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A new filing in the Pennsylvania Supreme Court is taking direct aim at how far government agencies can go when regulating gun dealers. And it doesn’t pull punches.
In Schmidt v. Paris, gun owners and dealers are challenging a web of state laws, regulations, and policies they say cross a constitutional line. At the center of the fight: warrantless inspections, vague licensing standards, and what plaintiffs argue is an unelected agency making up the rules as it goes.
The latest brief doubles down on a simple claim: Pennsylvania never authorized this.
According to the filing, the Uniform Firearms Act does not include any statutory authority for inspections of firearm dealers, let alone warrantless ones. Instead, the Pennsylvania State Police created that power through regulation. The plaintiffs argue that’s not just overreach. It’s unconstitutional.
They take it a step further, arguing the agency didn’t just interpret the law. It effectively wrote new law. And under Pennsylvania’s Constitution, that’s supposed to be the legislature’s job.
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Even more controversial is the inspection policy itself.
Plaintiffs say dealers are being forced to submit to warrantless searches, turn over records, and answer questions all without probable cause. Refuse, and you risk losing your license. The brief frames that as a textbook violation of due process and an unconstitutional condition: give up your rights, or give up your business.
And outside groups are backing that argument hard.
“Selling guns in accordance with state and federal law does not require that a seller waive their other constitutional rights,” said SAF Director of Legal Operations Bill Sack. “Warrantless searches of these businesses are unlawful, and particularly egregious when you consider that many FFL dealers run their business out of their private residence.”
The filing also leans heavily on history and recent Supreme Court precedent.
While the government tries to justify inspections under the “closely regulated industry” theory, the brief argues that kind of power didn’t exist at the Founding. Under Bruen, that’s a problem. If there’s no historical tradition, the regulation doesn’t stand.
The brief also hammers on the lack of clear standards in the law itself. Terms like “reputable applicant” and “cause” to revoke a license aren’t defined, giving regulators wide discretion and, according to the plaintiffs, opening the door to arbitrary enforcement.
The Second Amendment Foundation sees a bigger issue at play.
“These regulations are nothing more than an attempt to thwart the Second Amendment rights of Pennsylvanians,” said SAF founder Alan M. Gottlieb. “Whether it’s in Pennsylvania—or any other state—Americans are allowed to exercise their full constitutional rights without fear of government agencies enforcing frivolous laws.”
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And the implications stretch well beyond gun shops.
If agencies can create inspection powers without legislative approval, the brief warns, it sets a precedent for expanding that authority across other industries and potentially into private homes.
Bottom line: this case isn’t just about firearms.
It’s about who makes the rules and whether constitutional protections still hold when agencies decide to push the limits.
Now it’s up to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to decide where that line gets drawn.
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