The Second Amendment, the NFA, and the DOJ’s Misguided Defense: Why Americans Must Pay Attention

Introduction: A Right That Was Never Meant To Be Conditional

For generations, the Second Amendment has stood as one of the clearest and most uncompromising declarations of individual liberty in the United States Constitution. It was written to ensure that the right of the people to keep and bear arms would never be dependent on government permission, taxation, or regulatory approval.

The Founders understood—through both experience and conviction—that a free nation must empower its citizens to defend themselves not only from criminals or foreign enemies, but also from the steady creep of governmental overreach. Because of this, the Second Amendment was crafted not as a suggestion, not as a negotiable guideline, but as a safeguard against the very kind of expansive federal authority we are witnessing today.

Recently, this issue came into sharp focus when the Department of Justice, under Attorney General Pam Bondi, filed a brief defending the continued enforcement of the National Firearms Act (NFA)—even after Congress eliminated the tax that once justified the law’s existence. Her office described NFA-regulated firearms as “particularly dangerous and easily concealable,” a statement that echoes historical gun-control rhetoric rather than the constitutional principles this administration promised to uphold.

This raises a larger, unavoidable question:
If the government can still enforce a registration scheme for a tax that has been set to $0, what limits—if any—still restrain federal power?


What we do have

  • A press release by Gun Owners of America (GOA) condemns the brief filed by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) under Bondi’s leadership. Gun Owners of America+2Yahoo+2
  • A commentary article by News2A summarises the brief, noting that it is approximately 48 pages and outlines how the DOJ defends the NFA’s regulatory scheme. News2A+1
  • A news-site article reports on a letter from members of Congress urging the DOJ (and Bondi) to abandon defense of the NFA’s registration and tax scheme, noting the DOJ’s brief responded. Guns.com

Key Arguments in the Brief (as summarised)

Based on the commentary and press coverage, the brief appears to contain the following principal arguments:

  1. Congress had constitutional authority to enact the NFA
    • The DOJ argues that the NFA falls within Congress’s taxing power, the Commerce Clause, and the Necessary and Proper Clause. News2A
    • The brief responds to the plaintiffs’ narrative that the statute exceeds congressional power. News2A
    • It relies on precedent such as United States v. Miller and District of Columbia v. Heller to argue NFA-type regulation is constitutional. News2A+1
  2. The NFA remains a valid regulatory scheme even if the excise tax on certain items is now $0
    • Plaintiffs argue that because Congress reduced the $200 tax on certain NFA items to $0, the tax/registration scheme no longer has vitality and thus the registration requirement should fall. The brief rejects this. Guns.com+1
    • The DOJ’s summary argument: even if direct tax on transfer is $0, the statute’s structure still serves revenue purpose (e.g., the occupational tax for manufacturers/distributors) and regulatory purposes under commerce clause. News2A
  3. The NFA’s registration/transfer requirements target “particularly dangerous and easily concealable weapons” and thus fit the historical regulatory tradition
    • The brief argues that NFA-covered firearms (such as short-barreled rifles/shotguns, suppressors, “any other weapons” (AOWs)) present special risks and that regulation is consistent with historical tradition of weapons regulation. News2A
    • The brief maintains that the registration process and transfer‐tax/fee regime is a valid exercise of Congress’s power to regulate interstate commerce and legitimate public safety interest. Gun Owners of America+1
  4. Facial challenge under the Second Amendment is not meritorious
    • The DOJ contends that the case is not simply about the Second Amendment’s guarantee, but also about whether Congress exceeded its powers under the Constitution. News2A
    • It argues that the statute has long been upheld in the Fifth Circuit and other courts (e.g., for suppressors) under “presumptively lawful” weapons regulation standards. News2A
  5. If relief is granted, it should be appropriately limitedThe Second Amendment, the NFA, and the DOJ’s Misguided Defense: Why Americans Must Pay Attention
    Introduction: A Right That Was Never Meant To Be Conditional
    For generations, the Second Amendment has stood as one of the clearest and most uncompromising declarations of individual liberty in the United States Constitution. It was written to ensure that the right of the people to keep and bear arms would never be dependent on government permission, taxation, or regulatory approval.
    The Founders understood—through both experience and conviction—that a free nation must empower its citizens to defend themselves not only from criminals or foreign enemies, but also from the steady creep of governmental overreach. Because of this, the Second Amendment was crafted not as a suggestion, not as a negotiable guideline, but as a safeguard against the very kind of expansive federal authority we are witnessing today.
    Recently, this issue came into sharp focus when the Department of Justice, under Attorney General Pam Bondi, filed a brief defending the continued enforcement of the National Firearms Act (NFA)—even after Congress eliminated the tax that once justified the law’s existence. Her office described NFA-regulated firearms as “particularly dangerous and easily concealable,” a statement that echoes historical gun-control rhetoric rather than the constitutional principles this administration promised to uphold.
    This raises a larger, unavoidable question:
    If the government can still enforce a registration scheme for a tax that has been set to $0, what limits—if any—still restrain federal power?

