310.11 to ATF for the theft or loss of a registered NFA firearm 
satisfies the notification requirements under both 27 CFR 478.39a and 
27 CFR 479.141. This would reduce the FFLs' reporting burden and help 
to ensure that information about lost or stolen registered NFA firearms 
is consistently reported to ATF.
    The comment period for Notice No. 40P closed on November 10, 2014.

IV. Analysis of Comments and Department Response

    All public comments were considered in preparing this final rule. 
In response to Notice 40P, ATF received 14 comments. Comments were 
submitted by individuals, corporations and other legal entities, FFLs, 
and trade associations.
    Five commenters supported the proposed rule. Commenters who agreed 
with the proposed rule did so primarily because they believed that the 
implementation of the rule would help stop the unreported theft or loss 
of firearms in transit. One commenter agreed with the proposed rule in 
its entirety because it would allow police to quickly investigate and 
possibly return missing firearms and simplify FFLs' reporting of stolen 
or lost firearms registered under the NFA, thus making that process 
more efficient for both FFLs and ATF.
    Nine commenters disagreed with the proposed rule. Commenters who 
opposed the proposed rule did so for a variety of reasons, with the 
most common objection relating to ATF's lack of authority to request 
theft or loss reports of firearms once the firearms have allegedly been 
transferred from the transferor/sender FFL's inventory. One commenter 
opposed the proposed rule on ``philosophical[]'' grounds, claiming that 
there is over-regulation of commerce by the United States in general, 
and concluding that ``any regulation of transactions involving small 
arms are uniquely inappropriate a subject for regulation by the 
national government because of the special provisions of the second 
amendment to the Constitution.''
    Another commenter opposed the proposed rule because he believed 
that the rule's imposition of the reporting obligation on the 
transferring/sending FFL was at odds with ATF's alleged ``statement to 
the press'' that the rule ``applies to'' carriers. He further stated 
that ``[a]s written the regulation is ripe for abuse, should be 
rewritten so that the ATF can understand its own intent.'' Another 
commenter noted that ``[c]urrent ATF rules are clear regarding the 
manufacturer's responsibility to report lost or stolen firearms that 
are under their control. The proposed new rule imposes an unrealistic 
burden on manufacturers to report same after the firearm has left its 
premise and has exited its disposition log.'' One commenter stated that 
the ``issue of firearms lost in transit does not need solving because 
it is not a problem,'' and that ATF is ``trying to solve a problem that 
does not exist.'' The following sections address the specific comments 
on the proposed rule.

A. Legal Authority

Comments Received
    Regarding the comment that the transaction of small arms is not an 
appropriate subject for regulation by the national government because 
of the Second Amendment, the Department does not believe anything in 
this rule is inconsistent with that constitutional amendment. Congress 
has long regulated the transportation and shipment of firearms,\3\ and 
courts have not interpreted the Second Amendment as limiting the 
authority of Congress to enact such laws.\4\
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    \3\ Long before enactment of the Gun Control Act of 1968, 
Congress imposed limitations on the shipment of firearms. See, e.g., 
Nonmailable Firearms Act of 1927, Public Law 69-583, 44 Stat. 1059 
(codified at 18 U.S.C. 1715) (restricting mailing and delivery of 
concealable firearms); Federal Firearms Act of 1938, Public Law 75-
785, 52 Stat. 1250 (codified at 15 U.S.C. 901 et seq.) (repealed 
1968) (restricting interstate shipment of firearms).
    \4\ See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 626-27 
(2008) (``[N]othing in [the Supreme Court's] opinion [interpreting 
the Second Amendment] should be taken to cast doubt on . . . laws 
imposing conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of 
arms.''); United States v. Decastro, 682 F.3d 160, 168-69 (2d Cir. 
2012) (statute prohibiting transporting into one's state of 
residence firearms acquired outside the state did not infringe the 
right to keep and bear arms under the Second Amendment).
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    Some commenters asserted that ATF lacks the legal authority to 
impose the proposed rule because, in 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(6), Congress only 
mandated reporting of lost or stolen firearms when those firearms are 
currently in the ``inventory or collection'' of the FFL. These 
commenters argued that ATF impermissibly exceeded its statutory bounds 
in interpreting the requirement that licensees report ``the theft or 
loss of a firearm from the licensee's inventory'' to require licensees 
to report the theft or loss of firearms after the firearms are no 
longer in the transferring FFL's possession or on their premises; such 
an interpretation, the commenters argued, is at odds with the plain 
meaning of the word ``inventory.'' Citing Black's Law Dictionary, two 
Merriam-Webster dictionaries, and the Internal Revenue Code, the 
commenters defined the term ``inventory'' to mean that the goods in 
question must physically be held ``on hand'' or ``in stock.'' The 
commenters thus argued, in essence, that the reporting requirement in 
section 923(g)(6) only applies to firearms stolen or lost from the 
licensee personally or from the licensee's business premises. Another 
commenter stated that ATF lacks regulatory authority to impose best 
business practices on FFLs to monitor shipments of firearms once the 
firearms depart the FFLs' facilities.
Department Response
    Congress delegated the authority to prescribe rules and regulations 
to carry out the provisions of the GCA to the Attorney General, who has 
delegated to ATF the authority to investigate, administer, and enforce 
those laws. See 28 U.S.C. 599A; 18 U.S.C. 926(a); 28 CFR 0.130(a). The 
Attorney General (and, derivatively, ATF) also has authority, pursuant 
to 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(1)(A) and 923(g)(2), to promulgate regulations on 
how

[[Page 1311]]

licensees must maintain records of shipment, receipt, sale, or other 
disposition of firearms. It is unlawful under 18 U.S.C. 922(m) for 
licensees to fail to make an appropriate entry in a required record. 
Additionally, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 599A, 18 U.S.C. 926(a), and 28 CFR 
0.130(a), ATF has the authority and responsibility to interpret and 
enforce the GCA provisions prohibiting the theft of firearms. See 18 
U.S.C. 922(i) (transporting or shipping stolen firearms in interstate 
or foreign commerce), 922(j) (receiving, possessing, concealing, 
storing, bartering, selling, disposing, or pledging or accepting as 
security for a loan any stolen firearm which has moved in, is moving 
in, or will move in interstate or foreign commerce), 922(u) (stealing a 
firearm that has been shipped or transported in interstate or foreign 
commerce from the person or premises of an FFL), 924(l) (stealing a 
firearm which is moving in or has moved in interstate commerce), 924(m) 
(stealing a firearm from a licensee).
    The present rulemaking reflects ATF's interpretation of the theft 
or loss reporting requirement set forth in the GCA, 18 U.S.C. 
923(g)(6). Congress did not define the term ``inventory'' or the phrase 
``from the licensee's inventory'' in 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(6) or elsewhere 
in the GCA. Nor did Congress expressly limit the licensee's reporting 
obligation to firearms that are lost or stolen from the licensee's 
premises: unlike 18 U.S.C. 922(u), for instance, which makes it 
unlawful to steal ``from the person or the premises of a person who is 
licensed . . . any firearm in the licensee's business inventory'' 
(emphasis added), section 923(g)(6)'s reporting requirement is not 
limited to firearms taken ``from the person or premises'' of the 
licensee.
    Commenters argued that, in the absence of a statutory definition of 
the word ``inventory,'' the Department must use the word's plain or 
ordinary meaning, and they offered various definitions culled from a 
few sources in an effort to elucidate what that meaning is. But rather 
than revealing a clear commonality, the definitions in the commenters' 
cited sources instead show that the word ``inventory'' can take on 
slightly different meanings suited to the particular contexts in which 
it used.\5\ In the context of Federal firearms regulation, a licensee's 
``inventory'' can, and does, include firearms that are not either ``on 
hand'' or owned by the licensee. For instance, FFLs may transport some 
or all of their firearms away from a particular licensed premises--to a 
warehouse where the firearms will be kept ``solely for storage,'' for 
example. See 27 CFR 478.50(a). Or an FFL may have on hand firearms that 
the FFL does not own, but which have been pawned, consigned, or stored 
with the FFL by the firearms' owners. See 18 U.S.C. 921(a)(11)(C), 
921(a)(12).\6\ Similarly, licensed dealers may have on hand firearms 
that they are repairing or configuring for the firearms' owners. See 18 
U.S.C. 921(a)(11)(B).
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    \5\ See Black's Law Dictionary 901-02 (9th ed. 2009) (first 
definition: ``[a] detailed list of assets; esp., an executor's or 
administrator's detailed list of the probate-estate assets''; second 
definition, as used in accounting: ``[t]he portion of a financial 
statement reflecting the value of a business's raw materials, works-
in-progress, and finished products''; third definition: ``[r]aw 
materials or goods in stock''; fourth definition, as used in 
bankruptcy: ``[p]ersonal property leased or furnished, held for sale 
or lease, or to be furnished under a contract for service; raw 
materials, work in process, or materials used or consumed in a 
business, including farm products such as crops or livestock''); 
Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary (definition 1a: ``an itemized list 
of current assets as (1): a catalog of the property of an individual 
or estate [or] (2): a list of goods on hand''; definition 1b: ``a 
survey of natural resources''; definition 3: ``the quantity of goods 
or materials on hand''), http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/inventory; 26 U.S.C. 865(i)(1), 1221(a)(1) (describing ``inventory 
property'' as ``stock in trade of the taxpayer or other property of 
a kind which would properly be included in the inventory of the 
taxpayer if on hand at the close of the taxable year, or property 
held by the taxpayer primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary 
course of his trade or business'').
    \6\ See also Firearms Transaction Record, ATF Rul. 76-15 
(July1976) (recordkeeping requirements for pawned firearms); 
Engaging in the Business of Dealing in Firearms (Auctioneers), ATF 
Rul. 96-2 (Sept. 1996) (auctioneers must obtain a license as a 
dealer to take possession of firearms consigned for auction); ATF, 
Federal Firearms Licensee Quick Reference and Best Practices Guide, 
ATF Pub. No. 5300.15, at 8 (rev. Aug. 2010) (all firearms 
acquisitions must be documented in the A&D book, including pawned 
and consignment firearms), https://www.atf.gov/file/58676/download; 
Return of Firearms Received for Appraisal, FFL Newsletter (ATF, 
Washington, DC), Apr. 2015, at 4 (licensees must record firearms 
received for appraisal as a transaction on ATF Form 4473), https://www.atf.gov/file/11691/download; Shot Show Q & A, FFL Newsletter 
(ATF, Washington, DC), Jan. 2007, at 7, Q9 (licensees must treat 
firearms received for storage as acquisitions), https://www.atf.gov/file/56436/download.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Elsewhere in the law, physical possession is often neither 
necessary nor sufficient for something to be counted as inventory. The 
section of the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) governing secured 
transactions, for example, defines ``inventory'' to include not only 
goods ``held by a person,'' but also goods ``furnished by a person,'' 
and ``leased by a person,'' irrespective of who has them. U.C.C. 9-
102(a)(48); see also Matter of Watertown Tractor & Equip. Co., 289 
NW.2d 288, 293-94 (Wis. 1980) (holding that equipment constitutes a 
lessor's ``inventory'' when in the possession of a lessee). The Supreme 
Court has even held that a farmer's corn futures are considered the 
farmer's ``inventory'' for tax purposes, even though they are 
considered capital assets in the hands of a holding company. See 
Arkansas Best Corp. v. Comm'r, 485 U.S. 212, 219-22 (1988).
    Given its many meanings, the Department is of the view that the 
word ``inventory'' is ambiguous, and that Congress did not specifically 
intend--by use of the word--to deprive the Department of the authority 
to require FFLs to report the loss or theft of firearms in transit. 
That view is supported by multiple dictionaries that define inventory 
broadly to encompass any goods and articles that might appropriately be 
listed on an inventory. See, e.g., 5 The Oxford English Dictionary 453-
54 (1978) (defining inventory broadly as, inter alia, ``[t]he lot or 
stock of goods, etc., which are or may be made the subject of an 
inventory''); Funk & Wagnalls New Standard Dictionary of the English 
Language 1289 (1946) (defining inventory broadly as, inter alia, 
``[a]rticles which constitute or are to constitute the inventory''). In 
light of the range of items that can appear on an inventory--for 
example, ``the goods and chattels, rights and credits, and in some 
cases, the land and tenements of a person or persons,'' 2 Bouvier's Law 
Dictionary and Concise Encyclopedia 1681 (3d rev. 1914)--the word 
``inventory'' can be open-ended.
    In the context of section 923(g)(6) specifically, the Department 
believes that the obligation to report lost or stolen ``firearm[s] from 
the licensee's inventory'' is best understood to encompass firearms 
that are not yet in the physical possession of a transferee that the 
transferor is best positioned to monitor and control. The Department 
believes that this interpretation of the word ``inventory'' is 
consistent with the flexible, context-specific character of the term as 
used elsewhere in the law.
    Further, it is more logical--and more consistent with the GCA 
scheme--to consider an in-transit firearm as part of the shipping FFL's 
inventory and thereby place the reporting obligation on the transferor/
sender licensee rather than the firearm's intended recipient. The GCA 
scheme relies on firearms dealers to control commerce in firearms. See 
Huddleston v. United States, 415 U.S. 814, 824 (1974) (``The principal 
agent of federal enforcement [of laws regulating interstate commerce in 
firearms] is the dealer.''). The transferors/senders covered by this 
rule will be licensees who are subject to the reporting requirement 
under section 923(g)(6)--but not every intended

[[Page 1312]]

recipient in firearms transactions will necessarily be a licensee. 
Thus, placing the reporting obligation on the transferor/sender 
licensee ensures that, for every firearm transaction, there will be an 
FFL responsible for reporting any discovered thefts or losses that 
occur along the way. The Department believes that this will ensure more 
consistent reporting of stolen or lost firearms, thereby fulfilling the 
GCA's purpose of ``strengthen[ing] Federal regulation of interstate 
firearms traffic,'' H.R. Rep. No. 90-1577, at 7 (1968), and furthering 
the aim of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 to 
``enhance public safety,'' H.R. Rep. No. 103-711, at 1 (1994) (Conf. 
Rep.).
    In reaching its interpretation of 923(g)(6)'s reporting mandate, 
the Department considered whether the ``inventory'' determination 
should be made in accordance with the variable approach of the UCC 
regarding the transfer of title for risk of loss purposes. The 
Department determined that neither the text nor the purpose of the GCA 
counseled in favor of adopting the UCC approach to determining in whose 
``inventory'' a firearm belongs. As explained in the proposed rule, the 
UCC approach focuses on the ownership of the goods being shipped for 
the purposes of allocating the risk of loss, but the primary focus of 
the GCA and its implementing regulations is, instead, the tracking of 
the acquisition and disposition of firearms. Accordingly--and as the 
Department will explain in further detail below--the Department is of 
the view that the statutory obligation on firearms licensees to report 
a theft or loss should not turn on technicalities of commercial law 
regarding whether the seller or buyer has title to, or bears the risk 
of loss of, the shipped firearms.
    Instead, under the final rule, the theft or loss reporting 
requirement will always remain with the transferor/sender FFL, who will 
know how and when firearms sent to the transferee were shipped. As the 
Department reasoned in the 2014 NPRM, the transferee will have an 
incentive to notify the transferor about any discrepancies in the 
shipment because the transferee would not want to pay for an item the 
transferee did not actually receive. Upon being contacted by the 
transferee about a shipment discrepancy, the transferor FFL will be in 
the best position to verify the theft or loss by reviewing its 
transaction records and the shipping information from the carrier. The 
transferor could also be in a position to discover that the discrepancy 
was instead due to recordkeeping or other human error. Indeed, 
regardless of whether the transferee or transferor arranges the 
shipment, the transferor will know how and when the firearms were 
shipped. Moreover, if a firearm is stolen or lost in transit, the 
notation in the transferor's/sender's acquisition and disposition book 
indicating the firearm was disposed of to a particular transferee/buyer 
would be inaccurate.
    The Department's interpretation that in-transit firearms remain in 
the transferring/sending FFL's ``inventory'' for purposes of section 
923(g)(6) is further supported by the fact that an FFL's delivery of 
firearms to a common or contract carrier for transport does not result 
in a ``disposition'' or ``transfer'' unless and until the firearms are 
received by the transferee. The Department does not believe that the 
GCA scheme, which sets forth procedures for conveying firearms by 
carriers,\7\ supports the conclusion that delivering firearms to the 
carrier for transport is a ``transfer'' or ``disposition'' to that 
carrier. Under the GCA and current regulations, the carrier is not said 
to maintain an ``inventory'' of firearms, and the disposition records 
of the transferring FFL do not reflect the carrier as a person to whom 
firearms are disposed. If an FFL's submission of firearms to a carrier 
were a ``disposition'' or ``transfer,'' such an interpretation would 
lead to results that Congress very likely did not intend. Specifically, 
the transferring FFL would be required to treat carriers like any other 
unlicensed person by: (1) Having an employee of the carrier complete 
ATF Form 4473 prior to receiving any firearms for shipment; \8\ (2) 
checking identification and conducting background checks on the 
carrier's employees; \9\ (3) recording bound book entries as 
dispositions to the carrier, rather than to the actual transferees or 
purchasers of the firearms; \10\ and (4) possibly completing multiple 
sales or other disposition reports when applicable.\11\ Moreover, 
unless similar disposition requirements were also imposed on the 
carriers' subsequent transfer of the firearms to their purchasers, the 
firearms could potentially end up in the hands of criminals, and would 
not be traceable if later used in crimes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \7\ See 18 U.S.C. 922(e) (requiring notice to the common or 
contract carrier of firearms being transported or shipped), 922(f) 
(prohibiting common or contract carriers from violating the GCA, and 
requiring them to obtain acknowledgment of receipt of packages 
containing firearms); 27 CFR 478.31 (same); Open Letter to All 
Common and Contract Carriers from John W. Magaw, Director, ATF (Jan. 
1, 1994), http://www.nibin.gov/press/releases/historical/010194-openletter-contract-carriers.html.
    \8\ See 18 U.S.C. 922(b)(5), 923(g)(1)(A); 27 CFR 478.124(c).
    \9\ See 18 U.S.C. 922(t)(1); 27 CFR 478.102.
    \10\ See 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(1)(A); 27 CFR 478.122(d), 478.123(d), 
478.125(e).
    \11\ See 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(3)(A); 27 CFR 478.126a.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finally, the Department's interpreting the phrase ``firearm[s] from 
the licensee's inventory'' to encompass firearms that a licensee has 
placed in transit accords with the congressional intent behind the GCA 
more generally. The GCA is a comprehensive statutory scheme designed to 
closely track the acquisition and disposition of firearms to ensure 
that firearms do not fall into the hands of criminals, and so that the 
firearms can be traced if later found to have been used in crime. 
Accordingly, section 923(g)(6) mandates that ``[e]ach licensee shall 
report the theft or loss of a firearm from the licensee's inventory or 
collection.'' To be sure, Congress did not specifically address whether 
licensees must report the theft or loss of firearms in transit once the 
licensee ships the firearm to another recipient. Nor did Congress 
address how those firearms must be recorded in the transferor/sender 
FFL's acquisition and disposition records. But the text of 923(g)(6) 
does not foreclose the Department's interpretation of the term 
``inventory.'' And the final rule reasonably answers the questions left 
unaddressed by Congress by interpreting the reporting requirement to 
include a firearm stolen or lost from the licensee's inventory while in 
transit with a carrier, and by providing guidance on how FFLs must 
update their records in such situations. Adopting a contrary 
interpretation of the statutory language to the effect that thefts or 
losses of firearms in transit need not be reported by any FFL, on the 
theory that firearms in transit should not be deemed to be part of the 
transferor/seller's inventory nor part of the intended recipient's 
inventory, would operate to defeat the statutory goal of reporting 
thefts and losses of firearms. Commenters who oppose the rule have 
offered no persuasive reason why Congress would have intended in-
transit stolen or lost firearms to go unreported once a licensee 
discovers the theft or loss, and the Department sees none.
    For all those reasons, the Department's determination that the 
statutory obligation to report ``the theft or loss of a firearm from 
the licensee's inventory'' in section 923(g)(6) encompasses an 
obligation to report the theft or loss of a firearm that the licensee 
has shipped amounts to a reasonable construction of the GCA.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \12\ The Department acknowledges its previous statements that 
section 923(g)(6) does not address the reporting of thefts or losses 
of firearms in interstate shipments. See ATF, Safety and Security 
Information for Federal Firearms Licensees, ATF Pub. No. 3317.2, at 
1 (rev. Feb. 2010), https://www.atf.gov/file/58656/download; FFL or 
Interstate Theft Procedures and Information, FFL Newsletter (ATF, 
Washington, DC), Aug. 1998, at 5, https://www.atf.gov/file/56391/download. To the extent that the Department's prior statements, or 
ones like it, can be understood as the Department taking a position 
inconsistent with the interpretation of 923(g)(6) set forth in this 
final rule, the Department is ``at liberty to depart from its 
longstanding interpretation of a statute'' so long as it ``provides 
a reasoned explanation for its decision.'' TRT Telecomms. Corp. v. 
FCC, 857 F.2d 1535, 1550 (D.C. Cir. 1988); see also FCC v. Fox 
Television Stations, Inc., 556 U.S. 502, 514-15 (2009). The 
Department has explained above why it now interprets the term 
``inventory'' in 923(g)(6) to encompass firearms that an FFL has 
shipped.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 1313]]

