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As a commenter said this was looking like a dry run to see how we Americans would take such a illegal action. And they saw not so well.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives has backed away from what first appeared to be an immediate plan to ban a popular type of ammunition, and now claims that some confusion was caused by a “publishing mistake.”
In February, the ATF published a new framework for deciding what ammunition is “primarily intended for sporting purposes” and thus can be exempted from a federal ban on armor piercing ammo. The ATF also put out a regulation guide that didn’t including a current listing of exceptions, including the popular M855 cartridge that’s used in the AR-15 rifle.
The ATF says reports that it has already banned a certain type of ammunition are not correct, and are based on a ‘publishing mistake.’ Image: George Frey/Getty Images
According to the ATF, that omission led to media reports indicating that the government had already banned the M855. But the ATF said that omission was an error.
The ATF noted its error in a tweet late Friday night, which was first flagged by Townhall.com.
Nothing to analyze here folks, just a publishing mistake. No AP ammo exemptions revoked @NRA @NSSF. See http://t.co/mEIKThYBAX
— ATF HQ (@ATFHQ) March 7, 2015
“Media reports have noted that the 2014 ATF regulation guide published online does not contain a listing of the exemptions for armor piercing ammunition, and conclude that the absence of this listing indicates these exemptions have been rescinded,” ATF said in a release linked to that tweet. “This is not the case.”
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2015/03/09/atf-does-about-face-on-ammo-ban-calls-it-publishing-mistake/