    The National Firearms Act: A Law Built on a Tax That No Longer Exists
    When the NFA was enacted in 1934, it relied on a $200 transfer tax to regulate certain weapons. The legality of the act was tied directly to Congress’s taxing power. The Supreme Court upheld the NFA in Miller precisely because lawmakers framed it as a tax measure, not a regulatory or prohibitory law.
    Fast forward to today:
    Congress—through recent legislative changes—reduced the tax on certain NFA items to zero dollars.
    In other words:
    There is no longer a tax.
    There is no longer a revenue basis.
    The government’s original legal justification has evaporated.
    Yet the DOJ, under Pam Bondi, continues to argue that the NFA remains valid, enforceable, and necessary—despite the fact that its constitutional “hook” has been removed. Even worse, the DOJ suggests that a $0 tax still justifies a federal registration and approval process.
    This argument is not only weak; it is logically inconsistent. A tax that collects no tax cannot constitutionally support a federal registry that restricts a fundamental right.

    The DOJ’s “Dangerous and Concealable” Argument: A Recycled Excuse
    Bondi’s brief claims that NFA-regulated weapons—such as short-barreled rifles, short-barreled shotguns, suppressors, and AOWs—are “particularly dangerous and easily concealable.”
    But this phrase has a long and troubling history.
    For decades, anti-Second Amendment politicians have used identical language to justify:
    handgun bans,
    magazine limits,
    semi-auto prohibitions,
    and even ammunition restrictions.
    The American public was told each time that these regulations were “modest,” “reasonable,” and “necessary for public safety.” Yet every restriction, once accepted, paved the way for another.
    By using that same language today, the DOJ places itself in direct conflict with the original intent of the Second Amendment—an intent that explicitly recognizes the right of the people to own arms precisely because they are effective, not because they satisfy government comfort levels.
    The purpose of the Second Amendment was not to protect arms that government officials find harmless.
    It was written to protect the arms that make a free people capable of remaining free.

    GOA’s Lawsuit: Exposing the Contradictions
    The lawsuit brought by Gun Owners of America and the Gun Owners Foundation challenges the DOJ’s logic at its core. Their argument is straightforward:
    If Congress removes the tax,
    And the NFA is only constitutional because of the tax,
    Then the regulatory framework cannot continue.
    This is not a political argument; it is a constitutional one.
    And it is absolutely correct.
    The DOJ’s defense—that a zero-dollar tax still maintains federal regulatory authority—is an admission that the government wants the power without the constitutional justification that originally granted it.
    This should alarm every American who values the rule of law.

    A Dangerous Precedent for Constitutional Rights
    If the federal government can do this with the Second Amendment, it can do the same with:
    free speech,
    religious liberty,
    freedom of the press,
    or due process.
    It can claim a power, then keep exercising that power even after the legal foundation is gone.
    This is not how constitutional governance works.
    This is how unchecked bureaucratic authority works.
    The Second Amendment was designed specifically to prevent this kind of slow, creeping encroachment on the rights of the people.

    The Real Issue: Federal Power vs. Individual Liberty
    This moment is not just about suppressors or short-barreled rifles.
    It is not even about the NFA alone.
    This is about whether the federal government is allowed to:
    reinterpret its own powers,
    ignore structural limits,
    and preserve outdated regulatory systems
    even after the legal basis for those systems has been removed.
    When the DOJ defends a registration system detached from its legal justification, it reveals a mindset that sees constitutional rights as privileges to be managed—not freedoms to be protected.
    That mindset is incompatible with the system of liberty the Framers established.