    With regard to the comment concerning ATF's authority to require 
``best practices'' to monitor shipments of firearms once the shipments 
depart the FFL's facility, the final rule does not require FFLs to 
monitor their shipments. Again, FFLs will only be required to report 
thefts and losses once they discover a theft or loss.

B. Commercial Business Practices

Comments Received
    One commenter argued that the proposed rule is inconsistent with 
established commercial business practices. Citing U.C.C. 2-319, the 
commenter asserted that ``firearms are almost universally shipped 
`F.O.B. Factory,' '' indicating that once physical custody has passed 
at the place of shipment, so has legal title to the firearms and risk 
of loss.
Department Response
    The Department disputes the commenter's factual assertion that 
firearms ``are almost universally shipped `F.O.B. Factory.' '' The 
Department believes that transferor/sender FFLs generally select the 
means by which the firearms in their inventory are shipped and secure 
insurance from the carriers for the value of the firearms. While these 
costs may be passed along to buyers in the purchase contracts, the 
Department believes that in many, if not most, cases, the transferor/
sender FFL is legally responsible for any losses incurred in transit. 
This is because many, if not most, firearm purchase contracts require 
delivery at a specified destination.\13\ For this reason, if a firearm 
is lost or stolen in transit, the shipping FFL usually sends a 
replacement firearm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \13\ See U.C.C. 2-401(2) (``Unless otherwise explicitly agreed 
title passes to the buyer at the time and place at which the seller 
completes his performance with reference to the physical delivery of 
the goods . . . [and] if the contract requires delivery at 
destination, title passes on tender there.'')
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Even if the commenter's factual assertion were proven correct, 
however, the Department would nonetheless adhere to the position it 
expressed in the proposed rule that the UCC should not be used to 
determine the responsibility for reporting thefts and losses of 
firearms in transit. Adopting the variable UCC approach for reporting 
firearms stolen or lost in transit would be problematic for FFLs to 
apply and for ATF to enforce. Instead of being able to follow a single, 
consistent rule holding the transferor FFL responsible for reporting 
stolen or lost firearms in every transaction (should a theft or loss be 
discovered), FFLs in a transaction would need to examine each 
individual contract to determine who has the reporting responsibility. 
For that same reason, it would be impracticable for ATF to ensure 
regulatory reporting compliance under the variable UCC approach.
    The UCC does not address whether a merchant must report thefts or 
losses of goods in transit; rather, the UCC approach focuses on the 
ownership of the goods being shipped and allocating the risk of loss 
for purposes of commercial law. By contrast, the primary focus of the 
GCA and its implementing regulations is on the acquisition, 
disposition, and misuse of firearms in service of public safety 
objectives. See United States v. One Assortment of 89 Firearms, 465 
U.S. 354, 364 (1984) (``In enacting the 1968 gun control legislation, 
Congress was concerned with the widespread traffic in firearms and with 
their general availability to those whose possession thereof was 
contrary to the public interest.'' (internal quotation marks omitted)); 
Barrett v. United States, 423 U.S. 212, 220 (1976) (``The history of 
the 1968 Act reflects a . . . concern with keeping firearms out of the 
hands of categories of potentially irresponsible persons . . . . Its 
broadly stated principal purpose was `to make it possible to keep 
firearms out of the hands of those not legally entitled to possess them 
. . . .' '' (quoting S. Rep. No. 1501, at 22 (1968))); H.R. Rep. No. 
103-711, at 1 (the 1994 amendments were intended to ``enhance public 
safety''). The Department thus interprets the GCA to impose reporting 
and recordkeeping requirements on licensees in certain circumstances 
regardless of whether the licensee has title to, or bears the risk of 
loss of, the firearm in question.
    Other Federal agency regulations support the conclusion that 
transferors should be required to report the theft or loss of regulated 
goods in transit. For example, since 1974, the Drug Enforcement 
Administration (DEA) has required by rule that suppliers--i.e., 
transferors--are responsible for reporting in-transit losses of 
controlled substances by common or contract carriers upon discovery of 
the theft or loss. See 21 CFR 1301.74(c). The DEA also imposes a duty 
on suppliers to select common or contract carriers that provide 
adequate security to guard against in-transit losses, see 21 CFR 
1301.74(e), and to report theft and loss information to the DEA on a 
standard form, see 21 CFR 1301.74(c), to help the DEA to determine the 
patterns and methods of diversion of controlled substances. See 38 FR 
31840 (Nov. 19, 1973) (proposed rule); 39 FR 26022 (July 16, 1974) 
(final rule); see generally Larry K. Houck, The Drug Enforcement 
Administration's Final Rule on Theft and Significant Loss Reporting: We 
Can See More Clearly Now, 61 Food & Drug L.J. 1 (2006). ATF believes 
that many of the arguments informing DEA's decision to require 
suppliers to notify DEA of in-transit thefts and losses are applicable 
to this rulemaking.

C. Method of Reporting Theft or Loss of Firearms

Comments Received
    Five commenters supported the requirement to report a theft or loss 
of firearms in transit in part or in the requirement's entirety. One 
commenter supported the use of Form 3310.11 to report the theft or loss 
of firearms in transit to simultaneously meet the requirements of 
Sec. Sec.  478.39a and 479.141. Another commenter supported the 
requirement that FFLs notify local authorities as well as ATF, stating 
that ``[t]his is a very serious issue and the more authorities that are 
notified of the issue, the more likely it is to be resolved.'' The same 
commenter also agreed that transferring/sending FFLs should have the 
responsibility to report a theft or loss of a firearm in transit 
because a transferring/sending FFL has access to the shipping history 
and, therefore, should have better knowledge of the firearm's 
whereabouts and would be able to ``effectively report'' the theft or 
loss of the firearm.
    Two commenters made statements to the effect that ``[t]he updated 
regulations will help strengthen our nation['s] ability to track 
firearms that are lost or stolen while in transit'' and that a single 
method of reporting such thefts and losses to ATF and local authorities 
should be adopted. Although those two commenters supported notification 
of theft or loss by the transferring/sending

[[Page 1314]]

FFL, they suggested that the requirement to inform local law 
enforcement of shipping losses or suspected thefts should be eliminated 
because many local authorities often refuse to take the report. They 
also suggested that the requirement to make a report to local 
authorities should be clarified because, as one commenter put it, 
currently the regulation is ``particularly vague about who exactly the 
appropriate local authorities would be. If a firearm is being shipped 
from Philadelphia to Orlando and it gets lost in Atlanta[,] who are the 
proper local authorities to contact?'' Another commenter suggested that 
reporting to local authorities could be simplified by updating Form 
3310.11 to be applicable for both ATF and local authorities.
    Several commenters who opposed the proposed rule did so based on 
the claim that, once a firearm is logged out of the transferring/
sending FFL's A&D Record, it is no longer the responsibility of that 
FFL. One commenter asserted that the shipping companies instead have 
responsibility for the shipment and should therefore be required to 
report any in-transit thefts or losses.
    Three commenters had practical concerns about the transferor/sender 
licensee bearing the responsibility to report the theft or loss of a 
firearm in transit because, even though a transferor/sender might 
receive confirmation that the firearms were delivered, such 
confirmation might not reflect whether the full amount of firearms was 
received; that discrepancy might only become apparent once the 
recipient compares the shipping invoice to the specific firearms 
ordered. Those commenters stated that the transferee in such a 
situation would be in a better position to know and report whether a 
firearm was received. The commenters explained that the transferee 
would have more incentive to report a firearm shipment stolen or lost 
because businesses are not in the habit of paying for products they do 
not actually receive.
Department Response
    The reporting statute, 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(6), requires FFLs to report 
the theft or loss of firearms from their inventories or collections not 
only to the Attorney General (delegated to ATF) but also to ``the 
appropriate local authorities.'' Thus, as a statutory requirement, the 
report must be submitted to such local authorities even if it is 
refused. The Department believes that if the report is made to the 
local authorities with proper jurisdiction over the incident (i.e., the 
``appropriate'' authorities), the chance that the report would be 
refused is greatly reduced. More specifically, if the location of the 
loss or theft is known, the local law enforcement agency at that 
location would be the ``appropriate local authorit[y].'' Otherwise, the 
transferor/sender should report the theft or loss to the local law 
enforcement agency at the shipper's location--the same agency the FFL 
would contact in the event of any other missing or stolen property. Not 
only does the theft or loss report provide local law enforcement 
officers with the information necessary to commence an investigation to 
pursue the offenders and locate the property, such reporting may also 
assist the FFL in filing an insurance claim to recover the value of the 
firearms. Because the Department agrees with the commenters that 
clarification concerning local authority reporting would provide 
helpful guidance to licensees, the rule has been modified accordingly.
    The Department does not agree with one commenter's suggestion that 
common or contract carriers should be held legally responsible under 
this rule for reporting the theft or loss of firearms while in transit. 
The commenter who proposed that the reporting obligation lie with the 
carriers did not cite any statutory authority under which such a 
requirement could be imposed. Congress did not ignore the role of 
common or contract carriers in firearms transactions in the GCA. For 
example, it is unlawful for a common or contract carrier to transport 
or deliver any firearm shipment in violation of the GCA, or to deliver 
a firearm without obtaining written acknowledgment of receipt. See 18 
U.S.C. 922(f)(1)-(2). Yet Congress did not impose any express 
requirement on carriers to report the theft or loss of firearms they 
transport. If Congress had intended that the theft or loss of firearms 
in transit be reported by carriers, it likely would have drafted the 
law to state that requirement and specify the carriers' responsibility 
to file reports.
    Instead, the GCA's scheme relies on firearms dealers to control 
commerce in firearms and places the burden of reporting stolen and lost 
firearms on licensees. As we have explained, it is reasonable to 
interpret the phrase ``from the licensee's inventory'' to require 
transferor/sender licensees to report the thefts or losses of firearms 
they have placed in transit. In addition, the transferor/sender FFL is 
in the best position to verify the theft or loss by reviewing its 
records and the shipping information from the carrier that was 
utilized. The transferor/sender FFL may also discover that the 
discrepancy is due to a recordkeeping or other human error, or a theft 
or loss at the licensed premises, rather than a theft or loss in 
transit. To be sure, ATF has long encouraged carriers to file theft and 
loss reports and issued ATF Form 3310.6, Interstate Firearms Shipment 
Theft/Loss Report, to assist carriers in reporting. However, ATF 
considers such reporting merely voluntary, not clearly required by 
statute.
    Regarding the comment alleging that ATF made a conflicting 
statement to the press to the effect that this rulemaking would apply 
to ``the carriers'' rather than FFLs, ATF has not been able to locate 
any such statement. Both the 2000 and 2014 proposed rules consistently 
identified the transferor/sender licensee as the person who would be 
responsible for reporting thefts and losses of firearms in transit.

D. Burden on FFLs To Report and Update Records

Comments Received
    One commenter agreed with the basic process outlined in the 
proposed rule, but stated that the rule should clarify the type of 
shipping documents the transferring FFL must retain and for how long. 
Additionally, the commenter suggested that the proposed time frame for 
licensees to update their A&D Records to reflect a theft or loss--``7 
days following discovery of the theft or loss''--be extended to a 
longer term. The same commenter also recommended that disposition 
entries for shipped items not be entered into the A&D Record until the 
shipment has been received (by the transferee) or declared lost (by the 
carrier). The commenter asked for clarification on when the 
``discovery'' of the theft or loss occurs if the transferor/sender is 
waiting for proof of delivery to make a ``final disposition entry.'' 
The commenter further suggested that maintaining the complete 
electronic tracking record would be a good idea, but that the licensee 
should be able to dispose of the records a week after the carrier's 
tracking system (or the recipient's acknowledgment) indicates that the 
shipment has been received, because otherwise the paperwork could 
become burdensome.
    Another commenter argued that no signature should be required for a 
shipment and that the rule should not require proof of delivery to be 
retained. The commenter explained that ``[t]his burden should not fall 
on the shipping [FFL],'' because ``someone acting nefariously on the 
receiving end could refute any signature or proof of delivery very 
easily.''

[[Page 1315]]

    Another commenter opposed the rule on the basis that the 
transferor/sender cannot know that the firearm has been stolen or lost 
in transit until the intended recipient or the carrier notifies the 
transferor/sender, and the commenter did not know what would constitute 
notification. The same commenter further asserted that if FFLs are to 
timely report theft or loss of firearms in transit they must rely upon 
shipping companies to ``provide accurate information.''
    Two other commenters believed that imposing the burden on 
manufacturers--particularly those that ship thousands of firearms--to 
report the theft or loss of firearms no longer under the manufacturers' 
control would be unrealistic. As one commenter complained, ``The 
resulting logistical burden would be enormous, and require an estimated 
2-3 full time personnel to manually track, log and store documentation 
related to the hundreds or thousands of open orders on any given day.'' 
Another commenter projected that ATF's estimated time of 24 minutes to 
complete Form 3310.11 was too low.
Department Response
    In light of comments received, the Department has chosen not to 
implement a recordkeeping requirement related to shipment and delivery 
paperwork at this time. While the 2000 proposed rule would have 
required FFLs to establish commercial business practices to verify 
delivery, this final rule does not require licensees to track shipments 
or receive verification of receipt. There is only a reporting 
requirement once the transferor/sender FFL discovers that one or more 
firearms have been lost or stolen in transit. As stated previously, the 
FFL's discovery may come from contact with the intended recipient, the 
common or contract carrier, a witness, or some other person. In 
accordance with section 923(g)(6), licensees are required to report the 
theft or loss in transit to ATF and appropriate local authorities 
within 48 hours after discovery.\14\ The Department believes that, in 
many cases, transferor/sender FFLs are already reporting such thefts 
and losses to law enforcement authorities and insurance companies to 
recover the firearms and obtain compensation for their losses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \14\ For further guidance concerning the discovery and reporting 
of stolen and lost firearms, see ATF, Safety and Security 
Information for Federal Firearms Licensees, ATF Pub. No. 3317.2 
(rev. Feb. 2010), https://www.atf.gov/file/58656/download; Open 
Letter to All Federal Firearms Licensees from Carson W. Carroll, 
Assistant Director, Enforcement Programs & Services, ATF (Jan. 14, 
2009), https://www.atf.gov/file/60871/download.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Licensees will have up to 7 days to reflect the theft or loss of 
the firearm with a correct disposition entry in the A&D Record. This is 
consistent with the longstanding firearms disposition reporting 
requirement for licensed dealers under 27 CFR 478.125(e). ATF 
understands that there will be instances in which licensees must make 
corrections to the existing disposition information in their A&D 
Records to reflect the theft or loss of firearms. In those instances, 
the FFL should draw a single line through the disposition information. 
If there is room in the disposition block, the FFL should record the 
date of the theft or loss, the ATF-Issued Incident Number, and the 
local authority Incident Number. The licensee should then initial and 
date the changes. Alternatively, if there is no room in the disposition 
block to legibly record the required information, the FFL should line-
out the disposition information and initial and date the change. The 
FFL should then make a new entry in the next available line in the 
current A&D Record. In that case, the FFL must enter a reference to the 
new book, page, and line number in the disposition side of the updated 
record, and use the new entry to record the date of the theft or loss, 
the ATF-Issued Incident Number, and the local authority Incident 
Number.
    Though the number of responding FFLs will grow due to the expansion 
of the reporting requirements, the estimate of 24 minutes' average 
completion time for Form 3310.11 will not increase. Form 3310.11 has 
been utilized since 1994 for the reporting of firearms thefts and 
losses and this rulemaking makes no significant changes to Form 3310.11 
that would lead to an increase in the time required to complete it.

