[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 244 (Friday, December 18, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 82516-82520]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-27857]


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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE

Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives

[Docket No. 2020R-10]


Objective Factors for Classifying Weapons with ``Stabilizing 
Braces''

AGENCY: Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, 
Department of Justice.

ACTION: Notice; request for comment.

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SUMMARY: The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives 
(``ATF'') is publishing the objective factors it considers when 
evaluating firearms with an attached stabilizing brace to determine 
whether they are considered firearms under the National Firearms Act 
(``NFA'') and/or the Gun Control Act (``GCA''). ATF publishes this 
notice to inform and invite comment from the industry and public on the 
proposed guidance, Objective Factors for Classifying Weapons with 
``Stabilizing Braces,'' prior to issuing a final document. Upon 
issuance of final guidance, ATF will provide additional information to 
aid persons and companies in complying with Federal laws and 
regulations. This notice also outlines ATF's enforcement priorities 
regarding persons who, prior to publication of this notice, made or 
acquired, in good faith, firearms equipped with a stabilized brace. 
Finally, this notice previews ATF's and the Department of Justice's 
plan to subsequently implement a separate process for current 
possessors of stabilizer-equipped firearms to choose to register such 
firearms in compliance with the NFA, including an expedited application 
process and the retroactive exemption of such firearms from the 
collection of NFA taxes.

DATES: Written comments must be postmarked and electronic comments

[[Page 82517]]

must be submitted on or before January 4, 2021. Commenters should be 
aware that the electronic Federal Docket Management System will not 
accept comments after midnight Eastern time on the last day of the 
comment period.

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by docket number ATF 
2020R-10, by any of the following methods--
     Federal eRulemaking Portal: www.regulations.gov. Follow 
the instructions for submitting comments.
     Mail: Office of Regulatory Affairs, Enforcement Programs 
and Services, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, 99 
New York Ave. NE, Mail Stop 6N-518, Washington, DC 20226; ATTN: ATF 
2020R-10.
     Fax: (202) 648-9741.
    Instructions: All submissions received must include the agency name 
and docket number (ATF 2020R-10). All properly completed comments 
received will be posted without change to the Federal eRulemaking 
portal, www.regulations.gov, including any personal information 
provided. For detailed instructions on submitting comments and 
additional information on the rulemaking process, see the ``Public 
Participation'' heading of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of 
this document.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Andrew Lange, Office of Regulatory 
Affairs, Enforcement Programs and Services, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, 
Firearms, and Explosives, U.S. Department of Justice, 99 New York Ave. 
NE, Mail Stop 6N-518, Washington DC 20226; telephone: (202) 648-7070 
(this is not a toll-free number).