    A Call for Real Constitutional Leadership
    Americans deserve an Attorney General and President Trump who will take a firm stand for the Constitution, not defend obsolete regulations out of bureaucratic convenience.
    The NFA is a relic of a bygone era.
    Its tax structure is gone.
    Its justification is gone.
    Its constitutional footing is gone.
    It is time for the federal government to acknowledge that reality.
    Repealing or dismantling the NFA is not radical.
    Ignoring the Constitution is.

    Conclusion: The Second Amendment Needs Defenders, Not Managers
    The right to keep and bear arms is not a privilege measured by government paperwork, registration backlogs, or arbitrary classifications.
    It is a foundational right handed down from the Founders themselves—rooted in the belief that the people are the final check on the accumulation of government power.
    The DOJ’s defense of the NFA, especially after its tax foundation has been removed, is a direct contradiction to that belief.
    Every American who values liberty should pay attention.
    Because if a zero-dollar tax can still control your rights today,
    what stops the government from redefining any other liberty tomorrow?
    It is time to restore the Second Amendment to its rightful place:
    untouched, unrestricted, and uncompromised.
    • The brief asks the court to avoid a nationwide injunction and limit relief to those plaintiffs and their injuries. News2A

A Final Plea: Make Your Voice Heard

The fight for the Second Amendment does not belong only to lawyers, courts, or advocacy groups. It belongs to every American who understands that constitutional rights must be guarded with vigilance and defended with courage. If we stay silent while outdated laws are upheld through inconsistent reasoning, then we allow the very freedoms our Founders secured to slowly erode.

That is why your voice is not optional—it is essential.

I strongly urge every reader who values the Second Amendment to contact both President Donald J. Trump and Attorney General Pam Bondi and make your position unmistakably clear. Tell them that the American people expect leadership that honors the Constitution, not bureaucratic convenience.

Ask them—respectfully but firmly—to take immediate action:

1. Withdraw or revise the DOJ’s brief

Demand that the Department of Justice rewrite its position in the NFA case to reflect a constitutional, Second Amendment–centered understanding of the right to keep and bear arms. The DOJ should not be defending outdated regulatory overreach under the guise of public safety.

2. Publicly acknowledge the truth about the NFA

A $0 tax cannot constitutionally support a federal registry, approval process, or restriction on law-abiding citizens. The DOJ must acknowledge that when Congress removed the tax, it removed the law’s original legal justification.

3. Support dismantling or repealing the NFA

Ask President Trump and Attorney General Bondi to support legislative or administrative steps that bring the law into alignment with modern constitutional standards. The NFA’s time has passed. The Constitution has not.


Your Letter Matters

Whether you write a full letter, send an email, or even place a phone call, your voice adds to a growing chorus demanding that the federal government honor the Second Amendment as it was written—not as it has been reinterpreted over time.

Change begins when citizens speak up.
And now is the time to speak.


Let me know what you think below


Copyright Notice © 2025 Cecil Wayne Thorn Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this work authored by Cecil Wayne Thorn, to distribute, display, and reproduce the work, in its entirety, including verbatim copies, provided that no fee is charged for the copies or distribution. This permission is granted for non-commercial distribution only.


Wrangle the DOJ back in line with the 2nd Amendment

Wayne Thorn

Call to Action

Fellow Americans,

The time has come for law-abiding citizens to rise with one voice in defense of our freedoms. The Second Amendment is not a suggestion—it is a constitutional guarantee. Yet we have witnessed repeated attempts to erode it through misguided policies, bureaucratic overreach, and selective enforcement. These actions strike at the very foundation of our liberty and cannot go unanswered.

We must now take it upon ourselves to demand accountability. We call on every patriot to urge the President and the Department of Justice to honor their duty to the Constitution and to protect the rights it secures for all citizens. This is not the task of a few, but the responsibility of us all. The strength of our republic rests on the vigilance of its people, and silence in the face of encroachment is not an option.

Let us stand together—firm, united, and resolute. Write, speak, and act so that our leaders know the will of the people is clear: the Second Amendment must be upheld, and the Constitution must remain the supreme law of the land.


