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US HR431

US HR431
Gun Transparency and Accountability (Gun TRAC) Act of 2013


summary

Introduced
In Committee
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

113th Congress

Bill Summary

Gun Transparency and Accountability (Gun TRAC) Act of 2013 - Declares that the contents of the Firearms Trace System database maintained by the National Trace Center of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) shall not be immune from legal process, shall be subject to subpoena or other discovery, shall be admissible as evidence, and may be used, relied on, or disclosed on the same basis as other information in a civil action in any state or federal court or in an administrative proceeding. Amends the federal criminal code to: (1) prohibit national instant criminal background check system records from being destroyed until after 90 days after the system assigns and provides a firearms licensee with a unique identification number for the transfer, (2) set forth penalties for the willful violation of an inventory reporting order by a firearms licensee, and (3) prohibit the Attorney General from accepting an application for a federal firearms license from a person whose license has been revoked. Amends the Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, 2012, to repeal provisions that prohibit appropriated funds from being used: (1) for any background check system that does not require the destruction of any identifying information submitted for a transferee within 24 hours after the system advises a licensee that the transferee's receipt of a firearm is not prohibited; or (2) to promulgate or implement any rule requiring a physical inventory of any firearms business.

AI Summary

This bill, the Gun Transparency and Accountability (Gun TRAC) Act of 2013, makes several changes to firearms laws, primarily by making information from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) Firearms Trace System database available for legal proceedings, meaning it can be subpoenaed, used as evidence, and disclosed in civil lawsuits or administrative hearings, which was previously restricted. It also amends the federal criminal code to require that records from the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS), used to check if someone is legally allowed to purchase a firearm, be kept for at least 90 days after a unique identification number is assigned for a transfer, and it introduces penalties for firearms licensees who willfully fail to comply with inventory reporting orders, while also preventing the Attorney General from accepting license applications from individuals whose federal firearms license has been revoked. Additionally, the bill repeals provisions from a 2012 appropriations act that prohibited funds from being used for background check systems that didn't destroy identifying information within 24 hours or for rules requiring physical firearm inventories by businesses.

Committee Categories

Justice, Military Affairs and Security

Sponsors (29)

Last Action

Referred to the Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, Homeland Security, And Investigations. (on 02/28/2013)

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