E. Benefit to Law Enforcement

Comments Received
    One commenter supported the proposed rule because the rule ``would 
close a loophole in federal regulations that lets thousands of lost and 
stolen guns go unreported.'' The commenter believed that if FFLs were 
required to promptly report guns lost and stolen, illegal gun 
trafficking would be curtailed and guns would be kept out of the hands 
of dangerous criminals.
    Several commenters asserted that requiring the reporting of 
firearms stolen or lost in transit would not lead to any appreciable 
benefits. They questioned whether such reporting would make ATF or 
local police more successful in an investigation or in tracing 
firearms. They suggested that the costs of imposing the reporting 
requirement on licensees exceed any benefits to law enforcement.
Department Response
    The moment the theft of a firearm occurs, the firearm has been 
diverted to an illegal channel and is a threat to public safety. The 
knowledge that a particular firearm has been diverted is important to 
law enforcement at the local and Federal levels. A law enforcement 
agency cannot charge a suspect in possession of a firearm with a theft 
if there is no information that the firearm was stolen. An agency may 
not retain a firearm from a suspect if there is no information that the 
property was stolen. And an agency that has retained such a firearm 
cannot return the firearm to its rightful owner if there is no 
information about who the rightful owner might be. Without proper 
reporting of thefts, law enforcement may not be able link the person(s) 
who stole the firearm with the suspect who ultimately is found in 
possession of the firearm.
    In addition, even where a report is made to local law enforcement, 
in-transit shipments often result in interstate or cross-jurisdictional 
activities. Such activities are the purview of Federal law enforcement, 
which is designed to bridge jurisdictional gaps and provide assets not 
available to local law enforcement. ATF has found patterns in thefts in 
interstate shipments that can only be developed through the examination 
of aggregate data. This data often includes seemingly separate and 
unrelated individual incidents of theft over a period of time, which, 
when analyzed in the aggregate, reveal commonalities that allow ATF to 
dismantle larger criminal schemes. This process is highly dependent 
upon the collection of accurate interstate shipment theft information.
    In FY 2015, 313 firearms that interstate carriers had voluntarily 
reported as lost or stolen were recovered and traced by law enforcement 
agencies. In the past 5 years, 25 firearms that interstate carriers had 
voluntarily reported as lost or stolen were recovered and traced and 
the recovering agency reported that they were engaged in a homicide 
investigation involving the recovered firearm. Carriers voluntarily 
reported that information to ATF, and those numbers do not reflect the 
additional amount of firearms lost or stolen in transit that will be 
reported to ATF by FFLs pursuant to this rule. Such additional 
reporting will allow law enforcement to open more criminal

[[Page 1316]]

investigations to locate criminals, deter thefts, and promote better 
controls by carriers to prevent losses. This additional reporting 
should also result in the return of more lost or stolen firearms to 
their rightful owners.
    In addition to ensuring that thefts and losses of firearms are 
reported, the procedures outlined in this rule seek to eliminate 
redundancy in reporting. By designating the transferor/sender FFL as 
the required reporting party, confusion about who needs to report the 
incident will be reduced.

V. Final Rule

    This final rule adopts, with minor changes, the proposed amendment 
to 27 CFR 478.39a requiring the transferor/sender FFL to notify ATF and 
the appropriate local authorities when a firearm is stolen or lost in 
transit. For purposes of this final rule, the Department considers the 
U.S. Postal Service a ``common or contract carrier.'' Therefore, the 
regulatory text of the proposed Sec.  478.39a(a)(2) is amended to read 
as: ``common or contract carrier (which for purposes of this paragraph 
includes the U.S. Postal Service).''
    Upon the effective date of this final rule, transferor/sender 
licensees will be required to use Form 3310.11 to notify ATF of 
firearms stolen or lost in transit. For stolen or lost NFA firearms, 
submitting Form 3310.11 will satisfy the requirements of 27 CFR 478.39 
and 479.141. In addition, transferor/sender FFLs must reflect the theft 
or loss of a firearm in transit as a disposition entry in their 
required records not later than 7 days following discovery of the theft 
or loss. The rule also specifies that FFLs that report theft or loss of 
a firearm and later discover its whereabouts must advise ATF that the 
firearm has been located, and must re-enter the firearm into their 
required records as an acquisition or disposition entry as appropriate. 
These recordkeeping requirements apply whether the firearm is stolen or 
lost in transit between FFLs or between a licensee and a nonlicensee.

VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews

A. Executive Order 12866 and Executive Order 13563--Regulatory Review

    This final rule has been drafted and reviewed in accordance with 
Executive Order 12866, ``Regulatory Planning and Review,'' section 
1(b), The Principles of Regulation, and in accordance with Executive 
Order 13563, ``Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review,'' section 
1(b).
    The Department of Justice has determined that this final rule is a 
``significant regulatory action'' under Executive Order 12866, section 
(f), and accordingly this final rule has been reviewed by the Office of 
Management and Budget. However, this final rule will not have an annual 
effect on the economy of $100 million or more; nor will it adversely 
affect in a material way the economy, a sector of the economy, 
productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public health or 
safety, or State, local, or tribal governments or communities. 
Accordingly, this final rule is not an ``economically significant'' 
rulemaking under Executive Order 12866.
    Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 both direct agencies to assess 
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if 
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize 
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public 
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Executive 
Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and 
benefits, of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting 
flexibility. The Department has assessed the costs and benefits of this 
final regulation and believes that the regulatory approach selected 
maximizes net benefits.
    Under 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(6) and its current implementing regulation, 
27 CFR 478.39a, each FFL must report the theft or loss of a firearm 
from the licensee's inventory or collection within 48 hours after the 
theft or loss is discovered. The licensee must report the theft or loss 
of a firearm to ATF and to the appropriate local authorities. Current 
regulations do not specify reporting and recordkeeping requirements for 
firearms lost or stolen while in transit. This final rule specifies 
that when a firearm is stolen or lost in transit, for reporting 
purposes it is considered stolen or lost from the transferor's/sender's 
inventory.
    The GCA and the current implementing regulations have long required 
that a licensee must report the theft or loss of a firearm. This final 
rule specifies that a transferor/sender licensee is required to submit 
the required report if a firearm is lost or stolen in transit on a 
common or contract carrier from that licensee to another person. This 
final rule retains most of the existing requirements under 27 CFR part 
478, subpart H, and the instructions for Form 3310.11 with respect to 
how FFLs are to record the theft or loss of firearms from their 
inventories in their A&D Records.
    The final rule will reduce the current reporting burden on 
licensees when the theft or loss involves a registered NFA firearm. 
Currently, as discussed in section I, a licensee must submit Form 
3310.11 to NTC to comply with 27 CFR 478.39a and, if the licensee is 
the person who lost the firearm, provide additional notification to the 
NFA Branch to comply with 27 CFR 479.141. Under this final rule, to 
meet the 27 CFR 478.39a requirements, a licensee must complete and 
submit Form 3310.11 to NTC. If the theft or loss involves a registered 
NFA firearm, NTC will notify the NFA Branch. This will satisfy the 27 
CFR 479.141 notification requirements; licensees will no longer have to 
submit additional notification about NFA firearms to ATF.
    Although there is no definite count of the total number of firearms 
that were lost or stolen in transit, ATF can provide an estimate based 
on tracing data. From FY 2010 through FY 2014, there was an average of 
1,333 crime gun traces per year where the firearm was traced back to an 
FFL that claimed it never received the firearm allegedly shipped to it, 
but no theft or loss was reported to ATF.\15\ ATF recognizes that this 
figure may include some firearms lost or stolen at licensed premises 
while not in transit (i.e., prior to or after shipment). However, 
because there are numerous firearms lost or stolen that have not been 
traced, the full count of firearms lost or stolen in transit that would 
be reported under this rule may be significantly higher. Although the 
number of unreported thefts or losses of firearms may be substantially 
greater than this estimate, any additional burden to report them should 
be minimal. At this time, the 1,333 figure reflects the best data 
available.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \15\ In the 2014 NPRM, the Department relied on the crime gun 
trace average for FY 2008 through FY 2012. In this final rule, the 
Department has used the more recent average from FY 2010 through FY 
2014 because it believes that the updated figure more accurately 
reflects the actual benefits and costs of the final rule. The 
updated figure does not meaningfully change the Department's 
estimates of the rule's costs and benefits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Pursuant to the instructions on Form 3310.11, a separate form is 
required for each theft or loss. ATF estimates that it takes an FFL 24 
minutes to complete Form 3310.11; the postage cost to mail the form to 
NTC is 49 cents. If FFLs complete a separate Form 3310.11 for each of 
the average of 1,333 firearms that tracing data indicates are lost or 
stolen each year but are not currently being reported, ATF estimates 
the total burden hours to be 533 (1,333 x 24/60), and the current 
estimated cost to be $18,350. (Cost of completing the form = 24 minutes 
at $33.19 per hour x 1,333 = $17,697; Cost of mailing the form =

[[Page 1317]]

$.49 x 1,333 = $653.) ATF estimated the cost of the time to complete 
these tasks using employee compensation data for June 2015 as 
determined by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), U.S. Department of 
Labor. See News Release, U.S. Dep't of Labor, Bureau of Labor 
Statistics, Employer Costs for Employer Compensation (Sept. 9, 2015), 
http://www.bls.gov/news.release/archives/ecec_09092015.pdf.\16\ The BLS 
determined the hourly compensation (which includes wages, salaries, and 
benefits) for civilian workers to be $33.19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \16\ In the 2014 NPRM, the Department relied on BLS employee 
compensation data from December 2013. In this final rule, the 
Department has used the more recent BLS data from June 2015 because 
it believes that the more recent data more accurately reflects the 
actual benefits and costs of the final rule. The more recent BLS 
data does not meaningfully change the Department's estimates of the 
rule's costs and benefits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The instructions on Form 3310.11 also provide that FFLs must report 
firearms thefts or losses by telephone to ATF. ATF estimates that it 
takes an FFL 24 minutes to call and provide the requisite information 
to ATF. If an FFL called ATF for each of the average of 1,333 firearms 
that tracing data indicates are lost or stolen each year but are not 
currently being reported, ATF estimates the total burden hours to be 
533 (1,333 x 24/60), and the current estimated cost is $17,697 (24 
minutes at $33.19 per hour x 1,333).
    Therefore, the combined total estimated burden hours for submitting 
Form 3310.11 and calling ATF are 1,066 (533 + 533). The combined total 
estimated cost of fulfilling those same two requirements is $36,047 
($18,350 + $17,697).
    Alternatives, such as the UCC variable approach discussed in 
section III of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION in the 2014 NPRM, are more 
burdensome for FFLs than the approach taken in this final rule. This is 
because, under the UCC variable approach, FFLs would need to examine 
the terms of the individual contracts to determine how the contract 
allocates the risk of loss as between the two parties. In contrast, the 
final rule provides a simple, consistent rule so that there is no basis 
for uncertainty or need for additional review: the final rule assigns 
the theft or loss reporting requirement to the transferor/sender FFL.
    In addition, this final rule will alleviate reporting burdens on 
licensees in that licensees will need only report the theft or loss of 
a registered NFA firearm once to ATF instead of reporting the incident 
separately to NTC and the NFA Branch. As the licensee is providing much 
of the same information under both reporting requirements, ATF 
estimates that it takes the same amount of time and cost for postage, 
and ATF uses the same hourly compensation as listed above (i.e., 24 
minutes for time, 49 cents for postage, and $33.19 for hourly 
compensation). Currently, the NFA Branch receives notification of the 
theft or loss of a registered NFA firearm from approximately 60 
licensees annually. ATF estimates the total burden hours to be 24 (60 x 
24/60) and the total cost to be $826. (Cost of submitting the 
notification = 24 minutes at $33.19 per hour x 60 = $797; cost of 
mailing the notification = $.49 x 60 = $29.) Therefore, ATF estimates 
the savings to be these amounts.

B. Executive Order 13132

    This final rule will not have substantial direct effects on the 
States, on the relationship between the Federal Government and the 
States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the 
various levels of government. Therefore, in accordance with section 6 
of Executive Order 13132, ``Federalism,'' the Attorney General has 
determined that this final rule does not have sufficient federalism 
implications to warrant the preparation of a federalism summary impact 
statement.

C. Executive Order 12988

    This final rule meets the applicable standards set forth in 
sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988, ``Civil Justice 
Reform.''

D. Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act requires an agency to conduct a 
regulatory flexibility analysis of any rule subject to notice and 
comment rulemaking requirements unless the agency certifies that the 
rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial 
number of small entities. See 5 U.S.C. 605(b). Small entities include 
small businesses, small not-for-profit enterprises, and small 
governmental jurisdictions. The Attorney General has reviewed this 
final rule and, by approving it, certifies that this final rule will 
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities.
    Under section 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(6) and its implementing regulation, 
27 CFR 478.39a, each FFL must report the theft or loss of a firearm 
from the licensee's inventory or collection within 48 hours after the 
theft or loss is discovered. The licensee must report the theft or loss 
of a firearm to ATF and to the appropriate local authorities. This 
final rule clarifies that when a firearm is stolen or lost in transit, 
for reporting purposes, it is considered stolen or lost from the 
transferor/sender FFL's inventory.
    As discussed in section I of this preamble, the current regulation 
requires that an FFL report thefts or losses telephonically to ATF and 
complete and submit to NTC a separate Form 3310.11 for each theft or 
loss. ATF estimates the time to complete the form as 24 minutes, the 
time for the telephone call as 24 minutes, and the postage cost as 49 
cents. If an FFL called ATF to report the theft or loss and completed a 
separate Form 3310.11 for each of the average of 1,333 firearms that 
tracing data indicates are lost or stolen each year but are not 
currently being reported, ATF estimates the total cost of completing 
and mailing the form and calling ATF to be $36,047. See section VI.A. 
for a full discussion of these costs. Therefore, this final rule will 
not impose a significant impact on a substantial number of small 
entities.

E. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996

    This final rule is not a major rule as defined by section 251 of 
the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, 5 
U.S.C. 804. This final rule will not result in an annual effect on the 
economy of $100 million or more; a major increase in costs or prices; 
or significant adverse effects on competition, employment, investment, 
productivity, innovation, or on the ability of United States-based 
enterprises to compete with foreign based enterprises in domestic and 
export markets.

F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995

    This final rule will not result in the expenditure by State, local, 
and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector of 
$100 million or more in any one year, and it will not significantly or 
uniquely affect small governments. Therefore, no actions were deemed 
necessary under the provisions of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 
1995. See 2 U.S.C. 1532(a), 1533(a).

G. Paperwork Reduction Act

    This final rule revises an existing reporting and recordkeeping 
requirement under the Paperwork Reduction Act. It also eliminates an 
existing reporting requirement. The current regulation at 27 CFR 
478.39a provides that each FFL must report the theft or loss of a 
firearm from the licensee's inventory or collection within 48 hours 
after the theft or loss is discovered. Licensees must report such

[[Page 1318]]

thefts and losses to ATF both telephonically and by submitting Form 
3310.11. Licensees must also report the theft or loss to the 
appropriate local authorities.
    Pursuant to 27 CFR 479.141 and according to the instructions on 
Form 3310.11, licensees reporting the theft or loss of registered NFA 
firearms must provide additional notification to ATF. As discussed in 
section I, no form exists for this purpose, and the person reporting 
typically submits a letter with the required information to the NFA 
Branch. As part of this rulemaking, Form 3310.11, approved under OMB 
control number 1140-0039, will capture the information required by 27 
CFR 479.141. Therefore, under this final rule, a licensee will satisfy 
its obligation to provide the required notification to the NFA Branch 
by submitting Form 3310.11 to NTC, and NTC will notify the NFA Branch. 
Submitting Form 3310.11 will satisfy the requirements of both 27 CFR 
478.39a and 27 CFR 479.141 with one notification.
    In addition, the instructions on Form 3310.11 state that a licensee 
must reflect the theft or loss of a firearm as a disposition entry in 
the A&D Record required by subpart H of part 478 (formerly 178). These 
instructions further state that the disposition entry should indicate 
whether the incident is a theft or loss and include the ATF-Issued 
Incident Number and the Incident Number provided by the local law 
enforcement agency. Finally, the instructions state that if the 
firearms are located, they should be re-entered in the A&D Record as 
acquisition entries. The final rule adds both sets of these 
instructions to the regulatory text in 27 CFR 478.39a with 
modifications. See section V for full discussion of these revisions.
    The information collection required by 27 CFR 478.39a--i.e., the 
submission of Form 3310.11--has been approved by the Office of 
Management and Budget under control number 1140-0039. This final rule 
specifies that when a firearm is stolen or lost in transit, for 
reporting purposes, it is considered stolen or lost from the 
transferor's/sender's inventory.

Drafting Information

    The author of this document is Denise Brown, Office of Regulatory 
Affairs, Enforcement Programs and Services, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, 
Firearms, and Explosives.

List of Subjects in 27 CFR Part 478

    Administrative practice and procedure, Arms and munitions, Customs 
duties and inspection, Exports, Imports, Intergovernmental relations, 
Law enforcement officers, Military personnel, Penalties, Reporting and 
recordkeeping requirements, Research, Seizures and forfeitures, 
Transportation.

Authority and Issuance

    Accordingly, for the reasons discussed in the preamble, 27 CFR part 
478 is amended as follows:

PART 478--COMMERCE IN FIREARMS AND AMMUNITION

0
1. The authority citation for 27 CFR part 478 is revised to read as 
follows:

    Authority:  5 U.S.C. 552(a); 18 U.S.C. 921-931; 44 U.S.C. 
3504(h).


0
2. Revise Sec.  478.39a to read as follows:


Sec.  478.39a  Reporting theft or loss of firearms.

    (a)(1) Each licensee shall report the theft or loss of a firearm 
from the licensee's inventory (including any firearm which has been 
transferred from the licensee's inventory to a personal collection and 
held as a personal firearm for at least 1 year), or from the collection 
of a licensed collector, within 48 hours after the theft or loss is 
discovered.
    (2) When a firearm is stolen or lost in transit on a common or 
contract carrier (which for purposes of this paragraph includes the 
U.S. Postal Service), it is considered stolen or lost from the 
transferor/sender licensee's inventory for reporting purposes. 
Therefore, the transferor/sender of the stolen or lost firearm shall 
report the theft or loss of the firearm within 48 hours after the 
transferor/sender discovers the theft or loss.
    (b) Each licensee shall report the theft or loss by telephoning ATF 
at 1-888-930-9275 (nationwide toll-free number), and by preparing and 
submitting to ATF a Federal Firearms Licensee Theft/Loss Report, ATF 
Form 3310.11, in accordance with the instructions on the form. The 
original of the report shall be retained by the licensee as part of the 
licensee's required records.
    (c) When a licensee submits to ATF a Federal Firearms Licensee 
Theft/Loss Report, ATF Form 3310.11, for the theft or loss of a firearm 
registered under the National Firearms Act, this report also satisfies 
the notification requirement under Sec.  479.141 of this chapter.
    (d) Theft or loss of any firearm shall also be reported to the 
appropriate local authorities. If the location of the theft or loss is 
known, the local law enforcement agency at that location would be the 
appropriate local authority. Otherwise, the report should be made to 
the local law enforcement authorities at the licensee's location or 
business premises.
    (e) Licensees shall reflect the theft or loss of a firearm as a 
disposition entry in the Record of Acquisition and Disposition required 
by subpart H of this part not later than 7 days following discovery of 
the theft or loss. The disposition entry shall record whether the 
incident is a theft or loss, the ATF-Issued Incident Number, and the 
Incident Number provided by the local law enforcement agency.
    (f) Licensees who report the theft or loss of a firearm and later 
discover its whereabouts shall advise ATF at 1-888-930-9275 (nationwide 
toll-free number) that the firearm has been located, and shall re-enter 
the firearm in the Record of Acquisition and Disposition as an 
acquisition or disposition entry as appropriate.

