HR-2267-119
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
Sponsored by Thomas Massie (R-KY)
What it does
This bill would require the Attorney General to submit an annual report to the House and Senate Judiciary Committees on the demographic characteristics of people denied firearm purchases through the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS). The report would break down denials by reason for ineligibility and include data on race, ethnicity, national origin, sex, gender, age, disability, average annual income, and English language proficiency. It would also require the same demographic breakdown for people whose denials were overturned on appeal.
Who benefits
Researchers, policymakers, and civil rights organizations who study potential disparities in NICS denial patterns. Individuals who believe they were wrongly denied and want systemic data to support reform efforts. Congress, which would gain structured oversight data on a federal background check system that processes millions of transactions annually. Journalists and transparency advocates who monitor federal law enforcement systems. Gun rights advocates who may use the data to identify and challenge patterns of over-denial.
Who is hurt
The Department of Justice and FBI, which administer NICS and would bear the administrative cost of collecting, disaggregating, and reporting this demographic data annually. Individuals whose demographic information is collected and reported, even in aggregate, may have privacy concerns. Firearm retailers could face indirect scrutiny if denial patterns correlate with their customer base. Some civil liberties groups may object to the government collecting and retaining demographic data tied to firearm purchase attempts.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that NICS processes over 25 million background checks per year and that Congress has a legitimate oversight interest in whether the system operates equitably across demographic groups. They contend that disaggregated data is essential to identify whether certain populations — such as low-income individuals or non-English speakers — face disproportionate denial rates due to data errors or systemic issues, and that transparency is a prerequisite for any meaningful accountability of a federal law enforcement database.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that collecting and reporting demographic data on people who attempted to purchase firearms — including those whose denials were upheld — creates a de facto government registry of individuals by race, income, and national origin tied to gun purchase activity, raising serious privacy concerns. They contend that the data collection burden on the DOJ is not justified by a clearly defined remedial purpose, and that publishing such breakdowns could stigmatize demographic groups statistically associated with higher denial rates without providing meaningful context or corrective action.