The proposed regulations were adopted quietly, which is noteworthy in and of itself. In the days following a shooting near the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, a package of changes from the Justice Department and the ATF arrived, including modifications to identity verification, revisions to federal firearms forms, broader permit exemptions, and new shipping regulations. None of these changes read like a headline on their own. When combined, they start to resemble the gradual disintegration of something much older.
Physical presence has been the fundamental tenet of American gun commerce for almost 60 years. You enter, complete a form, have your ID and face examined by a person behind a counter, and the transaction is recorded. One man and one rifle are responsible for the existence of that structure. In 1963, Lee Harvey Oswald ordered a Mannlicher-Carcano to be shipped from a Chicago sporting goods store to a Dallas P.O. box using a fictitious name. Eventually, the nation responded with the 1968 Gun Control Act. The idea was simple, if a little obstinate: firearms shouldn’t be mailed anonymously.
| Subject | Details |
|---|---|
| Policy area | Proposed firearm sale and shipping rules under review by the Department of Justice |
| Originating agency | Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) |
| Foundational law | Gun Control Act of 1968 |
| Trigger event | 1963 mail-order rifle purchase by Lee Harvey Oswald |
| Current restriction | Firearm transfers must generally occur face-to-face through licensed dealers |
| Key private actor | GrabAGun, an online firearms retailer often called the “Amazon of guns” |
| Notable investor | Donald Trump Jr. |
| Estimated U.S. firearm retailers | More than 130,000 federally licensed dealers nationwide |
| Public-health framing | Tracked closely by groups like Everytown for Gun Safety |
| Status of proposal | Pre-rulemaking and public-comment phase |
The current proposal does not completely revoke that notion. It chips away at it. A nationwide system where firearms are transported similarly to other items from a warehouse—boxed, scanned, and dropped at a porch by someone in a rush before dawn—could result from updating sufficient verification standards and redefining sufficient exemptions. Advocates refer to it as modernization. The paperwork is outdated, there is genuine conflict, and lawful buyers have valid grievances regarding a procedure that hasn’t held up well in the age of e-commerce.
Opponents see things differently. They see the one component that made a system built around in-person checks disappearing. A nervous customer is noticed by a clerk. A dealer reporting a mismatched name. a difficult-to-fake paper trail. The geometry of gun trafficking changes when those moments are replaced with a confirmation email, perhaps in ways that are impossible to fully predict beforehand.

The political context makes it more difficult to take everything at face value. GrabAGun is an online retailer that has been openly marketed as the Amazon of firearms, and Donald Trump Jr. owns a sizable portion of the company. It’s difficult to ignore the fact that a regulatory framework shifting in favor of direct-to-consumer firearm shipping is excellent news for that particular business model. That does not necessarily mean that the proposal is flawed. It does indicate that the proposal is not functioning in a vacuum of policy.
Additionally, frictionless delivery in America already has a peculiar, ground-level texture. Amazon Flex drivers talk about working in the dark, going up to dimly lit homes without numbers on the doors, and never being certain if the person observing from the window or the dog in the yard is the issue. One driver remembered his hazards were still blinking when he looked up and saw a gun aimed at him. He was holding a package. Listening to those tales gives the impression that we have already established a delivery economy based on trust that no one fully extends and on routes that no one actually sees. It is not a leap into the unknown to add firearms to that pipeline. It’s an extension of what’s already happening, but when something goes wrong, the stakes are much higher.
It’s still unclear which portions of the proposal are quietly shelved and which make it through review. It appears likely that the discussion will not be silent for very long.