    Dated: January 4, 2016.
Loretta E. Lynch,
Attorney General.
[FR Doc. 2016-00112 Filed 1-11-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410-FY-P



                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 7 / Tuesday, January 12, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                1307

                                               (2) Verify the identity of the                          (1) Accept an application for a student               Issued in Washington, DC, under the
                                            applicant; and                                          pilot certificate;                                     authority of 49 U.S.C. 106(f), 44703, and
                                               (3) Verify the applicant meets the                      (2) Verify the identity of the                      Section 4022 of Public Law. 108–458 on
                                            eligibility requirements in § 61.83.                    applicant; and                                         December 24, 2015.
                                            ■ 10. Amend § 61.195 by revising                           (3) Verify the applicant meets the                  Michael P. Huerta,
                                            paragraphs (d)(1) introductory text and                 eligibility requirements in § 61.83.                   Administrator.
                                            (d)(2) to read as follows:                              ■ 12. Amend § 61.415 by revising                       [FR Doc. 2016–00199 Filed 1–11–16; 8:45 am]
                                                                                                    paragraphs (d)(1) introductory text,                   BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
                                            § 61.195 Flight instructor limitations and
                                                                                                    (d)(2), and (d)(3) introductory text to
                                            qualifications.
                                                                                                    read as follows:
                                            *      *    *     *     *                                                                                      DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
                                               (d) * * *                                            § 61.415 What are the limits of a flight
                                               (1) Student pilot’s logbook for solo                 instructor certificate with a sport pilot
                                                                                                                                                           Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms,
                                            flight privileges, unless that flight                   rating?
                                                                                                                                                           and Explosives
                                            instructor has—                                         *      *    *     *     *
                                               * * *                                                   (d) * * *
                                               (2) Student pilot’s logbook for a solo                                                                      27 CFR Part 478
                                                                                                       (1) Student pilot’s logbook for solo
                                            cross-country flight, unless that flight                flight privileges, unless you have—                    [Docket No. ATF 40F; AG Order No. 3607–
                                            instructor has determined the student’s                    * * *                                               2016]
                                            flight preparation, planning, equipment,                   (2) Student pilot’s logbook for a solo              RIN 1140–AA41
                                            and proposed procedures are adequate                    cross-country flight, unless you have
                                            for the proposed flight under the                       determined the student’s flight                        Commerce in Firearms and
                                            existing conditions and within any                      preparation, planning, equipment, and                  Ammunition—Reporting Theft or Loss
                                            limitations listed in the logbook that the              proposed procedures are adequate for                   of Firearms in Transit (2007R–9P)
                                            instructor considers necessary for the                  the proposed flight under the existing
                                            safety of the flight;                                   conditions and within any limitations                  AGENCY:  Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
                                            *      *    *     *     *                               listed in the logbook that you consider                Firearms, and Explosives (ATF);
                                                                                                    necessary for the safety of the flight.                Department of Justice.
                                            ■ 11. Revise § 61.413 to read as follows:
                                                                                                       (3) Student pilot’s logbook for solo                ACTION: Final rule.
                                            § 61.413 What are the privileges of my                  flight in Class B, C, and D airspace
                                            flight instructor certificate with a sport pilot        areas, at an airport within Class B, C, or             SUMMARY:    The Department of Justice is
                                            rating?                                                 D airspace and to from, through or on                  amending the regulations of the Bureau
                                               (a) If you hold a flight instructor                  an airport having an operational control               of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and
                                            certificate with a sport pilot rating, you              tower, unless you have—                                Explosives (ATF) concerning the
                                            are authorized, within the limits of your                                                                      statutory reporting requirement for
                                                                                                    *      *    *     *     *                              firearms that have been stolen or lost.
                                            certificate and rating, to provide training
                                                                                                    ■ 13. Amend § 61.423 by revising                       The final rule specifies that when a
                                            and endorsements that are required for,
                                            and relate to—                                          paragraph (a)(2)(i) to read as follows:                Federal firearms licensee (FFL)
                                               (1) A student pilot seeking a sport                  § 61.423 What are the recordkeeping                    discovers a firearm it shipped was
                                            pilot certificate;                                      requirements for a flight instructor with a            stolen or lost in transit, the transferor/
                                               (2) A sport pilot certificate;                       sport pilot rating?                                    sender FFL must report the theft or loss
                                               (3) A flight instructor certificate with               (a) * * *                                            to ATF and to the appropriate local
                                            a sport pilot rating;                                     (2) * * *                                            authorities within 48 hours of
                                               (4) A powered parachute or weight-                     (i) Each person whose logbook you                    discovery. The rule also reduces an
                                            shift-control aircraft rating;                          have endorsed for solo flight privileges.              FFL’s reporting burden when a theft or
                                               (5) Sport pilot privileges;                                                                                 loss involves a firearm registered under
                                               (6) A flight review or operating                     *     *    *     *    *
                                                                                                                                                           the National Firearms Act (NFA) and
                                            privilege for a sport pilot;                                                                                   ensures consistent reporting to ATF’s
                                               (7) A practical test for a sport pilot               PART 183—REPRESENTATIVES OF
                                                                                                    THE ADMINISTRATOR                                      NFA Branch. In addition, the rule
                                            certificate, a private pilot certificate                                                                       specifies that transferor/sender FFLs
                                            with a powered parachute or weight-                     ■  14. The authority citation for part 183             must reflect the theft or loss of a firearm
                                            shift-control aircraft rating or a flight               is revised to read as follows:                         as a disposition entry in their required
                                            instructor certificate with a sport pilot                                                                      records not later than 7 days following
                                            rating;                                                   Authority: 31 U.S.C. 9701; 49 U.S.C.
                                                                                                    106(f), 106(g), 40113, 44702, 45303.                   discovery of the theft or loss; moreover,
                                               (8) A knowledge test for a sport pilot
                                                                                                      15. Amend § 183.21 by revising                       if an FFL reported the theft or loss of a
                                            certificate, a private pilot certificate                ■
                                                                                                    paragraph (c) and removing and                         firearm and later discovers its
                                            with a powered parachute or weight-
                                                                                                    reserving paragraph (d) to read as                     whereabouts, the FFL must advise ATF
                                            shift-control aircraft rating or a flight
                                                                                                    follows:                                               that the firearm has been located and
                                            instructor certificate with a sport pilot
                                                                                                                                                           must re-enter the firearm into its
                                            rating; and
                                               (9) A proficiency check for an                       § 183.21    Aviation Medical Examiners.                required records as an acquisition or
                                            additional category or class privilege for              *     *     *    *     *                               disposition entry as appropriate.
                                            a sport pilot certificate or a flight                     (c) Issue or deny medical certificates               DATES: This rule is effective February
                                            instructor certificate with a sport pilot               in accordance with part 67 of this                     11, 2016.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                            rating.                                                 chapter, subject to reconsideration by                 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                               (b) A person who holds a flight                      the Federal Air Surgeon or his or her                  Denise Brown, Office of Regulatory
                                            instructor certificate with a sport pilot               authorized representatives within the                  Affairs, Enforcement Programs and
                                            rating is authorized, in a form and                     FAA; and                                               Services, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
                                            manner acceptable to the Administrator,                   (d) [Reserved.]                                      Firearms, and Explosives, U.S.
                                            to:                                                     *     *     *    *     *                               Department of Justice, 99 New York


                                       VerDate Sep<11>2014   20:17 Jan 11, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00017   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\12JAR1.SGM   12JAR1


                                            1308               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 7 / Tuesday, January 12, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                            Avenue NE., Washington, DC 20226;                       possession of an NFA firearm, it has                   the firearm. Similarly, current
                                            telephone: (202) 648–7070.                              reporting obligations under both 27 CFR                regulations do not address reporting
                                            SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                              479.141 and 27 CFR 478.39a.                            requirements arising from firearms
                                                                                                       Currently, an FFL reporting the theft               stolen or lost in transit, including
                                            I. Background                                           or loss of a registered NFA firearm                    whether the firearms are considered
                                               The Gun Control Act of 1968 (GCA),                   prepares and submits Form 3310.11 to                   stolen or lost from the inventory of the
                                            as amended by the Violent Crime                         ATF’s National Tracing Center (NTC),                   sending or receiving FFL. This gap in
                                            Control and Law Enforcement Act of                      the receiving office designated on the                 the regulations likely results in no one
                                            1994, requires each licensed importer,                  form, to meet the 27 CFR 478.39a                       reporting the theft or loss of a firearm
                                            licensed manufacturer, licensed dealer,                 requirements. In addition, the FFL must                stolen or lost in transit—an anomalous
                                            or licensed collector of firearms to                    submit a separate notification to the                  result that the Department believes is
                                            report the theft or loss of a firearm from              Director of ATF to meet the                            contrary to congressional intent in
                                            the licensee’s inventory or collection to               requirements of 27 CFR 479.141.                        mandating the reporting of thefts and
                                            the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,                         Because no form is directly associated                 losses generally. Clarifying this
                                            Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) and to                   with the separate notification to the                  responsibility is thus important to the
                                            the appropriate local authorities within                Director, FFLs submit a letter to the                  effective administration of the GCA and
                                            48 hours after the theft or loss is                     NFA Branch of ATF, as directed in the                  NFA. Congress delegated the authority
                                            discovered. See 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(6)                     ‘‘Important Notice’’ section of Form                   to prescribe necessary rules and
                                            (requiring licensees to report thefts or                3310.11. As a backup to this                           regulations to carry out the provisions of
                                            losses to the Attorney General and to the               requirement, when NTC receives a                       the GCA and NFA to the Attorney
                                            appropriate local authorities); 28 CFR                  completed Form 3310.11 involving the                   General, who has delegated to ATF the
                                            0.130(a) (delegating the Attorney                       theft or loss of an NFA firearm, it                    authority to investigate, administer, and
                                            General’s functions and powers to the                   currently forwards a copy of the                       enforce those laws. See 18 U.S.C. 926(a);
                                            Director of ATF).                                       completed form to the NFA Branch, as                   26 U.S.C. 7801(a)(2)(A)(i), 7805(a); 28
                                               The regulation that implements                       the completed form often contains more                 CFR 0.130(a).
                                            section 923(g)(6) is 27 CFR 478.39a.                    information than the letters FFLs submit
                                            This regulation provides that each                      to the NFA Branch. Form 3310.11 does                   II. Initial Notice of Proposed
                                            Federal firearms licensee (FFL) must                    not, however, ask for the name and                     Rulemaking
                                            report the theft or loss of a firearm from              address of the person in whose name                       On August 28, 2000, in ATF Notice
                                            the FFL’s inventory (including any                      the firearm is registered, which is                    No. 902, ATF published in the Federal
                                            firearm which has been transferred from                 required to be reported under 27 CFR                   Register a Notice of Proposed
                                            the FFL’s inventory to a personal                       479.141. Therefore, the NFA Branch                     Rulemaking (NPRM) proposing several
                                            collection and held as a personal                       may not currently be receiving                         amendments to the firearms regulations.
                                            firearm for at least 1 year), or from the               consistent and complete information                    65 FR 52054 (Aug. 28, 2000). Among
                                            collection of a licensed collector, within              regarding the theft or loss of a registered            those amendments, ATF proposed
                                            48 hours after the theft or loss is                     firearm.                                               specifying that, when a firearm is stolen
                                            discovered. FFLs must report such                          The instructions on Form 3310.11                    or lost in transit between licensees, for
                                            thefts or losses by telephoning 1–888–                  also provide that FFLs must reflect the                reporting purposes, the firearm is
                                            930–9275 (nationwide ATF toll-free                      theft or loss of a firearm as a disposition            considered stolen or lost from the
                                            number) and by preparing a Federal                      entry in the Record of Acquisition and                 transferor’s/sender’s inventory. ATF
                                            Firearms Licensee Firearms Inventory                    Disposition (A&D Record) required by                   noted that in Fiscal Year (FY) 1999,
                                            Theft/Loss Report, ATF Form 3310.11                     subpart H of 27 CFR part 478 (formerly                 there were 1,271 crime gun traces in
                                            (Form 3310.11), in accordance with the                  178). The disposition entry should
                                                                                                                                                           which an FFL claimed to have never
                                            instructions on the form. The FFL must                  indicate whether the incident is a theft
                                                                                                                                                           received the firearm shipped to it and
                                            also report the theft or loss of a firearm              or loss, the ATF-Issued Incident
                                                                                                                                                           no one reported the theft or loss to
                                            to the appropriate local authorities.                   Number, and the Incident Number
                                                                                                                                                           ATF.1 As proposed in 2000, a firearm
                                               When there has been a theft or loss of               provided by the local law enforcement
                                            a firearm registered under the National                                                                        stolen or lost in transit between
                                                                                                    agency. The instructions further state
                                            Firearms Act (NFA), 26 U.S.C. 5801 et                                                                          licensees, for reporting purposes, would
                                                                                                    that should any of the firearms be
                                            seq., such as a short-barreled rifle or                                                                        be considered stolen or lost from the
                                                                                                    located, they should be re-entered into
                                            short-barreled shotgun, silencer,                                                                              transferor’s/sender’s inventory. Further,
                                                                                                    the A&D Record as an acquisition entry.
                                            machinegun, or destructive device, see                  In addition, the ‘‘Important Notice’’                  as proposed, the transferor/sender of the
                                            26 U.S.C. 5841, 5845, 27 CFR 479.141                    section on Form 3310.11 provides that                  stolen or missing firearm would have
                                            imposes a separate and additional                       an FFL who reports a firearm as missing                been required to report to ATF and to
                                            reporting requirement. Section 479.141                  and later discover its whereabouts                     the appropriate local authorities the
                                            states that whenever any registered NFA                 should advise ATF that the firearm has                 theft or loss of the firearm within 48
                                            firearm is stolen or lost, the person who               been located.                                          hours after the transferor/sender
                                            has lost possession must, immediately                      The text of the statutory reporting                 discovered the theft or loss. In addition,
                                            upon discovery of such theft or loss,                   requirement, 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(6)—which                 to enable the transferor/sender of the
                                            make a report to the Director of ATF                    obligates licensees to report the theft or             stolen or lost firearm to obtain the
                                            showing the following: name and                         loss of a firearm ‘‘from the licensee’s                knowledge necessary to comply with
                                            address of the person in whose name                     inventory’’—does not clearly address                   the theft or loss reporting requirements
                                            the firearm is registered; kind of firearm;             the reporting of a firearm that has been               and fulfill the statutory responsibility of
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                                            serial number; model; caliber;                          stolen or lost in transit. That is, the                maintaining accurate records, ATF
                                            manufacturer of the firearm; date and                   statute does not expressly address                     proposed that the transferor/sender be
                                            place of theft or loss; and complete                    whether such a firearm should be                         1 A crime gun is any firearm that is illegally
                                            statement of facts and circumstances                    considered part of the inventory of the                possessed, used in a crime, or suspected by law
                                            surrounding such theft or loss.                         transferring/shipping FFL, a recipient                 enforcement officials of having been used in a crime
                                            Accordingly, when an FFL loses                          FFL, or the common carrier transporting                or act of terrorism.



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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 7 / Tuesday, January 12, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                           1309

