Estimated reading time: 3 minutes
A Maryland gun shop is taking on one of the biggest banks in the country and the firearm industry is paying close attention.
According to reporting from NSSF’s Mark Oliva, United Gun Shop in Rockville, Maryland, is suing Capital One after the bank allegedly cut off its payment processing services without warning, costing the business an estimated $75,000 in damages.
The reason? The shop was reportedly labeled a “prohibited industry.”
That’s despite the fact that United Gun Shop was operating legally, selling firearms to law-abiding customers and previously using the same payment platform without issue.
Owner Jonathan Bennett said the shutdown came out of nowhere.
“As an American-owned small business operating legally, we were shocked when Capital One abruptly stopped processing our payments,” Bennett said, adding the company cited vague reasoning tied to a third-party provider.
That third party (Melio Payments) reportedly pointed back at Capital One. Capital One, in turn, pointed at Melio. Meanwhile, the business was left unable to process transactions.
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What makes this case different is the timing.
In August 2025, a White House executive order was issued aimed at preventing banking discrimination against lawful businesses. Around the same time, federal regulators began taking a harder look at what the firearm industry has long argued: banks were making politically motivated decisions to cut off services.
According to Oliva’s reporting, findings from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) confirmed that large banks had made “inappropriate distinctions” against lawful industries, including firearm-related businesses.
In response, regulators moved to eliminate “reputational risk” as a justification for denying services, essentially removing the ability for banks to blacklist legal businesses based on political pressure or perception.
That’s where things get interesting.
Because if those rules are now in place, cases like this could test how serious regulators are about enforcing them.
The OCC has already signaled that banks engaging in this kind of behavior could face consequences, including scrutiny during licensing reviews and regulatory actions tied to compliance.
In other words, this isn’t just about one gun shop. It’s about whether banks can still quietly cut off entire industries they don’t like.
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And that brings it back to the core issue.
If a federally licensed firearm retailer, operating legally, can be shut down overnight by a payment processor or bank, what does that say about access to financial services?
Because without banking, there’s no business. No payroll; no transactions, no way to operate.
That’s why this case matters beyond just one lawsuit.
It could define where the line is drawn between legitimate risk management… and outright discrimination.
And now, Capital One may have to explain that line in court.
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