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Background

    The Attorney General \1\ is responsible for enforcing the NFA, GCA, 
and the Arms Export Control Act (``AECA'').\2\ The Attorney General has 
delegated the responsibility for administering and enforcing these 
statutes to the Director of ATF, subject to the direction of the 
Attorney General and the Deputy Attorney General. See 28 CFR 
0.130(a)(1)-(2). The ATF Director delegated the authority to classify 
firearms pursuant to the GCA and NFA to ATF's Firearms Technology 
Criminal Branch (``FTCB'') and the Firearms Technology Industry 
Services Branch (``FTISB''), within the Firearms and Ammunition 
Technology Division (``FATD''), Office of Enforcement Programs & 
Services (``EPS'').\3\
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    \1\ National Firearms Act provisions still refer to the 
``Secretary of the Treasury.'' 26 U.S.C. ch. 53. However, the 
Homeland Security Act of 2002, Public Law 107-296, 116 Stat. 2135, 
transferred the functions of ATF from the Department of the Treasury 
to the Department of Justice, under the general authority of the 
Attorney General. 26 U.S.C. 7801(a)(2); 28 U.S.C. 599A(c)(1). Thus, 
for ease of reference, this notice refers to the Attorney General.
    \2\ National Firearms Act, 26 U.S.C. ch. 53; Gun Control Act, 18 
U.S.C. ch. 44; Arms Export Control Act, 22 U.S.C. 2778.
    \3\ Delegation of Authorities within the Bureau of Alcohol, 
Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Delegation Order 1100.168C 
(November 5, 2018).
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    FATD supports the firearms industry and the general public by, 
among other things, responding to technical inquiries, and by testing 
and evaluating firearms submitted to ATF for classification as to their 
regulation under the GCA and/or NFA. There is no requirement that the 
firearms industry or the public submit firearms to ATF for assessment 
of the firearm's proper classification. The statutory definition of 
``firearm'' under the GCA and the NFA is different.\4\ As a result, 
whether an item meets the definition of ``firearm'' under the GCA or 
the NFA affects how it will be regulated under Federal law. For 
instance, the GCA restricts the transportation, sale, and delivery of 
short-barreled shotguns and short-barreled rifles. 18 U.S.C. 922(a)(4) 
and (b)(4). Shotguns having a barrel or barrels of less than 18 inches 
in length,\5\ and rifles having a barrel or barrels less than 16 inches 
in length,\6\ and certain weapons made from shotguns and rifles, are 
``firearms'' as defined by the NFA, and are subject to registration and 
taxes. 26 U.S.C. 5845(a). Therefore, FATD's classifications of a 
particular firearm allows industry members to plan, develop, and 
distribute products in compliance with the law, thereby reducing their 
risk of incurring criminal or civil penalties, or the potential for 
costly corrective actions, including a possible recall by the 
manufacturer.
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    \4\ 18 U.S.C. 921(a)(3) (GCA definition of firearm); 26 U.S.C. 
5845(a) (NFA definition of firearm).
    \5\ Under 26 U.S.C. 5845(d), the term ``shotgun'' is further 
defined to mean ``a weapon designed or redesigned, made or remade, 
and intended to be fired from the shoulder and designed or 
redesigned and made or remade to use the energy of the explosive in 
a fixed shotgun shell to fire through a smooth bore either a number 
of projectiles (ball shot) or a single projectile for each pull of 
the trigger, and shall include any such weapon which may be readily 
restored to fire a fixed shotgun shell.''
    \6\ Under 26 U.S.C. 5845(c), the term ``rifle'' is further 
defined to mean ``a weapon designed or redesigned, made or remade, 
and intended to be fired from the shoulder and designed or 
redesigned and made or remade to use the energy of the explosive in 
a fixed cartridge to fire only a single projectile through a rifled 
bore for each single pull of the trigger, and shall include any such 
weapon which may be readily restored to fire a fixed cartridge.''
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    Generally, when FATD evaluates a firearm sample, it examines its 
overall configuration, physical characteristics, objective design 
features that are relevant under the statutory definitions of the GCA 
and NFA, and any other information that directly affects the 
classification of a particular firearm sample. Even though firearms may 
appear to have similar features, an ATF classification pertains only to 
the particular sample submitted, because variations in submissions, 
applicable statutes, judicial interpretations of these statutes, the 
manufacturer's or maker's intent,\7\ and the objective design features 
supporting that intent, make the general applicability of any 
particular classification exceedingly rare.
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    \7\ ``When classifying a part as a firearm silencer, the statute 
imposes an intent requirement. Therefore, the manufacturer's stated 
intent for the part is clearly relevant,'' however, ``the objective 
design features of the part must support the stated intent.'' Sig 
Sauer, Inc. v. Jones, 133 F. Supp. 3d 364, 370 (D.N.H 2015) aff'd 
Sig Sauer, Inc. v. Brandon, 826 F.3d 598 (1st Cir. 2016).
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    In recent years, some manufacturers have produced and sold devices 
designed to be attached to large and/or heavy pistols which are 
marketed to help a shooter ``stabilize'' his or her arm to support 
single-handed fire (``braces''). ATF was advised by the first 
manufacturer to submit an arm brace for classification that the intent 
of the arm brace was to facilitate one-handed firing of the AR15 pistol 
for those with limited strength or mobility due to a handicap, and to 
reduce bruising to the forearm when firing with one hand. According to 
this manufacturer, the brace concept was inspired by the needs of 
disabled combat veterans who still enjoy recreational shooting but 
could not reliably control heavy pistols without assistance. 
Consequently, ATF agrees that there are legitimate uses for certain 
``stabilizing braces.''
    The GCA and NFA generally regulate ``firearms'' and not individual 
components and, as such, ATF does not classify unregulated components 
or accessories alone. However, components or accessories can affect the 
overall classification of a firearm because: (1) How a component or 
accessory is actually used may be relevant in assessing the 
manufacturer's or maker's intent with respect to the design of a 
firearm; or (2) the design of a component or accessory may result in a 
firearm falling within a particular statutory definition. Stabilizing 
braces are one such component or accessory that ATF has encountered.
    ATF's longstanding and publicly known position is that a firearm 
does not evade classification under the NFA merely because the firearm 
is configured with a device marketed as a ``stabilizing