My letter to the President and copied to the DOJ

08/28/2025

Dear President Trump,

I write to you today out of deep concern for the future of our Second Amendment rights. You have long stood as a defender of the right to keep and bear arms, assuring the American people that their constitutional freedoms would not be compromised. At this critical moment, we urgently need your leadership to ensure that promise is upheld.

In the past week, two significant cases—the Zero Tolerance Policy and United States v. Peterson—have underscored a troubling reality: the Department of Justice has drifted away from a fair and consistent application of constitutional principles. These cases should have been resolved simply and directly. Instead, the DOJ has complicated what should have been straightforward matters by refusing to concede to plaintiffs whose positions align with both common sense and the Constitution.

The proper course of action should have been clear: the Department ought to acknowledge that the repealed Zero Tolerance Policy was inconsistent with constitutional protections and the Department’s own evolving view of fairness. Likewise, in United States v. Peterson, the DOJ had the opportunity to affirm the plain meaning of the Second Amendment by respecting the rights of lawful citizens, yet it chose instead to resist.

The American people cannot afford ambiguity on this issue. Our constitutional rights must not be left vulnerable to bureaucratic overreach or inconsistent enforcement. The Department of Justice should be compelled to align its actions with the Constitution and the values of liberty that define our nation.

Mr. President, the time has come to move beyond words and take decisive action. We ask that you continue to stand firm in defense of the Second Amendment and bring the Department of Justice back in line with the principles of fairness, accountability, and constitutional integrity. We are watching


It is not a privilege, it is a RIGHT


Let me know what you think below


DOJ Litigation Concerning the Zero Tolerance Policy

The DOJ is still fighting the GOA case over the Zero Tolerance Policy, even though the policy has already been repealed. It’s time for us to speak up. Contact the Department of Justice and send a request to the President to tell them to stop this unnecessary litigation and concede to the plaintiffs’ claims.


Here is a copy of the letter I sent to the DOJ and a copy to the President.

Re: DOJ Litigation Concerning the Zero Tolerance Policy

Dear Attorney General Bondi,

I am writing to respectfully urge the Department of Justice to discontinue further litigation in defense of the repealed “Zero Tolerance” policy. On April 7, 2025, you and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) rightly announced the repeal of the Enhanced Regulatory Enforcement Policy. In that announcement, you stated:

“This Department of Justice believes that the 2nd Amendment is not a second-class right. The prior administration’s ‘Zero Tolerance’ policy unfairly targeted law-abiding gun owners and created an undue burden on Americans seeking to exercise their constitutional right to bear arms – it ends today.”

That declaration was clear and unequivocal. Yet, the Department’s continued defense of the policy in court stands at odds with your own words and the official repeal. To persist in litigation risks undermining the Department’s credibility and prolonging unnecessary legal conflict with plaintiffs who were directly harmed by the policy.

I respectfully ask that you take immediate steps to align the Department’s litigation posture with its public position. This includes conceding to the plaintiffs in the pending cases and acknowledging that the repealed policy was inconsistent with the Department’s current view of constitutional rights and fairness.

The American people deserve consistency from the Department of Justice. By standing firmly behind your April 7th statement and ending these legal defenses, you will reinforce the Department’s commitment to both the Constitution and to justice itself.

Thank you for your time and consideration.


Make your voice heard about our 2nd Amendment rights.

Lets Keep America Great


Feel free to ask me about anything, including comments on articles, questions you may have.


Copyright Notice © 2025 Cecil Wayne Thorn Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this work authored by Cecil Wayne Thorn, to distribute, display, and reproduce the work, in its entirety, including verbatim copies, provided that no fee is charged for the copies or distribution. This permission is granted for non-commercial distribution only.


Shall not be infringed

There is currently a legal case affecting Second Amendment rights, in which the Department of Justice and the ATF are advocating to maintain restrictions on non-residents purchasing handguns in states where they do not reside. Notably, these restrictions would not apply to rifles.

It is imperative that the President and the Department of Justice reconsider their position, withdraw any opposition to this case, and allow a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs.


Here is my letter I sent:

Dear President Trump, and DOJ Pam Bondi

I ask that you instruct DOJ, Pami Bondi, to withdraw any opposition to this action and to grant judgment in favor of the Plaintiffs. Based on the case and statements below.