                                            required to have or establish                           NPRM also clarified that firearms lost or              qualified interstate shipments to law
                                            commercial business practices that                      stolen in transit between FFLs and non-                enforcement officers for official duty,
                                            confirm whether the transferee/buyer of                 FFLs (not just between FFLs) would be                  and intrastate transactions under 18
                                            the firearm ultimately received the                     included in the transactions that must                 U.S.C. 922(c), 27 CFR 478.96, and ATF
                                            firearm.                                                be reported by a transferor/sender FFL.                Procedure 2013–2. In all such
                                               As a result of the comments received                 Finally, the proposed rule would                       transactions, the transferor/sender
                                            in response to various issues addressed                 require the A&D Records to be updated                  would be the only FFL involved in the
                                            in the document, the Department                         within 7 days of discovery of the theft                transaction, and it would be reasonable
                                            decided to study the issues further, and                or loss.                                               for that FFL to assume responsibility to
                                            it subsequently withdrew these                             As stated in the 2014 NPRM, theft or                make a report to ATF if the shipment is
                                            proposals. See 69 FR 37757 (June 28,                    loss of firearms in transit continues to               lost or stolen in transit before the
                                            2004).                                                  be a problem. In its 2000 NPRM, ATF                    transferee acquires possession. The
                                                                                                    stated that in FY 1999, there were 1,271               proposed rule would not require
                                            III. 2014 Notice of Proposed
                                                                                                    crime gun traces in which an FFL                       transferor/sender FFLs to establish
                                            Rulemaking
                                                                                                    claimed to have never received the                     commercial business practices to
                                               On August 12, 2014, ATF published                    firearm shipped to it and no one                       affirmatively verify or retain
                                            in the Federal Register another NPRM                    reported the theft or loss to ATF. More                confirmation of receipt; instead, the rule
                                            proposing to amend the regulations in                   recent data from NTC shows that from                   would allow a transferor/sender FFL to
                                            subpart C of part 478, section 478.39a                  FY 2010 through FY 2014, there was an                  rely on notification by the transferee/
                                            (ATF Notice No. 40P) (‘‘2014 NPRM’’ or                  average of 1,333 crime gun traces per                  buyer, the common or contract carrier,
                                            ‘‘proposed rule’’). See 79 FR 47033. The                year where the firearm was traced back                 or any other person that the shipment
                                            proposed rule was intended to clarify                   to an FFL that claimed it never received               was not received. Only upon receiving
                                            that, when an FFL discovers a firearm                   the firearm allegedly shipped to it, but               such notification would the FFL be
                                            that it shipped was stolen or lost in                   no theft or loss was reported to ATF.                  required to report the theft or loss and
                                            transit, that transferor/sender FFL                     ATF recognizes that this figure may                    change its records accordingly.
                                            would be the one responsible for                        include some firearms lost or stolen at                   The 2014 proposed rule retained most
                                            reporting the theft or loss to ATF and to               the licensed premises while not in                     of the current procedures for licensees
                                            the appropriate local authorities.                      transit (i.e., prior to or after shipment).            reporting the theft or loss of firearms
                                               The NPRM specified a time period                     However, because there are numerous                    subject to the GCA, in accordance with
                                            within which to reflect the theft or loss               firearms lost or stolen that have not                  the instructions on Form 3310.11. For
                                            of a firearm as a disposition entry—i.e.,               been traced, the full count of firearms                example, Instruction 7 on Form 3310.11
                                            not later than 7 days following the                     lost or stolen in transit may be                       provides that FFLs must reflect the theft
                                            discovery of the theft or loss—and                      significantly higher. The omission in the              or loss of a firearm as a disposition entry
                                            required, rather than recommended, that                 regulations regarding reporting the theft              in the A&D Record that is required by
                                            the disposition entry in the FFL’s A&D                  or loss of a firearm in transit adversely              subpart H of part 478 (formerly 178).
                                            Record include specified information.                   affects ATF’s and local law                            The form also provides that the
                                            Under the regulations as proposed, if an                enforcement’s investigative and tracing                disposition entry should indicate
                                            FFL reported a firearm stolen or lost and               capabilities. For those reasons, the                   whether the incident is a theft or loss,
                                            later discovered its whereabouts, the                   Department proposed amending the                       include the ATF-Issued Incident
                                            FFL would be required to advise ATF                     regulations to specify who is                          Number, and include the Incident
                                            that the firearm has been located and re-               responsible for reporting the theft or                 Number provided by the local law
                                            enter the firearm into the required                     loss of a firearm in transit.                          enforcement agency. The proposed rule
                                            records as an acquisition or disposition                   As previously noted, the statutory                  set out these procedures in a new
                                            entry as appropriate. The proposed rule                 provision requiring licensees to report                paragraph (e) of 27 CFR 478.39a with
                                            was intended to reduce an FFL’s                         lost or stolen firearms, 18 U.S.C.                     two modifications: (1) The rule would
                                            reporting burden when a theft or loss                   923(g)(6), does not clearly address                    prescribe a time period to reflect the
                                            involves a firearm registered under the                 situations in which a firearm is lost or               theft or loss of a firearm as a disposition
                                            NFA by having the FFL submit one                        stolen in transit. The Department                      entry (i.e., not later than 7 days
                                            Form 3310.11 to ATF to satisfy the                      proposed to interpret section 923(g)(6)’s              following discovery of the theft or loss);
                                            requirements of both 27 CFR 478.39a                     requirement that a licensee ‘‘report the               and (2) it would require, rather than
                                            and 27 CFR 479.141.                                     theft or loss of a firearm from the                    recommend, that the disposition entry
                                               The proposed rule retained the same                  licensee’s inventory’’ to include a                    include specified information. The
                                            general approach for transferor/sender                  responsibility to report a theft or loss               proposed 7-day time period for
                                            FFLs to report thefts or losses in transit              that occurs once the licensee has placed               reporting would be consistent with the
                                            as the 2000 NPRM, although there are                    a firearm in shipment. Accordingly, the                firearms receipt and disposition
                                            some important differences. Unlike the                  proposed rule specified that, when a                   reporting requirement for licensed
                                            2000 NPRM, the 2014 NPRM did not                        firearm is stolen or lost in transit on a              dealers in 27 CFR 478.125(e), which
                                            propose to require FFLs to establish                    common or contract carrier,2 for                       requires the ‘‘sale or other disposition of
                                            commercial business practices that                                                                             a firearm’’ to be recorded ‘‘not later than
                                                                                                    reporting purposes the firearm is
                                            would enable the FFL to verify that the                                                                        7 days following the date of such
                                                                                                    considered stolen or lost from the
                                            transferee/buyer of a shipped firearm                                                                          transaction.’’ The Department considers
                                                                                                    transferor’s/sender’s inventory. The
                                            actually received the firearm. The 2014                                                                        a theft or loss to be a disposition that
                                                                                                    proposed rule would apply to transfers
                                            NPRM merely solicited comments on                                                                              must be reported within this time
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                                                                                                    from a licensee to a nonlicensee,
                                            whether a transferor/sender FFL should                                                                         period.
                                                                                                    including interstate shipments for
                                            be required to obtain and retain                                                                                  In addition, the ‘‘Important Notice’’
                                                                                                    firearms repair and replacement,
                                            confirmation of receipt. In addition,                                                                          section of Form 3310.11 provides that
                                            unlike the 2000 NPRM, the 2014 NPRM                       2 For purposes of this rule, the Department          licensees who report firearms as missing
                                            proposed to reduce the reporting burden                 considers the U.S. Postal Service a ‘‘common or        and later discover their whereabouts
                                            with respect to NFA firearms. The 2014                  contract carrier.’’                                    should advise ATF that the firearms


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                                            1310               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 7 / Tuesday, January 12, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                            have been located, and Instruction 8                    entirety because it would allow police                 not interpreted the Second Amendment
                                            provides that licensees should re-enter                 to quickly investigate and possibly                    as limiting the authority of Congress to
                                            these located firearms into the A&D                     return missing firearms and simplify                   enact such laws.4
                                            Record as an acquisition entry. The                     FFLs’ reporting of stolen or lost firearms                Some commenters asserted that ATF
                                            proposed rule combined and set out                      registered under the NFA, thus making                  lacks the legal authority to impose the
                                            these procedures in a new paragraph (f)                 that process more efficient for both FFLs              proposed rule because, in 18 U.S.C.
                                            of 27 CFR 478.39a with three                            and ATF.                                               923(g)(6), Congress only mandated
                                            modifications. The proposed rule                           Nine commenters disagreed with the                  reporting of lost or stolen firearms when
                                            would: (1) Change the phrase ‘‘should                   proposed rule. Commenters who                          those firearms are currently in the
                                            advise ATF’’ to ‘‘shall advise the [ATF]                opposed the proposed rule did so for a                 ‘‘inventory or collection’’ of the FFL.
                                            Director’’; (2) change the phrase ‘‘should              variety of reasons, with the most                      These commenters argued that ATF
                                            re-enter’’ to ‘‘shall re-enter’’; and (3)               common objection relating to ATF’s lack                impermissibly exceeded its statutory
                                            specify that the re-entry is to be                      of authority to request theft or loss                  bounds in interpreting the requirement
                                            recorded as an acquisition or                           reports of firearms once the firearms                  that licensees report ‘‘the theft or loss of
                                            disposition entry as appropriate. Making                have allegedly been transferred from the               a firearm from the licensee’s inventory’’
                                            mandatory both the advising of ATF and                  transferor/sender FFL’s inventory. One                 to require licensees to report the theft or
                                            the re-entry of the located firearm into                commenter opposed the proposed rule                    loss of firearms after the firearms are no
                                            the A&D Record would help to improve                    on ‘‘philosophical[]’’ grounds, claiming               longer in the transferring FFL’s
                                            the accuracy of NTC data, which would                   that there is over-regulation of                       possession or on their premises; such an
                                            greatly assist law enforcement in solving               commerce by the United States in                       interpretation, the commenters argued,
                                            violent crimes and enhancing public                     general, and concluding that ‘‘any                     is at odds with the plain meaning of the
                                            safety.                                                 regulation of transactions involving                   word ‘‘inventory.’’ Citing Black’s Law
                                               The proposed rule would also reduce                  small arms are uniquely inappropriate a                Dictionary, two Merriam-Webster
                                            a licensee’s reporting burden to ATF for                subject for regulation by the national                 dictionaries, and the Internal Revenue
                                            the theft or loss of a registered NFA                   government because of the special                      Code, the commenters defined the term
                                            firearm by allowing submission of one                   provisions of the second amendment to                  ‘‘inventory’’ to mean that the goods in
                                            Form 3310.11 to meet the requirements                   the Constitution.’’                                    question must physically be held ‘‘on
                                            of 27 CFR 478.39a and 27 CFR 479.141.                      Another commenter opposed the                       hand’’ or ‘‘in stock.’’ The commenters
                                            Currently, if a licensee’s registered NFA               proposed rule because he believed that                 thus argued, in essence, that the
                                            firearm is lost or stolen, the licensee                 the rule’s imposition of the reporting                 reporting requirement in section
                                            prepares and submits Form 3310.11 to                    obligation on the transferring/sending                 923(g)(6) only applies to firearms stolen
                                            ATF’s NTC to comply with the 27 CFR                     FFL was at odds with ATF’s alleged                     or lost from the licensee personally or
                                            478.39a requirements, which specify                     ‘‘statement to the press’’ that the rule               from the licensee’s business premises.
                                            that Form 3310.11 be used. The licensee                 ‘‘applies to’’ carriers. He further stated             Another commenter stated that ATF
                                            also provides to ATF’s NFA Branch a                     that ‘‘[a]s written the regulation is ripe             lacks regulatory authority to impose best
                                            separate notification—typically in the                  for abuse, should be rewritten so that                 business practices on FFLs to monitor
                                            form of a letter—to comply with 27 CFR                  the ATF can understand its own intent.’’               shipments of firearms once the firearms
                                            479.141. The proposed rule would                        Another commenter noted that                           depart the FFLs’ facilities.
                                            revise 27 CFR 478.39a to stipulate that                 ‘‘[c]urrent ATF rules are clear regarding
                                            a licensee’s submission of a completed                  the manufacturer’s responsibility to                   Department Response
                                            Form 3310.11 to ATF for the theft or                    report lost or stolen firearms that are                  Congress delegated the authority to
                                            loss of a registered NFA firearm satisfies              under their control. The proposed new                  prescribe rules and regulations to carry
                                            the notification requirements under                     rule imposes an unrealistic burden on                  out the provisions of the GCA to the
                                            both 27 CFR 478.39a and 27 CFR                          manufacturers to report same after the                 Attorney General, who has delegated to
                                            479.141. This would reduce the FFLs’                    firearm has left its premise and has                   ATF the authority to investigate,
                                            reporting burden and help to ensure that                exited its disposition log.’’ One                      administer, and enforce those laws. See
                                            information about lost or stolen                        commenter stated that the ‘‘issue of                   28 U.S.C. 599A; 18 U.S.C. 926(a); 28
                                            registered NFA firearms is consistently                 firearms lost in transit does not need                 CFR 0.130(a). The Attorney General
                                            reported to ATF.                                        solving because it is not a problem,’’                 (and, derivatively, ATF) also has
                                               The comment period for Notice No.                    and that ATF is ‘‘trying to solve a                    authority, pursuant to 18 U.S.C.
                                            40P closed on November 10, 2014.                        problem that does not exist.’’ The                     923(g)(1)(A) and 923(g)(2), to
                                                                                                    following sections address the specific                promulgate regulations on how
                                            IV. Analysis of Comments and                            comments on the proposed rule.
                                            Department Response
                                                                                                    A. Legal Authority                                     shipment of firearms. See, e.g., Nonmailable
                                               All public comments were considered                                                                         Firearms Act of 1927, Public Law 69–583, 44 Stat.
                                            in preparing this final rule. In response               Comments Received                                      1059 (codified at 18 U.S.C. 1715) (restricting
                                            to Notice 40P, ATF received 14                                                                                 mailing and delivery of concealable firearms);
                                                                                                       Regarding the comment that the                      Federal Firearms Act of 1938, Public Law 75–785,
                                            comments. Comments were submitted                       transaction of small arms is not an                    52 Stat. 1250 (codified at 15 U.S.C. 901 et seq.)
                                            by individuals, corporations and other                  appropriate subject for regulation by the              (repealed 1968) (restricting interstate shipment of
                                            legal entities, FFLs, and trade                         national government because of the                     firearms).
                                            associations.                                           Second Amendment, the Department
                                                                                                                                                              4 See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570,

                                               Five commenters supported the                                                                               626–27 (2008) (‘‘[N]othing in [the Supreme Court’s]
                                                                                                    does not believe anything in this rule is              opinion [interpreting the Second Amendment]
                                            proposed rule. Commenters who agreed                    inconsistent with that constitutional
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                                                                                                                                                           should be taken to cast doubt on . . . laws
                                            with the proposed rule did so primarily                 amendment. Congress has long                           imposing conditions and qualifications on the
                                            because they believed that the                          regulated the transportation and                       commercial sale of arms.’’); United States v.
                                            implementation of the rule would help                                                                          Decastro, 682 F.3d 160, 168–69 (2d Cir. 2012)
                                                                                                    shipment of firearms,3 and courts have                 (statute prohibiting transporting into one’s state of
                                            stop the unreported theft or loss of                                                                           residence firearms acquired outside the state did
                                            firearms in transit. One commenter                        3 Long before enactment of the Gun Control Act       not infringe the right to keep and bear arms under
                                            agreed with the proposed rule in its                    of 1968, Congress imposed limitations on the           the Second Amendment).



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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 7 / Tuesday, January 12, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                1311

                                            licensees must maintain records of                        the context of Federal firearms                           Supreme Court has even held that a
                                            shipment, receipt, sale, or other                         regulation, a licensee’s ‘‘inventory’’ can,               farmer’s corn futures are considered the
                                            disposition of firearms. It is unlawful                   and does, include firearms that are not                   farmer’s ‘‘inventory’’ for tax purposes,
                                            under 18 U.S.C. 922(m) for licensees to                   either ‘‘on hand’’ or owned by the                        even though they are considered capital
                                            fail to make an appropriate entry in a                    licensee. For instance, FFLs may                          assets in the hands of a holding
                                            required record. Additionally, pursuant                   transport some or all of their firearms                   company. See Arkansas Best Corp. v.
                                            to 28 U.S.C. 599A, 18 U.S.C. 926(a), and                  away from a particular licensed                           Comm’r, 485 U.S. 212, 219–22 (1988).
                                            28 CFR 0.130(a), ATF has the authority                    premises—to a warehouse where the                            Given its many meanings, the
                                            and responsibility to interpret and                       firearms will be kept ‘‘solely for                        Department is of the view that the word
                                            enforce the GCA provisions prohibiting                    storage,’’ for example. See 27 CFR                        ‘‘inventory’’ is ambiguous, and that
                                            the theft of firearms. See 18 U.S.C.                      478.50(a). Or an FFL may have on hand                     Congress did not specifically intend—by
                                            922(i) (transporting or shipping stolen                   firearms that the FFL does not own, but                   use of the word—to deprive the
                                            firearms in interstate or foreign                         which have been pawned, consigned, or                     Department of the authority to require
                                            commerce), 922(j) (receiving,                             stored with the FFL by the firearms’                      FFLs to report the loss or theft of
                                            possessing, concealing, storing,                          owners. See 18 U.S.C. 921(a)(11)(C),                      firearms in transit. That view is
                                            bartering, selling, disposing, or pledging                921(a)(12).6 Similarly, licensed dealers                  supported by multiple dictionaries that
                                            or accepting as security for a loan any                   may have on hand firearms that they are                   define inventory broadly to encompass
                                            stolen firearm which has moved in, is                     repairing or configuring for the firearms’                any goods and articles that might
                                            moving in, or will move in interstate or                  owners. See 18 U.S.C. 921(a)(11)(B).                      appropriately be listed on an inventory.
                                            foreign commerce), 922(u) (stealing a                        Elsewhere in the law, physical                         See, e.g., 5 The Oxford English
                                            firearm that has been shipped or                          possession is often neither necessary                     Dictionary 453–54 (1978) (defining
                                            transported in interstate or foreign                      nor sufficient for something to be                        inventory broadly as, inter alia, ‘‘[t]he
                                            commerce from the person or premises                      counted as inventory. The section of the                  lot or stock of goods, etc., which are or
                                            of an FFL), 924(l) (stealing a firearm                    Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)                             may be made the subject of an
                                            which is moving in or has moved in                        governing secured transactions, for                       inventory’’); Funk & Wagnalls New
                                            interstate commerce), 924(m) (stealing a                  example, defines ‘‘inventory’’ to include                 Standard Dictionary of the English
                                            firearm from a licensee).                                 not only goods ‘‘held by a person,’’ but                  Language 1289 (1946) (defining
                                               The present rulemaking reflects ATF’s                  also goods ‘‘furnished by a person,’’ and                 inventory broadly as, inter alia,
                                            interpretation of the theft or loss                       ‘‘leased by a person,’’ irrespective of                   ‘‘[a]rticles which constitute or are to
                                            reporting requirement set forth in the                    who has them. U.C.C. 9–102(a)(48); see                    constitute the inventory’’). In light of the
                                            GCA, 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(6). Congress did                    also Matter of Watertown Tractor &                        range of items that can appear on an
                                            not define the term ‘‘inventory’’ or the                  Equip. Co., 289 NW.2d 288, 293–94                         inventory—for example, ‘‘the goods and
                                            phrase ‘‘from the licensee’s inventory’’                  (Wis. 1980) (holding that equipment                       chattels, rights and credits, and in some
                                            in 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(6) or elsewhere in                    constitutes a lessor’s ‘‘inventory’’ when                 cases, the land and tenements of a
                                            the GCA. Nor did Congress expressly                       in the possession of a lessee). The                       person or persons,’’ 2 Bouvier’s Law
                                            limit the licensee’s reporting obligation                                                                           Dictionary and Concise Encyclopedia
                                            to firearms that are lost or stolen from                  bankruptcy: ‘‘[p]ersonal property leased or               1681 (3d rev. 1914)—the word
                                                                                                      furnished, held for sale or lease, or to be furnished     ‘‘inventory’’ can be open-ended.
                                            the licensee’s premises: unlike 18 U.S.C.                 under a contract for service; raw materials, work in
                                                                                                                                                                   In the context of section 923(g)(6)
                                            922(u), for instance, which makes it                      process, or materials used or consumed in a
                                                                                                      business, including farm products such as crops or        specifically, the Department believes
                                            unlawful to steal ‘‘from the person or
                                                                                                      livestock’’); Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary           that the obligation to report lost or
                                            the premises of a person who is licensed                  (definition 1a: ‘‘an itemized list of current assets as   stolen ‘‘firearm[s] from the licensee’s
                                            . . . any firearm in the licensee’s                       (1): a catalog of the property of an individual or
                                                                                                                                                                inventory’’ is best understood to
                                            business inventory’’ (emphasis added),                    estate [or] (2): a list of goods on hand’’; definition
                                                                                                      1b: ‘‘a survey of natural resources’’; definition 3:      encompass firearms that are not yet in
                                            section 923(g)(6)’s reporting                             ‘‘the quantity of goods or materials on hand’’),          the physical possession of a transferee
                                            requirement is not limited to firearms                    http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/                that the transferor is best positioned to
                                            taken ‘‘from the person or premises’’ of                  inventory; 26 U.S.C. 865(i)(1), 1221(a)(1) (describing
                                                                                                      ‘‘inventory property’’ as ‘‘stock in trade of the
                                                                                                                                                                monitor and control. The Department
                                            the licensee.                                                                                                       believes that this interpretation of the
                                               Commenters argued that, in the                         taxpayer or other property of a kind which would
                                                                                                      properly be included in the inventory of the              word ‘‘inventory’’ is consistent with the
                                            absence of a statutory definition of the                  taxpayer if on hand at the close of the taxable year,     flexible, context-specific character of the
                                            word ‘‘inventory,’’ the Department must                   or property held by the taxpayer primarily for sale
                                                                                                      to customers in the ordinary course of his trade or
                                                                                                                                                                term as used elsewhere in the law.
                                            use the word’s plain or ordinary                                                                                       Further, it is more logical—and more
                                                                                                      business’’).
                                            meaning, and they offered various                            6 See also Firearms Transaction Record, ATF Rul.       consistent with the GCA scheme—to
                                            definitions culled from a few sources in                  76–15 (July1976) (recordkeeping requirements for          consider an in-transit firearm as part of
                                            an effort to elucidate what that meaning                  pawned firearms); Engaging in the Business of             the shipping FFL’s inventory and
                                            is. But rather than revealing a clear                     Dealing in Firearms (Auctioneers), ATF Rul. 96–2
                                                                                                                                                                thereby place the reporting obligation
                                            commonality, the definitions in the                       (Sept. 1996) (auctioneers must obtain a license as
                                                                                                      a dealer to take possession of firearms consigned for     on the transferor/sender licensee rather
                                            commenters’ cited sources instead show                    auction); ATF, Federal Firearms Licensee Quick            than the firearm’s intended recipient.
                                            that the word ‘‘inventory’’ can take on                   Reference and Best Practices Guide, ATF Pub. No.          The GCA scheme relies on firearms
                                            slightly different meanings suited to the                 5300.15, at 8 (rev. Aug. 2010) (all firearms
                                                                                                      acquisitions must be documented in the A&D book,          dealers to control commerce in firearms.
                                            particular contexts in which it used.5 In                 including pawned and consignment firearms),               See Huddleston v. United States, 415
                                              5 See Black’s Law Dictionary 901–02 (9th ed.
                                                                                                      https://www.atf.gov/file/58676/download; Return of        U.S. 814, 824 (1974) (‘‘The principal
                                                                                                      Firearms Received for Appraisal, FFL Newsletter           agent of federal enforcement [of laws
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                                            2009) (first definition: ‘‘[a] detailed list of assets;   (ATF, Washington, DC), Apr. 2015, at 4 (licensees
                                            esp., an executor’s or administrator’s detailed list of   must record firearms received for appraisal as a          regulating interstate commerce in
                                            the probate-estate assets’’; second definition, as        transaction on ATF Form 4473), https://                   firearms] is the dealer.’’). The
                                            used in accounting: ‘‘[t]he portion of a financial        www.atf.gov/file/11691/download; Shot Show Q &            transferors/senders covered by this rule
                                            statement reflecting the value of a business’s raw        A, FFL Newsletter (ATF, Washington, DC), Jan.
                                            materials, works-in-progress, and finished                2007, at 7, Q9 (licensees must treat firearms
                                                                                                                                                                will be licensees who are subject to the
                                            products’’; third definition: ‘‘[r]aw materials or        received for storage as acquisitions), https://           reporting requirement under section
                                            goods in stock’’; fourth definition, as used in           www.atf.gov/file/56436/download.                          923(g)(6)—but not every intended