[[Page 82518]]

brace'' or ``arm brace.'' \8\ When an accessory and a weapon's 
objective design features, taken together, are not consistent with use 
of the accessory as an arm brace, that is, not to stabilize a handgun 
when being operated with one hand, such weapon, configured with the 
accessory may fall within the scope of the NFA, particularly where the 
accessory functions as a shoulder stock for the weapon. Accordingly, 
ATF must evaluate whether a particular firearm configured with a 
stabilizing brace bears the objective features of a firearm designed 
and intended to be fired from the shoulder, and thus subject to the 
NFA, on a case-by-case basis.
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    \8\ See ATF, Open Letter on the Redesign of ``Stabilizing 
Braces,'' (Jan. 16, 2015); and an open letter to industry counsel 
clarifying the 2015 Open Letter, see Marvin G. Richardson, Assistant 
Director, ATF Enforcement Programs & Services, 90000:GM, 5000 (Mar. 
21, 2017) (made widely available to the public on various websites, 
for example, see https://johnpierceesq.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/ATF-Letter-March-21-2017.pdf and https://www.sigsauer.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/atf-letter-march-21-2017.pdf).
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    As the purpose of the NFA is ``to regulate certain weapons likely 
to be used for criminal purposes,'' United States v. Thompson/Center 
Arms Co., 504 U.S. 505, 517 (1992), ATF cannot ignore the design 
features of a firearm that place it within the scope of the NFA's 
regulation simply because the manufacturer characterizes or markets a 
firearm accessory in a manner that does not correspond to its objective 
design. The characterization of an accessory by the manufacturer, 
including assertions in advertising, is not dispositive. If ATF's 
classification of a submitted sample demonstrates that the objective 
design features of the firearm, as configured, do not support the 
manufacturer's purported intent and characterization of the accessory 
on that particular firearm as a ``stabilizing brace'' or ``arm brace,'' 
ATF will classify the firearm based on the objective design features, 
as Federal law requires. See Sig Sauer v. Brandon, 826 F.3d 598, 601-02 
(1st Cir. 2016).
    ATF has observed that the development and production of firearms 
with arm braces has become more prevalent in the firearms industry and, 
relatedly, that requests for classifications for this kind of firearm 
design have also increased. Therefore, ATF is publishing this notice to 
aid the firearms industry and public in understanding the objective 
design features that FATD considers when evaluating firearm samples 
submitted with a stabilizing brace or similar attachment.
    The objective design features ATF considers in determining whether 
a weapon with an attached ``stabilizing brace'' has been ``designed or 
redesigned, made or remade, and intended to be fired from the 
shoulder'' include, but are not limited to:
     Type and Caliber. The type and caliber of firearm to which 
the stabilizing brace or similar item is installed. A large caliber 
firearm that is impractical to fire with one hand because of recoil or 
other factors, even with an arm brace, is likely to be considered a 
rifle or shotgun.
     Weight and Length. The weight and length of the firearm 
used with the stabilizing brace. A firearm that is so heavy that it is 
impractical to fire or aim with one hand, or so long that it is 
difficult to balance the firearm to fire with one hand, is likely to be 
considered a rifle or shotgun.
     Length of Pull. The ``length of pull'' refers to the 
distance from the trigger to the point at which a stock meets the 
shoulder. This is a measurement for rifles and shotguns used to 
accommodate shooters of different sizes. Because an arm brace need only 
reach the forearm, the distance between the trigger and the back of the 
brace is generally expected to be shorter than the distance between the 
trigger and the back of a stock on a weapon designed and intended to be 
fired from the shoulder. This measurement is not necessarily 
determinative of the intent of the manufacturer but is used in making 