The case you’re referring to is Elite Precision Customs LLC v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), filed on January 20, 2025, in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas (Fort Worth Division). The case number is 4:25-cv-00044.Firearms Policy Coalition+4NationBuilder+4CourtListener+4Firearms Policy Coalition+1

Case Overview

This lawsuit challenges the federal ban on interstate transfers of handguns from federally licensed firearms dealers (FFLs) to individuals who are not residents of the state where the dealer is located. Plaintiffs argue that this restriction infringes upon the Second Amendment rights of individuals and businesses.GIFFORDS+3NationBuilder+3Firearms Policy Coalition+3

Second Amendment to the United States Constitution (ratified 1791):

“A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

“Infringe” was stronger than merely regulate; it implied violation, encroachment, or impairment of a right. It was not used lightly; “infringe” suggested denying or materially restricting a right rather than simply placing conditions on it.

Implication for the Second Amendment

The Framers’ use of “shall not be infringed” suggests that the right to keep and bear arms was meant to be absolute in its protection against government encroachment, though subsequent interpretation has allowed for some regulation that doesn’t destroy the right.

For example, minor regulations constitute infringement; laws that effectively prohibit the right would have been considered infringing in 1791.

Origin / Source

From Latin infringere (“to break, violate”). Common in legal texts and dictionaries of the 18th century.

From Latin incrocare or French encrocher, meaning “to hook into” or “advance beyond proper limits.” Used in legal and property contexts.

Samuel Johnson, 1755

“To violate; to transgress; to break a law or right.”

“To advance beyond proper limits; to intrude.”

Blackstone, 1765–1769

Acts that breach or diminish established rights or liberties.

Acts that intrude upon another’s lawful rights or property, including civil liberties.

Strength / Severity

Stronger: implies violation or material impairment of a right; actionable in law.

Strong but slightly more gradual: implies intrusion or gradual trespass, may or may not constitute full violation, depending on context.

Legal / Rights Implication

Government or individual cannot infringe a right without overstepping legal bounds; protection is absolute.

Encroachment is an unauthorized intrusion; often gradual or creeping; legally objectionable but may describe minor or developing overreach.

Example (18th c. rights context)

“A law prohibiting all citizens from bearing arms infringes the right to keep and bear them.”

“A law requiring burdensome regulations before exercising the right may encroach on the right, depending on severity.”

Thank you,


Stand up for our RIGHTS and make America Great Again


Feel free to ask me about anything, including comments on articles, questions you may have.


Copyright Notice © 2025 Cecil Wayne Thorn Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this work authored by Cecil Wayne Thorn, to distribute, display, and reproduce the work, in its entirety, including verbatim copies, provided that no fee is charged for the copies or distribution. This permission is granted for non-commercial distribution only.


52 incidents compared gun-free and non-gun-free zones 08/09/25

I was looking for information on gun incident reports in gun-free zones versus non-gun-free zones. Using ChatGPT, it gave me reports that were stated as being non-partisan and non-bias 3 of the 4 were given as accurate reporting. They said on the surface that there appears to be more gun-free zones had fewer gun incidences and then added that this is more Caveat, and it appears there are fewer gun incidents in gun-free zones

Also, this research is coming from states that are Democratic. The 4th research totally disagreed with them and was blasted the 4th report altogether.

So I adventurally go down to the nitty gritty and told ChatGPT to give me reported gun violence and whether these were in gun-free zones or non-gun-free zones, and instead it gave me the reports again. I then told it from news media accounts, then it started giving me at first 26 incidents and most were in gun-free zones. But then stated these were only high-profile incidents, so that was not a good sampling to be able to agree that there is more shooting in gun-free zones.

So I said give me 26 random incidences it did and all of them were in gun-free zones.

I then told it using both hight profile and random incidences and give me the average presentages in a chart

And then it recanted it claims

Here is my ChatGPT screens from beginning to the end (pdf). I also did this on Perplexity AI and ended up with the same results. I then sent a message to Donald Trump about his support for this AI, and it was very left-leaning with its results and told him that This AI was not non-partisan or non- bias.


Final Statement

We need to send a message to the President and Congress to shut down Gun-Free Zones and Make America Safe Again for our families, neighbors, states, and country.