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                                            1312               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 7 / Tuesday, January 12, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                            recipient in firearms transactions will                 transferee or transferor arranges the                  purchasers, the firearms could
                                            necessarily be a licensee. Thus, placing                shipment, the transferor will know how                 potentially end up in the hands of
                                            the reporting obligation on the                         and when the firearms were shipped.                    criminals, and would not be traceable if
                                            transferor/sender licensee ensures that,                Moreover, if a firearm is stolen or lost               later used in crimes.
                                            for every firearm transaction, there will               in transit, the notation in the                           Finally, the Department’s interpreting
                                            be an FFL responsible for reporting any                 transferor’s/sender’s acquisition and                  the phrase ‘‘firearm[s] from the
                                            discovered thefts or losses that occur                  disposition book indicating the firearm                licensee’s inventory’’ to encompass
                                            along the way. The Department believes                  was disposed of to a particular                        firearms that a licensee has placed in
                                            that this will ensure more consistent                   transferee/buyer would be inaccurate.                  transit accords with the congressional
                                            reporting of stolen or lost firearms,                      The Department’s interpretation that                intent behind the GCA more generally.
                                            thereby fulfilling the GCA’s purpose of                 in-transit firearms remain in the                      The GCA is a comprehensive statutory
                                            ‘‘strengthen[ing] Federal regulation of                 transferring/sending FFL’s ‘‘inventory’’               scheme designed to closely track the
                                            interstate firearms traffic,’’ H.R. Rep. No.            for purposes of section 923(g)(6) is                   acquisition and disposition of firearms
                                            90–1577, at 7 (1968), and furthering the                further supported by the fact that an                  to ensure that firearms do not fall into
                                            aim of the Violent Crime Control and                    FFL’s delivery of firearms to a common                 the hands of criminals, and so that the
                                            Law Enforcement Act of 1994 to                          or contract carrier for transport does not             firearms can be traced if later found to
                                            ‘‘enhance public safety,’’ H.R. Rep. No.                result in a ‘‘disposition’’ or ‘‘transfer’’            have been used in crime. Accordingly,
                                            103–711, at 1 (1994) (Conf. Rep.).                      unless and until the firearms are                      section 923(g)(6) mandates that ‘‘[e]ach
                                               In reaching its interpretation of                    received by the transferee. The                        licensee shall report the theft or loss of
                                            923(g)(6)’s reporting mandate, the                      Department does not believe that the                   a firearm from the licensee’s inventory
                                            Department considered whether the                       GCA scheme, which sets forth                           or collection.’’ To be sure, Congress did
                                            ‘‘inventory’’ determination should be                   procedures for conveying firearms by                   not specifically address whether
                                            made in accordance with the variable                    carriers,7 supports the conclusion that                licensees must report the theft or loss of
                                            approach of the UCC regarding the                       delivering firearms to the carrier for                 firearms in transit once the licensee
                                            transfer of title for risk of loss purposes.            transport is a ‘‘transfer’’ or ‘‘disposition’’         ships the firearm to another recipient.
                                            The Department determined that neither                  to that carrier. Under the GCA and                     Nor did Congress address how those
                                            the text nor the purpose of the GCA                     current regulations, the carrier is not                firearms must be recorded in the
                                            counseled in favor of adopting the UCC                  said to maintain an ‘‘inventory’’ of                   transferor/sender FFL’s acquisition and
                                            approach to determining in whose                        firearms, and the disposition records of               disposition records. But the text of
                                            ‘‘inventory’’ a firearm belongs. As                     the transferring FFL do not reflect the                923(g)(6) does not foreclose the
                                            explained in the proposed rule, the UCC                 carrier as a person to whom firearms are               Department’s interpretation of the term
                                            approach focuses on the ownership of                    disposed. If an FFL’s submission of                    ‘‘inventory.’’ And the final rule
                                            the goods being shipped for the                         firearms to a carrier were a                           reasonably answers the questions left
                                            purposes of allocating the risk of loss,                ‘‘disposition’’ or ‘‘transfer,’’ such an               unaddressed by Congress by
                                            but the primary focus of the GCA and                    interpretation would lead to results that              interpreting the reporting requirement
                                            its implementing regulations is, instead,               Congress very likely did not intend.                   to include a firearm stolen or lost from
                                            the tracking of the acquisition and                     Specifically, the transferring FFL would               the licensee’s inventory while in transit
                                            disposition of firearms. Accordingly—                   be required to treat carriers like any                 with a carrier, and by providing
                                            and as the Department will explain in                   other unlicensed person by: (1) Having                 guidance on how FFLs must update
                                            further detail below—the Department is                  an employee of the carrier complete                    their records in such situations.
                                            of the view that the statutory obligation               ATF Form 4473 prior to receiving any                   Adopting a contrary interpretation of
                                            on firearms licensees to report a theft or              firearms for shipment; 8 (2) checking                  the statutory language to the effect that
                                            loss should not turn on technicalities of               identification and conducting                          thefts or losses of firearms in transit
                                            commercial law regarding whether the                    background checks on the carrier’s                     need not be reported by any FFL, on the
                                            seller or buyer has title to, or bears the              employees; 9 (3) recording bound book                  theory that firearms in transit should
                                            risk of loss of, the shipped firearms.                  entries as dispositions to the carrier,                not be deemed to be part of the
                                               Instead, under the final rule, the theft             rather than to the actual transferees or               transferor/seller’s inventory nor part of
                                            or loss reporting requirement will                      purchasers of the firearms; 10 and (4)                 the intended recipient’s inventory,
                                            always remain with the transferor/                      possibly completing multiple sales or                  would operate to defeat the statutory
                                            sender FFL, who will know how and                       other disposition reports when                         goal of reporting thefts and losses of
                                            when firearms sent to the transferee                    applicable.11 Moreover, unless similar                 firearms. Commenters who oppose the
                                            were shipped. As the Department                         disposition requirements were also                     rule have offered no persuasive reason
                                            reasoned in the 2014 NPRM, the                          imposed on the carriers’ subsequent                    why Congress would have intended in-
                                            transferee will have an incentive to                    transfer of the firearms to their                      transit stolen or lost firearms to go
                                            notify the transferor about any                                                                                unreported once a licensee discovers the
                                            discrepancies in the shipment because                      7 See 18 U.S.C. 922(e) (requiring notice to the
                                                                                                                                                           theft or loss, and the Department sees
                                            the transferee would not want to pay for                common or contract carrier of firearms being
                                                                                                    transported or shipped), 922(f) (prohibiting           none.
                                            an item the transferee did not actually                 common or contract carriers from violating the            For all those reasons, the
                                            receive. Upon being contacted by the                    GCA, and requiring them to obtain acknowledgment       Department’s determination that the
                                            transferee about a shipment                             of receipt of packages containing firearms); 27 CFR    statutory obligation to report ‘‘the theft
                                            discrepancy, the transferor FFL will be                 478.31 (same); Open Letter to All Common and
                                                                                                    Contract Carriers from John W. Magaw, Director,        or loss of a firearm from the licensee’s
                                            in the best position to verify the theft or             ATF (Jan. 1, 1994), http://www.nibin.gov/press/        inventory’’ in section 923(g)(6)
                                            loss by reviewing its transaction records               releases/historical/010194-openletter-contract-        encompasses an obligation to report the
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                                            and the shipping information from the                   carriers.html.
                                                                                                                                                           theft or loss of a firearm that the
                                                                                                       8 See 18 U.S.C. 922(b)(5), 923(g)(1)(A); 27 CFR
                                            carrier. The transferor could also be in                                                                       licensee has shipped amounts to a
                                                                                                    478.124(c).
                                            a position to discover that the                            9 See 18 U.S.C. 922(t)(1); 27 CFR 478.102.          reasonable construction of the GCA.12
                                            discrepancy was instead due to                             10 See 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(1)(A); 27 CFR 478.122(d),
                                            recordkeeping or other human error.                     478.123(d), 478.125(e).                                  12 The Department acknowledges its previous

                                            Indeed, regardless of whether the                          11 See 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(3)(A); 27 CFR 478.126a.     statements that section 923(g)(6) does not address



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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 7 / Tuesday, January 12, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                           1313

                                               With regard to the comment                             shipping FFL usually sends a                          loss of regulated goods in transit. For
                                            concerning ATF’s authority to require                     replacement firearm.                                  example, since 1974, the Drug
                                            ‘‘best practices’’ to monitor shipments of                   Even if the commenter’s factual                    Enforcement Administration (DEA) has
                                            firearms once the shipments depart the                    assertion were proven correct, however,               required by rule that suppliers—i.e.,
                                            FFL’s facility, the final rule does not                   the Department would nonetheless                      transferors—are responsible for
                                            require FFLs to monitor their                             adhere to the position it expressed in                reporting in-transit losses of controlled
                                            shipments. Again, FFLs will only be                       the proposed rule that the UCC should                 substances by common or contract
                                            required to report thefts and losses once                 not be used to determine the                          carriers upon discovery of the theft or
                                            they discover a theft or loss.                            responsibility for reporting thefts and               loss. See 21 CFR 1301.74(c). The DEA
                                                                                                      losses of firearms in transit. Adopting               also imposes a duty on suppliers to
                                            B. Commercial Business Practices                          the variable UCC approach for reporting               select common or contract carriers that
                                            Comments Received                                         firearms stolen or lost in transit would              provide adequate security to guard
                                                                                                      be problematic for FFLs to apply and for              against in-transit losses, see 21 CFR
                                               One commenter argued that the                          ATF to enforce. Instead of being able to              1301.74(e), and to report theft and loss
                                            proposed rule is inconsistent with                        follow a single, consistent rule holding              information to the DEA on a standard
                                            established commercial business                           the transferor FFL responsible for                    form, see 21 CFR 1301.74(c), to help the
                                            practices. Citing U.C.C. 2–319, the                       reporting stolen or lost firearms in every            DEA to determine the patterns and
                                            commenter asserted that ‘‘firearms are                    transaction (should a theft or loss be                methods of diversion of controlled
                                            almost universally shipped ‘F.O.B.                        discovered), FFLs in a transaction                    substances. See 38 FR 31840 (Nov. 19,
                                            Factory,’ ’’ indicating that once physical                would need to examine each individual                 1973) (proposed rule); 39 FR 26022 (July
                                            custody has passed at the place of                        contract to determine who has the                     16, 1974) (final rule); see generally Larry
                                            shipment, so has legal title to the                       reporting responsibility. For that same               K. Houck, The Drug Enforcement
                                            firearms and risk of loss.                                reason, it would be impracticable for                 Administration’s Final Rule on Theft
                                                                                                      ATF to ensure regulatory reporting                    and Significant Loss Reporting: We Can
                                            Department Response                                       compliance under the variable UCC                     See More Clearly Now, 61 Food & Drug
                                                                                                      approach.                                             L.J. 1 (2006). ATF believes that many of
                                               The Department disputes the                               The UCC does not address whether a
                                            commenter’s factual assertion that                                                                              the arguments informing DEA’s decision
                                                                                                      merchant must report thefts or losses of              to require suppliers to notify DEA of in-
                                            firearms ‘‘are almost universally                         goods in transit; rather, the UCC
                                            shipped ‘F.O.B. Factory.’ ’’ The                                                                                transit thefts and losses are applicable to
                                                                                                      approach focuses on the ownership of                  this rulemaking.
                                            Department believes that transferor/                      the goods being shipped and allocating
                                            sender FFLs generally select the means                    the risk of loss for purposes of                      C. Method of Reporting Theft or Loss of
                                            by which the firearms in their inventory                  commercial law. By contrast, the                      Firearms
                                            are shipped and secure insurance from                     primary focus of the GCA and its
                                            the carriers for the value of the firearms.                                                                     Comments Received
                                                                                                      implementing regulations is on the
                                            While these costs may be passed along                     acquisition, disposition, and misuse of                  Five commenters supported the
                                            to buyers in the purchase contracts, the                  firearms in service of public safety                  requirement to report a theft or loss of
                                            Department believes that in many, if not                  objectives. See United States v. One                  firearms in transit in part or in the
                                            most, cases, the transferor/sender FFL is                 Assortment of 89 Firearms, 465 U.S.                   requirement’s entirety. One commenter
                                            legally responsible for any losses                        354, 364 (1984) (‘‘In enacting the 1968               supported the use of Form 3310.11 to
                                            incurred in transit. This is because                      gun control legislation, Congress was                 report the theft or loss of firearms in
                                            many, if not most, firearm purchase                       concerned with the widespread traffic                 transit to simultaneously meet the
                                            contracts require delivery at a specified                 in firearms and with their general                    requirements of §§ 478.39a and 479.141.
                                            destination.13 For this reason, if a                      availability to those whose possession                Another commenter supported the
                                            firearm is lost or stolen in transit, the                 thereof was contrary to the public                    requirement that FFLs notify local
                                                                                                      interest.’’ (internal quotation marks                 authorities as well as ATF, stating that
                                            the reporting of thefts or losses of firearms in          omitted)); Barrett v. United States, 423              ‘‘[t]his is a very serious issue and the
                                            interstate shipments. See ATF, Safety and Security        U.S. 212, 220 (1976) (‘‘The history of the            more authorities that are notified of the
                                            Information for Federal Firearms Licensees, ATF           1968 Act reflects a . . . concern with                issue, the more likely it is to be
                                            Pub. No. 3317.2, at 1 (rev. Feb. 2010), https://
                                            www.atf.gov/file/58656/download; FFL or Interstate        keeping firearms out of the hands of                  resolved.’’ The same commenter also
                                            Theft Procedures and Information, FFL Newsletter          categories of potentially irresponsible               agreed that transferring/sending FFLs
                                            (ATF, Washington, DC), Aug. 1998, at 5, https://          persons . . . . Its broadly stated                    should have the responsibility to report
                                            www.atf.gov/file/56391/download. To the extent            principal purpose was ‘to make it                     a theft or loss of a firearm in transit
                                            that the Department’s prior statements, or ones like
                                            it, can be understood as the Department taking a
                                                                                                      possible to keep firearms out of the                  because a transferring/sending FFL has
                                            position inconsistent with the interpretation of          hands of those not legally entitled to                access to the shipping history and,
                                            923(g)(6) set forth in this final rule, the Department    possess them . . . .’ ’’ (quoting S. Rep.             therefore, should have better knowledge
                                            is ‘‘at liberty to depart from its longstanding           No. 1501, at 22 (1968))); H.R. Rep. No.               of the firearm’s whereabouts and would
                                            interpretation of a statute’’ so long as it ‘‘provides
                                            a reasoned explanation for its decision.’’ TRT
                                                                                                      103–711, at 1 (the 1994 amendments                    be able to ‘‘effectively report’’ the theft
                                            Telecomms. Corp. v. FCC, 857 F.2d 1535, 1550 (D.C.        were intended to ‘‘enhance public                     or loss of the firearm.
                                            Cir. 1988); see also FCC v. Fox Television Stations,      safety’’). The Department thus interprets                Two commenters made statements to
                                            Inc., 556 U.S. 502, 514–15 (2009). The Department         the GCA to impose reporting and                       the effect that ‘‘[t]he updated regulations
                                            has explained above why it now interprets the term                                                              will help strengthen our nation[’s]
                                            ‘‘inventory’’ in 923(g)(6) to encompass firearms that
                                                                                                      recordkeeping requirements on
                                                                                                      licensees in certain circumstances                    ability to track firearms that are lost or
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                                            an FFL has shipped.
                                               13 See U.C.C. 2–401(2) (‘‘Unless otherwise             regardless of whether the licensee has                stolen while in transit’’ and that a single
                                            explicitly agreed title passes to the buyer at the time   title to, or bears the risk of loss of, the           method of reporting such thefts and
                                            and place at which the seller completes his               firearm in question.                                  losses to ATF and local authorities
                                            performance with reference to the physical delivery
                                            of the goods . . . [and] if the contract requires
                                                                                                         Other Federal agency regulations                   should be adopted. Although those two
                                            delivery at destination, title passes on tender           support the conclusion that transferors               commenters supported notification of
                                            there.’’)                                                 should be required to report the theft or             theft or loss by the transferring/sending