Give me your comments.


Copyright Notice © 2025 Cecil Wayne Thorn Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this work authored by Cecil Wayne Thorn, to distribute, display, and reproduce the work, in its entirety, including verbatim copies, provided that no fee is charged for the copies or distribution. This permission is granted for non-commercial distribution only.


Self-defense is not for civilians, but is for Law Enforcement Officers

I have a question on law-abiding citizens and self-defense. Here is the question:

“Gun control advocates often claim that civilians don’t need an AR-15 for self-defense—that a handgun should be enough. But if that’s true, why do law enforcement officers carry both a handgun and an AR-15? If a handgun is sufficient for protection, then why aren’t we asking police to give up their rifles too?”


Give me your comments.


GIVE ME YOUR COMMENTS:

I will post them after review


Copyright Notice © 2025 Cecil Wayne Thorn Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this work authored by Cecil Wayne Thorn, to distribute, display, and reproduce the work, in its entirety, including verbatim copies, provided that no fee is charged for the copies or distribution. This permission is granted for non-commercial distribution only.


With all this Hearing Protection Act, Short Act

With everything going on, I figured we could all use a little fun to take the edge off!.

“Left would refer to them as ‘assault rifles.'”.

Below are three rifles—can you identify the make and model of each one?

First:

Second:

Three:


Drop me your answers in the contact me below and I will answer you right back:


CALL TO ACTION FOR ALL 2A SUPPORTERS – REGARDLESS OF YOUR STATE

New York is pushing dangerous anti-gun legislation that could affect us ALL. State Senator Zellnor Myrie is leading a bill to ban certain Glock pistols by labeling them “convertible firearms”—a made-up term meant to scare the public and chip away at our Second Amendment rights.

🔹 The truth? Glock switches are already ILLEGAL under federal law.
🔹 The result? Law-abiding gun owners and trusted manufacturers are being targeted instead of criminals.
🔹 The goal? To open the door to lawsuits against gun companies for crimes they didn’t commit.

Even if you don’t live in New York or California, this is part of a growing national movement to erode our gun rights one state at a time. If we stay silent now, this wave could hit your state next.

💥 Stand up. Speak out. Contact your local, state, and federal lawmakers and demand they protect your rights.

📍 FIND YOUR ELECTED OFFICIALS HERE:
👉 https://www.usa.gov/elected-officials
👉 https://www.congress.gov/members

🔁 Share this post with every gun owner, every freedom lover, and every patriot you know. The time to act is NOW. 🇺🇸


My Final Thought:

The Second Amendment isn’t negotiable.
When politicians invent terms like “convertible firearms” to push fear instead of facts, they aren’t protecting people—they’re targeting freedom.
🇺🇸 Speak now, or lose your rights one bill at a time.


Feel free to reach out with any questions, feedback on articles, or anything else you’d like to discuss—I’m always happy to connect!


Copyright Notice © 2025 Cecil Wayne Thorn Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this work authored by Cecil Wayne Thorn, to distribute, display, and reproduce the work, in its entirety, including verbatim copies, provided that no fee is charged for the copies or distribution. This permission is granted for non-commercial distribution only.


DOJ & ATF Go After Pin & Welds & Suppressors…AGAIN

Here is a letter I sent to Donald Trump and Pam Bondi and each and everyone of us need to do the same to let them know we are not happy.


Dear President Trump,

I hope this message finds you well.

It appears that the Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) are not fully implementing or adhering to the mandates you have issued regarding the protection of Second Amendment rights. Despite your administration’s clear stance on safeguarding lawful gun ownership, we continue to see concerning actions that suggest overreach and inconsistent application of federal firearms regulations.

Below is a letter I recently sent to Pam Boni regarding this matter. I believe it reflects the growing concern among law-abiding citizens who value their constitutional rights and look to your leadership for continued defense of our freedoms.

I am writing to express serious concern over the recurring emergence of legal cases that appear to challenge established Second Amendment rights—particularly those involving suppressors, “pin and weld” methods, and other firearms-related issues. These cases often seem to originate from what appear to be overly aggressive or ideologically motivated U.S. attorneys, raising questions about oversight and accountability within the Department of Justice.