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                                            1314               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 7 / Tuesday, January 12, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                            FFL, they suggested that the                            would be refused is greatly reduced.                   or a theft or loss at the licensed
                                            requirement to inform local law                         More specifically, if the location of the              premises, rather than a theft or loss in
                                            enforcement of shipping losses or                       loss or theft is known, the local law                  transit. To be sure, ATF has long
                                            suspected thefts should be eliminated                   enforcement agency at that location                    encouraged carriers to file theft and loss
                                            because many local authorities often                    would be the ‘‘appropriate local                       reports and issued ATF Form 3310.6,
                                            refuse to take the report. They also                    authorit[y].’’ Otherwise, the transferor/              Interstate Firearms Shipment Theft/Loss
                                            suggested that the requirement to make                  sender should report the theft or loss to              Report, to assist carriers in reporting.
                                            a report to local authorities should be                 the local law enforcement agency at the                However, ATF considers such reporting
                                            clarified because, as one commenter put                 shipper’s location—the same agency the                 merely voluntary, not clearly required
                                            it, currently the regulation is                         FFL would contact in the event of any                  by statute.
                                            ‘‘particularly vague about who exactly                  other missing or stolen property. Not                     Regarding the comment alleging that
                                            the appropriate local authorities would                 only does the theft or loss report                     ATF made a conflicting statement to the
                                            be. If a firearm is being shipped from                  provide local law enforcement officers                 press to the effect that this rulemaking
                                            Philadelphia to Orlando and it gets lost                with the information necessary to                      would apply to ‘‘the carriers’’ rather
                                            in Atlanta[,] who are the proper local                  commence an investigation to pursue                    than FFLs, ATF has not been able to
                                            authorities to contact?’’ Another                       the offenders and locate the property,                 locate any such statement. Both the
                                            commenter suggested that reporting to                   such reporting may also assist the FFL                 2000 and 2014 proposed rules
                                            local authorities could be simplified by                in filing an insurance claim to recover                consistently identified the transferor/
                                            updating Form 3310.11 to be applicable                  the value of the firearms. Because the                 sender licensee as the person who
                                            for both ATF and local authorities.                     Department agrees with the commenters
                                                                                                                                                           would be responsible for reporting
                                               Several commenters who opposed the                   that clarification concerning local
                                                                                                                                                           thefts and losses of firearms in transit.
                                            proposed rule did so based on the claim                 authority reporting would provide
                                            that, once a firearm is logged out of the               helpful guidance to licensees, the rule                D. Burden on FFLs To Report and
                                            transferring/sending FFL’s A&D Record,                  has been modified accordingly.                         Update Records
                                            it is no longer the responsibility of that                 The Department does not agree with
                                            FFL. One commenter asserted that the                    one commenter’s suggestion that                        Comments Received
                                            shipping companies instead have                         common or contract carriers should be                     One commenter agreed with the basic
                                            responsibility for the shipment and                     held legally responsible under this rule               process outlined in the proposed rule,
                                            should therefore be required to report                  for reporting the theft or loss of firearms            but stated that the rule should clarify
                                            any in-transit thefts or losses.                        while in transit. The commenter who                    the type of shipping documents the
                                               Three commenters had practical                       proposed that the reporting obligation                 transferring FFL must retain and for
                                            concerns about the transferor/sender                    lie with the carriers did not cite any                 how long. Additionally, the commenter
                                            licensee bearing the responsibility to                  statutory authority under which such a                 suggested that the proposed time frame
                                            report the theft or loss of a firearm in                requirement could be imposed.                          for licensees to update their A&D
                                            transit because, even though a                          Congress did not ignore the role of                    Records to reflect a theft or loss—‘‘7
                                            transferor/sender might receive                         common or contract carriers in firearms                days following discovery of the theft or
                                            confirmation that the firearms were                     transactions in the GCA. For example, it               loss’’—be extended to a longer term.
                                            delivered, such confirmation might not                  is unlawful for a common or contract                   The same commenter also
                                            reflect whether the full amount of                      carrier to transport or deliver any                    recommended that disposition entries
                                            firearms was received; that discrepancy                 firearm shipment in violation of the                   for shipped items not be entered into
                                            might only become apparent once the                     GCA, or to deliver a firearm without                   the A&D Record until the shipment has
                                            recipient compares the shipping invoice                 obtaining written acknowledgment of                    been received (by the transferee) or
                                            to the specific firearms ordered. Those                 receipt. See 18 U.S.C. 922(f)(1)–(2). Yet              declared lost (by the carrier). The
                                            commenters stated that the transferee in                Congress did not impose any express                    commenter asked for clarification on
                                            such a situation would be in a better                   requirement on carriers to report the                  when the ‘‘discovery’’ of the theft or loss
                                            position to know and report whether a                   theft or loss of firearms they transport.
                                                                                                                                                           occurs if the transferor/sender is waiting
                                            firearm was received. The commenters                    If Congress had intended that the theft
                                                                                                                                                           for proof of delivery to make a ‘‘final
                                            explained that the transferee would                     or loss of firearms in transit be reported
                                                                                                                                                           disposition entry.’’ The commenter
                                            have more incentive to report a firearm                 by carriers, it likely would have drafted
                                                                                                                                                           further suggested that maintaining the
                                            shipment stolen or lost because                         the law to state that requirement and
                                                                                                                                                           complete electronic tracking record
                                            businesses are not in the habit of paying               specify the carriers’ responsibility to file
                                                                                                                                                           would be a good idea, but that the
                                            for products they do not actually                       reports.
                                                                                                       Instead, the GCA’s scheme relies on                 licensee should be able to dispose of the
                                            receive.
                                                                                                    firearms dealers to control commerce in                records a week after the carrier’s
                                            Department Response                                     firearms and places the burden of                      tracking system (or the recipient’s
                                               The reporting statute, 18 U.S.C.                     reporting stolen and lost firearms on                  acknowledgment) indicates that the
                                            923(g)(6), requires FFLs to report the                  licensees. As we have explained, it is                 shipment has been received, because
                                            theft or loss of firearms from their                    reasonable to interpret the phrase ‘‘from              otherwise the paperwork could become
                                            inventories or collections not only to the              the licensee’s inventory’’ to require                  burdensome.
                                            Attorney General (delegated to ATF) but                 transferor/sender licensees to report the                 Another commenter argued that no
                                            also to ‘‘the appropriate local                         thefts or losses of firearms they have                 signature should be required for a
                                            authorities.’’ Thus, as a statutory                     placed in transit. In addition, the                    shipment and that the rule should not
                                            requirement, the report must be                         transferor/sender FFL is in the best                   require proof of delivery to be retained.
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                                            submitted to such local authorities even                position to verify the theft or loss by                The commenter explained that ‘‘[t]his
                                            if it is refused. The Department believes               reviewing its records and the shipping                 burden should not fall on the shipping
                                            that if the report is made to the local                 information from the carrier that was                  [FFL],’’ because ‘‘someone acting
                                            authorities with proper jurisdiction over               utilized. The transferor/sender FFL may                nefariously on the receiving end could
                                            the incident (i.e., the ‘‘appropriate’’                 also discover that the discrepancy is due              refute any signature or proof of delivery
                                            authorities), the chance that the report                to a recordkeeping or other human error,               very easily.’’


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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 7 / Tuesday, January 12, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                           1315

                                               Another commenter opposed the rule                   firearms and obtain compensation for                   tracing firearms. They suggested that the
                                            on the basis that the transferor/sender                 their losses.                                          costs of imposing the reporting
                                            cannot know that the firearm has been                      Licensees will have up to 7 days to                 requirement on licensees exceed any
                                            stolen or lost in transit until the                     reflect the theft or loss of the firearm               benefits to law enforcement.
                                            intended recipient or the carrier notifies              with a correct disposition entry in the
                                                                                                                                                           Department Response
                                            the transferor/sender, and the                          A&D Record. This is consistent with the
                                            commenter did not know what would                       longstanding firearms disposition                         The moment the theft of a firearm
                                            constitute notification. The same                       reporting requirement for licensed                     occurs, the firearm has been diverted to
                                            commenter further asserted that if FFLs                 dealers under 27 CFR 478.125(e). ATF                   an illegal channel and is a threat to
                                            are to timely report theft or loss of                   understands that there will be instances               public safety. The knowledge that a
                                            firearms in transit they must rely upon                 in which licensees must make                           particular firearm has been diverted is
                                            shipping companies to ‘‘provide                         corrections to the existing disposition                important to law enforcement at the
                                            accurate information.’’                                 information in their A&D Records to                    local and Federal levels. A law
                                               Two other commenters believed that                   reflect the theft or loss of firearms. In              enforcement agency cannot charge a
                                            imposing the burden on                                  those instances, the FFL should draw a                 suspect in possession of a firearm with
                                            manufacturers—particularly those that                   single line through the disposition                    a theft if there is no information that the
                                            ship thousands of firearms—to report                    information. If there is room in the                   firearm was stolen. An agency may not
                                            the theft or loss of firearms no longer                 disposition block, the FFL should                      retain a firearm from a suspect if there
                                            under the manufacturers’ control would                  record the date of the theft or loss, the              is no information that the property was
                                            be unrealistic. As one commenter                        ATF-Issued Incident Number, and the                    stolen. And an agency that has retained
                                            complained, ‘‘The resulting logistical                  local authority Incident Number. The                   such a firearm cannot return the firearm
                                            burden would be enormous, and require                   licensee should then initial and date the              to its rightful owner if there is no
                                            an estimated 2–3 full time personnel to                 changes. Alternatively, if there is no                 information about who the rightful
                                            manually track, log and store                           room in the disposition block to legibly               owner might be. Without proper
                                            documentation related to the hundreds                   record the required information, the FFL               reporting of thefts, law enforcement may
                                            or thousands of open orders on any                      should line-out the disposition                        not be able link the person(s) who stole
                                            given day.’’ Another commenter                          information and initial and date the                   the firearm with the suspect who
                                            projected that ATF’s estimated time of                  change. The FFL should then make a                     ultimately is found in possession of the
                                                                                                    new entry in the next available line in                firearm.
                                            24 minutes to complete Form 3310.11
                                                                                                                                                              In addition, even where a report is
                                            was too low.                                            the current A&D Record. In that case,
                                                                                                                                                           made to local law enforcement, in-
                                                                                                    the FFL must enter a reference to the
                                            Department Response                                                                                            transit shipments often result in
                                                                                                    new book, page, and line number in the
                                                                                                                                                           interstate or cross-jurisdictional
                                              In light of comments received, the                    disposition side of the updated record,
                                                                                                                                                           activities. Such activities are the
                                            Department has chosen not to                            and use the new entry to record the date
                                                                                                                                                           purview of Federal law enforcement,
                                            implement a recordkeeping requirement                   of the theft or loss, the ATF-Issued
                                                                                                                                                           which is designed to bridge
                                            related to shipment and delivery                        Incident Number, and the local                         jurisdictional gaps and provide assets
                                            paperwork at this time. While the 2000                  authority Incident Number.                             not available to local law enforcement.
                                            proposed rule would have required                          Though the number of responding
                                                                                                                                                           ATF has found patterns in thefts in
                                            FFLs to establish commercial business                   FFLs will grow due to the expansion of
                                                                                                                                                           interstate shipments that can only be
                                            practices to verify delivery, this final                the reporting requirements, the estimate
                                                                                                                                                           developed through the examination of
                                            rule does not require licensees to track                of 24 minutes’ average completion time                 aggregate data. This data often includes
                                            shipments or receive verification of                    for Form 3310.11 will not increase.                    seemingly separate and unrelated
                                            receipt. There is only a reporting                      Form 3310.11 has been utilized since                   individual incidents of theft over a
                                            requirement once the transferor/sender                  1994 for the reporting of firearms thefts              period of time, which, when analyzed in
                                            FFL discovers that one or more firearms                 and losses and this rulemaking makes                   the aggregate, reveal commonalities that
                                            have been lost or stolen in transit. As                 no significant changes to Form 3310.11                 allow ATF to dismantle larger criminal
                                            stated previously, the FFL’s discovery                  that would lead to an increase in the                  schemes. This process is highly
                                            may come from contact with the                          time required to complete it.                          dependent upon the collection of
                                            intended recipient, the common or                                                                              accurate interstate shipment theft
                                                                                                    E. Benefit to Law Enforcement
                                            contract carrier, a witness, or some other                                                                     information.
                                            person. In accordance with section                      Comments Received                                         In FY 2015, 313 firearms that
                                            923(g)(6), licensees are required to                       One commenter supported the                         interstate carriers had voluntarily
                                            report the theft or loss in transit to ATF              proposed rule because the rule ‘‘would                 reported as lost or stolen were recovered
                                            and appropriate local authorities within                close a loophole in federal regulations                and traced by law enforcement agencies.
                                            48 hours after discovery.14 The                         that lets thousands of lost and stolen                 In the past 5 years, 25 firearms that
                                            Department believes that, in many                       guns go unreported.’’ The commenter                    interstate carriers had voluntarily
                                            cases, transferor/sender FFLs are                       believed that if FFLs were required to                 reported as lost or stolen were recovered
                                            already reporting such thefts and losses                promptly report guns lost and stolen,                  and traced and the recovering agency
                                            to law enforcement authorities and                      illegal gun trafficking would be                       reported that they were engaged in a
                                            insurance companies to recover the                      curtailed and guns would be kept out of                homicide investigation involving the
                                              14 For further guidance concerning the discovery
                                                                                                    the hands of dangerous criminals.                      recovered firearm. Carriers voluntarily
                                                                                                       Several commenters asserted that                    reported that information to ATF, and
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                                            and reporting of stolen and lost firearms, see ATF,
                                            Safety and Security Information for Federal             requiring the reporting of firearms                    those numbers do not reflect the
                                            Firearms Licensees, ATF Pub. No. 3317.2 (rev. Feb.      stolen or lost in transit would not lead               additional amount of firearms lost or
                                            2010), https://www.atf.gov/file/58656/download;         to any appreciable benefits. They                      stolen in transit that will be reported to
                                            Open Letter to All Federal Firearms Licensees from
                                            Carson W. Carroll, Assistant Director, Enforcement
                                                                                                    questioned whether such reporting                      ATF by FFLs pursuant to this rule. Such
                                            Programs & Services, ATF (Jan. 14, 2009), https://      would make ATF or local police more                    additional reporting will allow law
                                            www.atf.gov/file/60871/download.                        successful in an investigation or in                   enforcement to open more criminal


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                                            1316               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 7 / Tuesday, January 12, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                            investigations to locate criminals, deter               ‘‘significant regulatory action’’ under                theft or loss involves a registered NFA
                                            thefts, and promote better controls by                  Executive Order 12866, section (f), and                firearm. Currently, as discussed in
                                            carriers to prevent losses. This                        accordingly this final rule has been                   section I, a licensee must submit Form
                                            additional reporting should also result                 reviewed by the Office of Management                   3310.11 to NTC to comply with 27 CFR
                                            in the return of more lost or stolen                    and Budget. However, this final rule                   478.39a and, if the licensee is the person
                                            firearms to their rightful owners.                      will not have an annual effect on the                  who lost the firearm, provide additional
                                               In addition to ensuring that thefts and              economy of $100 million or more; nor                   notification to the NFA Branch to
                                            losses of firearms are reported, the                    will it adversely affect in a material way             comply with 27 CFR 479.141. Under
                                            procedures outlined in this rule seek to                the economy, a sector of the economy,                  this final rule, to meet the 27 CFR
                                            eliminate redundancy in reporting. By                   productivity, competition, jobs, the                   478.39a requirements, a licensee must
                                            designating the transferor/sender FFL as                environment, public health or safety, or               complete and submit Form 3310.11 to
                                            the required reporting party, confusion                 State, local, or tribal governments or                 NTC. If the theft or loss involves a
                                            about who needs to report the incident                  communities. Accordingly, this final                   registered NFA firearm, NTC will notify
                                            will be reduced.                                        rule is not an ‘‘economically                          the NFA Branch. This will satisfy the 27
                                                                                                    significant’’ rulemaking under Executive               CFR 479.141 notification requirements;
                                            V. Final Rule                                           Order 12866.                                           licensees will no longer have to submit
                                               This final rule adopts, with minor                      Executive Orders 12866 and 13563                    additional notification about NFA
                                            changes, the proposed amendment to 27                   both direct agencies to assess costs and               firearms to ATF.
                                            CFR 478.39a requiring the transferor/                   benefits of available regulatory                          Although there is no definite count of
                                            sender FFL to notify ATF and the                        alternatives and, if regulation is                     the total number of firearms that were
                                            appropriate local authorities when a                    necessary, to select regulatory                        lost or stolen in transit, ATF can
                                            firearm is stolen or lost in transit. For               approaches that maximize net benefits                  provide an estimate based on tracing
                                            purposes of this final rule, the                        (including potential economic,                         data. From FY 2010 through FY 2014,
                                            Department considers the U.S. Postal                    environmental, public health and safety                there was an average of 1,333 crime gun
                                            Service a ‘‘common or contract carrier.’’               effects, distributive impacts, and                     traces per year where the firearm was
                                            Therefore, the regulatory text of the                   equity). Executive Order 13563                         traced back to an FFL that claimed it
                                            proposed § 478.39a(a)(2) is amended to                  emphasizes the importance of                           never received the firearm allegedly
                                            read as: ‘‘common or contract carrier                   quantifying both costs and benefits, of                shipped to it, but no theft or loss was
                                            (which for purposes of this paragraph                   reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,                  reported to ATF.15 ATF recognizes that
                                            includes the U.S. Postal Service).’’                    and of promoting flexibility. The                      this figure may include some firearms
                                               Upon the effective date of this final                Department has assessed the costs and                  lost or stolen at licensed premises while
                                            rule, transferor/sender licensees will be               benefits of this final regulation and                  not in transit (i.e., prior to or after
                                            required to use Form 3310.11 to notify                  believes that the regulatory approach                  shipment). However, because there are
                                            ATF of firearms stolen or lost in transit.              selected maximizes net benefits.                       numerous firearms lost or stolen that
                                            For stolen or lost NFA firearms,                           Under 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(6) and its                   have not been traced, the full count of
                                            submitting Form 3310.11 will satisfy the                current implementing regulation, 27                    firearms lost or stolen in transit that
                                            requirements of 27 CFR 478.39 and                       CFR 478.39a, each FFL must report the                  would be reported under this rule may
                                            479.141. In addition, transferor/sender                 theft or loss of a firearm from the                    be significantly higher. Although the
                                            FFLs must reflect the theft or loss of a                licensee’s inventory or collection within              number of unreported thefts or losses of
                                            firearm in transit as a disposition entry               48 hours after the theft or loss is
                                                                                                                                                           firearms may be substantially greater
                                            in their required records not later than                discovered. The licensee must report the
                                                                                                                                                           than this estimate, any additional
                                            7 days following discovery of the theft                 theft or loss of a firearm to ATF and to
                                                                                                                                                           burden to report them should be
                                            or loss. The rule also specifies that FFLs              the appropriate local authorities.
                                                                                                                                                           minimal. At this time, the 1,333 figure
                                            that report theft or loss of a firearm and              Current regulations do not specify
                                                                                                                                                           reflects the best data available.
                                            later discover its whereabouts must                     reporting and recordkeeping                               Pursuant to the instructions on Form
                                            advise ATF that the firearm has been                    requirements for firearms lost or stolen               3310.11, a separate form is required for
                                            located, and must re-enter the firearm                  while in transit. This final rule specifies
                                                                                                                                                           each theft or loss. ATF estimates that it
                                                                                                    that when a firearm is stolen or lost in
                                            into their required records as an                                                                              takes an FFL 24 minutes to complete
                                                                                                    transit, for reporting purposes it is
                                            acquisition or disposition entry as                                                                            Form 3310.11; the postage cost to mail
                                                                                                    considered stolen or lost from the
                                            appropriate. These recordkeeping                                                                               the form to NTC is 49 cents. If FFLs
                                                                                                    transferor’s/sender’s inventory.
                                            requirements apply whether the firearm                     The GCA and the current                             complete a separate Form 3310.11 for
                                            is stolen or lost in transit between FFLs               implementing regulations have long                     each of the average of 1,333 firearms
                                            or between a licensee and a nonlicensee.                required that a licensee must report the               that tracing data indicates are lost or
                                                                                                    theft or loss of a firearm. This final rule            stolen each year but are not currently
                                            VI. Statutory and Executive Order
                                                                                                    specifies that a transferor/sender                     being reported, ATF estimates the total
                                            Reviews
                                                                                                    licensee is required to submit the                     burden hours to be 533 (1,333 × 24/60),
                                            A. Executive Order 12866 and Executive                  required report if a firearm is lost or                and the current estimated cost to be
                                            Order 13563—Regulatory Review                           stolen in transit on a common or                       $18,350. (Cost of completing the form =
                                              This final rule has been drafted and                  contract carrier from that licensee to                 24 minutes at $33.19 per hour × 1,333
                                            reviewed in accordance with Executive                   another person. This final rule retains                = $17,697; Cost of mailing the form =
                                            Order 12866, ‘‘Regulatory Planning and                  most of the existing requirements under                  15 In the 2014 NPRM, the Department relied on
                                            Review,’’ section 1(b), The Principles of               27 CFR part 478, subpart H, and the
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                                                                                                                                                           the crime gun trace average for FY 2008 through FY
                                            Regulation, and in accordance with                      instructions for Form 3310.11 with                     2012. In this final rule, the Department has used the
                                            Executive Order 13563, ‘‘Improving                      respect to how FFLs are to record the                  more recent average from FY 2010 through FY 2014
                                            Regulation and Regulatory Review,’’                     theft or loss of firearms from their                   because it believes that the updated figure more
                                                                                                                                                           accurately reflects the actual benefits and costs of
                                            section 1(b).                                           inventories in their A&D Records.                      the final rule. The updated figure does not
                                              The Department of Justice has                            The final rule will reduce the current              meaningfully change the Department’s estimates of
                                            determined that this final rule is a                    reporting burden on licensees when the                 the rule’s costs and benefits.



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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 7 / Tuesday, January 12, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                           1317

                                            $.49 × 1,333 = $653.) ATF estimated the                 providing much of the same information                 that when a firearm is stolen or lost in
                                            cost of the time to complete these tasks                under both reporting requirements, ATF                 transit, for reporting purposes, it is
                                            using employee compensation data for                    estimates that it takes the same amount                considered stolen or lost from the
                                            June 2015 as determined by the Bureau                   of time and cost for postage, and ATF                  transferor/sender FFL’s inventory.
                                            of Labor Statistics (BLS), U.S.                         uses the same hourly compensation as                      As discussed in section I of this
                                            Department of Labor. See News Release,                  listed above (i.e., 24 minutes for time, 49            preamble, the current regulation
                                            U.S. Dep’t of Labor, Bureau of Labor                    cents for postage, and $33.19 for hourly               requires that an FFL report thefts or
                                            Statistics, Employer Costs for Employer                 compensation). Currently, the NFA                      losses telephonically to ATF and
                                            Compensation (Sept. 9, 2015), http://                   Branch receives notification of the theft              complete and submit to NTC a separate
                                            www.bls.gov/news.release/archives/                      or loss of a registered NFA firearm from               Form 3310.11 for each theft or loss. ATF
                                            ecec_09092015.pdf.16 The BLS                            approximately 60 licensees annually.                   estimates the time to complete the form
                                            determined the hourly compensation                      ATF estimates the total burden hours to                as 24 minutes, the time for the
                                            (which includes wages, salaries, and                    be 24 (60 × 24/60) and the total cost to               telephone call as 24 minutes, and the
                                            benefits) for civilian workers to be                    be $826. (Cost of submitting the                       postage cost as 49 cents. If an FFL called
                                            $33.19.                                                 notification = 24 minutes at $33.19 per                ATF to report the theft or loss and
                                               The instructions on Form 3310.11                     hour × 60 = $797; cost of mailing the                  completed a separate Form 3310.11 for
                                            also provide that FFLs must report                      notification = $.49 × 60 = $29.)                       each of the average of 1,333 firearms
                                            firearms thefts or losses by telephone to               Therefore, ATF estimates the savings to                that tracing data indicates are lost or
                                            ATF. ATF estimates that it takes an FFL                 be these amounts.                                      stolen each year but are not currently
                                            24 minutes to call and provide the                                                                             being reported, ATF estimates the total
                                                                                                    B. Executive Order 13132                               cost of completing and mailing the form
                                            requisite information to ATF. If an FFL
                                            called ATF for each of the average of                     This final rule will not have                        and calling ATF to be $36,047. See
                                            1,333 firearms that tracing data                        substantial direct effects on the States,              section VI.A. for a full discussion of
                                            indicates are lost or stolen each year but              on the relationship between the Federal                these costs. Therefore, this final rule
                                            are not currently being reported, ATF                   Government and the States, or on the                   will not impose a significant impact on
                                            estimates the total burden hours to be                  distribution of power and                              a substantial number of small entities.
                                            533 (1,333 x 24/60), and the current                    responsibilities among the various
                                                                                                    levels of government. Therefore, in                    E. Small Business Regulatory
                                            estimated cost is $17,697 (24 minutes at                                                                       Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
                                            $33.19 per hour × 1,333).                               accordance with section 6 of Executive
                                               Therefore, the combined total                        Order 13132, ‘‘Federalism,’’ the                          This final rule is not a major rule as
                                            estimated burden hours for submitting                   Attorney General has determined that                   defined by section 251 of the Small
                                            Form 3310.11 and calling ATF are 1,066                  this final rule does not have sufficient               Business Regulatory Enforcement
                                            (533 + 533). The combined total                         federalism implications to warrant the                 Fairness Act of 1996, 5 U.S.C. 804. This
                                            estimated cost of fulfilling those same                 preparation of a federalism summary                    final rule will not result in an annual
                                            two requirements is $36,047 ($18,350 +                  impact statement.                                      effect on the economy of $100 million
                                            $17,697).                                                                                                      or more; a major increase in costs or
                                                                                                    C. Executive Order 12988                               prices; or significant adverse effects on
                                               Alternatives, such as the UCC variable
                                            approach discussed in section III of the                  This final rule meets the applicable                 competition, employment, investment,
                                            SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION in the 2014
                                                                                                    standards set forth in sections 3(a) and               productivity, innovation, or on the
                                            NPRM, are more burdensome for FFLs                      3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988, ‘‘Civil              ability of United States-based
                                            than the approach taken in this final                   Justice Reform.’’                                      enterprises to compete with foreign
                                            rule. This is because, under the UCC                    D. Regulatory Flexibility Act                          based enterprises in domestic and
                                            variable approach, FFLs would need to                                                                          export markets.
                                                                                                       The Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                            examine the terms of the individual                     requires an agency to conduct a                        F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
                                            contracts to determine how the contract                 regulatory flexibility analysis of any rule            1995
                                            allocates the risk of loss as between the               subject to notice and comment                            This final rule will not result in the
                                            two parties. In contrast, the final rule                rulemaking requirements unless the                     expenditure by State, local, and tribal
                                            provides a simple, consistent rule so                   agency certifies that the rule will not                governments, in the aggregate, or by the
                                            that there is no basis for uncertainty or               have a significant economic impact on                  private sector of $100 million or more
                                            need for additional review: the final rule              a substantial number of small entities.                in any one year, and it will not
                                            assigns the theft or loss reporting                     See 5 U.S.C. 605(b). Small entities                    significantly or uniquely affect small
                                            requirement to the transferor/sender                    include small businesses, small not-for-               governments. Therefore, no actions were
                                            FFL.                                                    profit enterprises, and small                          deemed necessary under the provisions
                                               In addition, this final rule will                    governmental jurisdictions. The                        of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                            alleviate reporting burdens on licensees                Attorney General has reviewed this final               of 1995. See 2 U.S.C. 1532(a), 1533(a).
                                            in that licensees will need only report                 rule and, by approving it, certifies that
                                            the theft or loss of a registered NFA                   this final rule will not have a significant            G. Paperwork Reduction Act
                                            firearm once to ATF instead of reporting                economic impact on a substantial                          This final rule revises an existing
                                            the incident separately to NTC and the                  number of small entities.                              reporting and recordkeeping
                                            NFA Branch. As the licensee is                             Under section 18 U.S.C. 923(g)(6) and               requirement under the Paperwork
                                              16 In the 2014 NPRM, the Department relied on
                                                                                                    its implementing regulation, 27 CFR                    Reduction Act. It also eliminates an
                                                                                                    478.39a, each FFL must report the theft                existing reporting requirement. The
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                                            BLS employee compensation data from December
                                            2013. In this final rule, the Department has used the   or loss of a firearm from the licensee’s               current regulation at 27 CFR 478.39a
                                            more recent BLS data from June 2015 because it          inventory or collection within 48 hours                provides that each FFL must report the
                                            believes that the more recent data more accurately      after the theft or loss is discovered. The             theft or loss of a firearm from the
                                            reflects the actual benefits and costs of the final
                                            rule. The more recent BLS data does not
                                                                                                    licensee must report the theft or loss of              licensee’s inventory or collection within
                                            meaningfully change the Department’s estimates of       a firearm to ATF and to the appropriate                48 hours after the theft or loss is
                                            the rule’s costs and benefits.                          local authorities. This final rule clarifies           discovered. Licensees must report such


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                                            1318               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 7 / Tuesday, January 12, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                            thefts and losses to ATF both                           Law enforcement officers, Military                     authorities at the licensee’s location or
                                            telephonically and by submitting Form                   personnel, Penalties, Reporting and                    business premises.
                                            3310.11. Licensees must also report the                 recordkeeping requirements, Research,                     (e) Licensees shall reflect the theft or
                                            theft or loss to the appropriate local                  Seizures and forfeitures, Transportation.              loss of a firearm as a disposition entry
                                            authorities.                                                                                                   in the Record of Acquisition and
                                               Pursuant to 27 CFR 479.141 and                       Authority and Issuance
                                                                                                                                                           Disposition required by subpart H of
                                            according to the instructions on Form                     Accordingly, for the reasons                         this part not later than 7 days following
                                            3310.11, licensees reporting the theft or               discussed in the preamble, 27 CFR part                 discovery of the theft or loss. The
                                            loss of registered NFA firearms must                    478 is amended as follows:                             disposition entry shall record whether
                                            provide additional notification to ATF.                                                                        the incident is a theft or loss, the ATF-
                                            As discussed in section I, no form exists               PART 478—COMMERCE IN FIREARMS                          Issued Incident Number, and the
                                            for this purpose, and the person                        AND AMMUNITION                                         Incident Number provided by the local
                                            reporting typically submits a letter with                                                                      law enforcement agency.
                                            the required information to the NFA                     ■ 1. The authority citation for 27 CFR                    (f) Licensees who report the theft or
                                            Branch. As part of this rulemaking,                     part 478 is revised to read as follows:                loss of a firearm and later discover its
                                            Form 3310.11, approved under OMB                          Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552(a); 18 U.S.C. 921–           whereabouts shall advise ATF at 1–888–
                                            control number 1140–0039, will capture                  931; 44 U.S.C. 3504(h).                                930–9275 (nationwide toll-free number)
                                            the information required by 27 CFR                                                                             that the firearm has been located, and
                                            479.141. Therefore, under this final rule,              ■   2. Revise § 478.39a to read as follows:
                                                                                                                                                           shall re-enter the firearm in the Record
                                            a licensee will satisfy its obligation to               § 478.39a    Reporting theft or loss of                of Acquisition and Disposition as an
                                            provide the required notification to the                firearms.                                              acquisition or disposition entry as
                                            NFA Branch by submitting Form                              (a)(1) Each licensee shall report the               appropriate.
                                            3310.11 to NTC, and NTC will notify the                 theft or loss of a firearm from the                      Dated: January 4, 2016.
                                            NFA Branch. Submitting Form 3310.11                     licensee’s inventory (including any
                                            will satisfy the requirements of both 27                                                                       Loretta E. Lynch,
                                                                                                    firearm which has been transferred from                Attorney General.
                                            CFR 478.39a and 27 CFR 479.141 with                     the licensee’s inventory to a personal
                                            one notification.                                                                                              [FR Doc. 2016–00112 Filed 1–11–16; 8:45 am]
                                                                                                    collection and held as a personal
                                               In addition, the instructions on Form                firearm for at least 1 year), or from the              BILLING CODE 4410–FY–P
                                            3310.11 state that a licensee must reflect              collection of a licensed collector, within
                                            the theft or loss of a firearm as a                     48 hours after the theft or loss is
                                            disposition entry in the A&D Record                     discovered.                                            DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
                                            required by subpart H of part 478
                                                                                                       (2) When a firearm is stolen or lost in
                                            (formerly 178). These instructions                                                                             Fiscal Service
                                                                                                    transit on a common or contract carrier
                                            further state that the disposition entry
                                                                                                    (which for purposes of this paragraph
                                            should indicate whether the incident is                                                                        31 CFR Part 285
                                                                                                    includes the U.S. Postal Service), it is
                                            a theft or loss and include the ATF-
                                                                                                    considered stolen or lost from the
                                            Issued Incident Number and the                                                                                 RIN 1530–AA12
                                                                                                    transferor/sender licensee’s inventory
                                            Incident Number provided by the local
                                                                                                    for reporting purposes. Therefore, the                 Debt Collection Authorities Under the
                                            law enforcement agency. Finally, the
                                                                                                    transferor/sender of the stolen or lost                Debt Collection Improvement Act of
                                            instructions state that if the firearms are
                                                                                                    firearm shall report the theft or loss of              1996
                                            located, they should be re-entered in the
                                                                                                    the firearm within 48 hours after the
                                            A&D Record as acquisition entries. The                                                                         AGENCY:  Bureau of the Fiscal Service,
                                                                                                    transferor/sender discovers the theft or
                                            final rule adds both sets of these                                                                             Treasury.
                                                                                                    loss.
                                            instructions to the regulatory text in 27
                                                                                                       (b) Each licensee shall report the theft            ACTION: Final rule.
                                            CFR 478.39a with modifications. See
                                                                                                    or loss by telephoning ATF at 1–888–
                                            section V for full discussion of these                                                                         SUMMARY:   The Department of the
                                                                                                    930–9275 (nationwide toll-free number),
                                            revisions.                                                                                                     Treasury, Bureau of the Fiscal Service,
                                               The information collection required                  and by preparing and submitting to ATF
                                                                                                    a Federal Firearms Licensee Theft/Loss                 is amending its regulations concerning
                                            by 27 CFR 478.39a—i.e., the submission                                                                         the offset of Federal benefit payments to
                                            of Form 3310.11—has been approved by                    Report, ATF Form 3310.11, in
                                                                                                    accordance with the instructions on the                collect past-due, legally enforceable
                                            the Office of Management and Budget                                                                            nontax debt, centralized offset of
                                            under control number 1140–0039. This                    form. The original of the report shall be
                                                                                                    retained by the licensee as part of the                Federal payments to collect nontax
                                            final rule specifies that when a firearm                                                                       debts owed to the United States, salary
                                            is stolen or lost in transit, for reporting             licensee’s required records.
                                                                                                       (c) When a licensee submits to ATF a                offset, and transfer of debts to Treasury
                                            purposes, it is considered stolen or lost                                                                      for collection. The amendment adjusts
                                            from the transferor’s/sender’s inventory.               Federal Firearms Licensee Theft/Loss
                                                                                                    Report, ATF Form 3310.11, for the theft                the time period in which Federal
                                            Drafting Information                                    or loss of a firearm registered under the              agencies must notify the Secretary of the
                                              The author of this document is Denise                 National Firearms Act, this report also                Treasury of past due, nontax debt for the
                                            Brown, Office of Regulatory Affairs,                    satisfies the notification requirement                 purposes of administrative offset. A
                                            Enforcement Programs and Services,                      under § 479.141 of this chapter.                       statutory change, enacted as part of the
                                            Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms,                      (d) Theft or loss of any firearm shall              Digital Accountability and
                                            and Explosives.                                         also be reported to the appropriate local              Transparency Act of 2014, shortened the
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                                                                    authorities. If the location of the theft or           period of delinquency within which
                                            List of Subjects in 27 CFR Part 478                     loss is known, the local law                           Federal agencies are required to notify
                                              Administrative practice and                           enforcement agency at that location                    the Secretary of past due, nontax debt
                                            procedure, Arms and munitions,                          would be the appropriate local                         from 180 days to 120 days.
                                            Customs duties and inspection, Exports,                 authority. Otherwise, the report should                DATES: This rule is effective January 12,
                                            Imports, Intergovernmental relations,                   be made to the local law enforcement                   2016.


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Document Created: 2016-01-12 01:22:56
Document Modified: 2016-01-12 01:22:56
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesThis rule is effective February 11, 2016.
ContactDenise Brown, Office of Regulatory Affairs, Enforcement Programs and Services, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, U.S. Department of Justice, 99 New York Avenue NE., Washington, DC 20226; telephone: (202) 648-7070.
FR Citation81 FR 1307 
RIN Number1140-AA41
CFR AssociatedAdministrative Practice and Procedure; Arms and Munitions; Customs Duties and Inspection; Exports; Imports; Intergovernmental Relations; Law Enforcement Officers; Military Personnel; Penalties; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements; Research; Seizures and Forfeitures and Transportation

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