Why are these cases repeatedly being brought forward despite long-standing legal precedents and administrative guidance? Who is responsible for reviewing and approving such cases before they proceed, and why aren’t questionable filings being dismissed at the outset? The public deserves transparency and assurance that prosecutorial discretion is being exercised fairly and within constitutional bounds.

It has been stated that a specialized office or department exists within the DOJ to evaluate legal matters that may affect Second Amendment rights. If that is the case, its role in reviewing and potentially halting these prosecutions is unclear. From a citizen’s perspective, it appears that this oversight function is either ineffective or not being utilized as intended.

If any U.S. attorneys are acting outside of their proper authority or pursuing cases that lack constitutional merit, we urge immediate disciplinary action, including termination if warranted. Furthermore, a thorough investigation should be conducted to determine how such cases were allowed to proceed.

We the People expect our constitutional rights to be upheld, not undermined by those entrusted with enforcing the law. The DOJ must restore public confidence by ensuring that rogue prosecutions are promptly addressed and prevented from recurring.

Thank you for your continued commitment to the Constitution and to protecting the rights of responsible American gun owners.


Send this to the following people:

President Donald Trump – The Office of Donald J. Trump

Pam Bondi – Pam Bondi Department of Justice

And to all your Congress Representatives and Senators, – https://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/current


“We, the American gun owners, must remain steadfast and vocal until President Donald Trump’s Second Amendment directives are fully implemented.”


Feel free to reach out with any questions, feedback on articles, or anything else you’d like to discuss—I’m always happy to connect!


Copyright Notice © 2025 Cecil Wayne Thorn Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this work authored by Cecil Wayne Thorn, to distribute, display, and reproduce the work, in its entirety, including verbatim copies, provided that no fee is charged for the copies or distribution. This permission is granted for non-commercial distribution only.


Gun Free Zones do not protect people; people protect people 

Mall of America

We have another example of how Gun Control and Gun Free Zones do not protect people with the Mall of America shooting. Here is what we know so far:

The Mall of America under Minnesota state law is a gun free zone. The Mall of America posts these signs:

At least 6 gang members were carrying firearms despite the law and involved in shooting and killing a 19-year old. 5 have been arrested so far. 2 are 18 years old and 3 are 17 years old. Minnesota does not issue CCW permits to anybody under 21, so they were carrying illegally. It was illegal for them to carry in the Mall. One of them is believed to be the shooter who killed the 19 year old. It is possible another of them also fired a firearm, but all are suspects involved according to police.

There were 16 police officers on duty in the Mall. Despite that all of the suspects left the Mall without being arrested, and went to White Castle to eat.

Compare that the the Greenwood Mall shooting. Where state law does not give the No Weapons signs legal force, and an attempted mass shooting was stopped by a concealed carry holder.

Greenwood Park Mall

The Greenwood Park Mall shooting occurred in the state of Indiana. Specifically, at the Greenwood Park Mall in Greenwood, Indiana, a suburb located just south of Indianapolis .(Wikipedia)

During the incident, a gunman opened fire in the mall’s food court, resulting in the deaths of three individuals and injuries to two others. The shooter was subsequently fatally shot by Elisjsha Dicken, a 22-year-old legally armed civilian who was present at the scene .(Axios, Wikipedia)

The swift intervention by Dicken was widely recognized and praised by local and state officials for preventing further casualties .


My Thoughts

“These incidents make one thing clear: gun-free zones and restrictive carry laws may disarm the law-abiding, but they do little to stop those with criminal intent. Real safety comes not from signs and statutes alone, but from empowering responsible citizens to protect themselves and others when seconds count.”

In areas where civilians were legally permitted to carry firearms, the intervention rate by armed citizens was even higher. The CPRC found that in such locations, armed civilians stopped 51.5% of active shooter incidents, compared to 44.6% stopped by police.

Read this study:

At The Federalist: Study: Concealed Carriers Do A Better Job Of Stopping Active Shooters Than Police


Feel free to reach out with any questions, feedback on articles, or anything else you’d like to discuss—I’m always happy to connect!


Copyright Notice © 2025 Cecil Wayne Thorn Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this work authored by Cecil Wayne Thorn, to distribute, display, and reproduce the work, in its entirety, including verbatim copies, provided that no fee is charged for the copies or distribution. This permission is granted for non-commercial distribution only.