an evaluation of the firearm. If a brace is of a length that makes it 
impractical to attach to the shooter's wrist or forearm, then that may 
demonstrate that it is not designed as brace but rather for shoulder 
fire.
     Attachment Method. The method of attachment of the 
stabilizing brace, to include modified stock attachments, extended 
receiver extensions, and the use of spacers. These items extend the 
distance between the trigger and the part of the weapon that contacts 
the shooter, whether it is a stock or stabilizing brace. Use of these 
items indicates that the weapon is designed and intended to be fired 
from the shoulder because they extend a stabilizing brace beyond a 
point that is useful for something other than shoulder support.
     Stabilizing Brace Design Features. The objective design 
features of the attached stabilizing brace itself are relevant to the 
classification of the assembled weapon, and include:
    [cir] The comparative function of the attachment when utilized as a 
stabilizing brace compared to its alternate use as a shouldering 
device;
    [cir] The design of the stabilizing brace compared to known 
shoulder stock designs;
    [cir] The amount of rear contact surface area of the stabilizing 
brace that can be used in shouldering the weapon as compared to the 
surface area necessary for use as a stabilizing brace;
    [cir] The material used to make the attachment that indicates 
whether the brace is designed and intended to be pressed against the 
shoulder for support, or actually used on the arm;
    [cir] Any shared or interchangeable parts with known shoulder 
stocks; and
    [cir] Any other feature of the brace that improves the weapon's 
effectiveness from the shoulder-firing position without providing a 
corresponding benefit to the effectiveness of the stability and support 
provided by the brace's use on the arm.
     Aim Point. Appropriate aim point when utilizing the 
attachment as a stabilizing brace. If the aim point when using the arm 
brace attachment results in an upward or downward trajectory that could 
not accurately hit a target, this may indicate the attachment was not 
designed as a stabilizing brace.
     Secondary Grip. The presence of a secondary grip may 
indicate that the weapon is not a ``pistol'' because it is not designed 
to be held and fired by one hand.
     Sights and Scopes. Incorporation of sights or scopes that 
possess eye relief incompatible with one-handed firing may indicate 
that the weapon is not a ``pistol'' because they are designed to be 
used from a shoulder-fire position and are incompatible for the single-
handed shooting that arm braces are designed and intended.
     Peripheral Accessories. Installation of peripheral 
accessories commonly found on rifles or shotguns that may indicate that 
the firearm is not designed and intended to be held and fired with one 
hand. This includes, but is not limited to, the installation of bipods/
monopods that improve the accuracy of heavy weapons designed and 
intended to be fired from the shoulder; or the inclusion of a magazine 
or drum that accepts so many cartridges that it increases the overall 
weight of the firearm to a degree that it is impractical to fire the 
weapon with one hand even with the assistance of a stabilizing brace.
    These factors are based on known stabilizing braces and similar 
attachments. No single factor or combination of factors is necessarily 
dispositive, and FATD examines each weapon holistically on a case-by-
case basis. Because of changes in design or configuration of a weapon 
or

[[Page 82519]]

attachment, as well as future changes in technology, this list is not 
exhaustive and other factors may become relevant to a weapon's 
classification. Moreover, in addition to the objective design features 
of a submitted sample, FATD also considers the marketing of both the 
item and the firearm to which it is attached, compared to the 
manufacturer's stated intent when submitting an item. FATD has found 
that manufacturers sometimes assert that a device is a ``stabilizing 
brace'' when submitting a firearm for classification. The same 
manufacturers will then advertise their products as devices that permit 
customers to fire their ``pistols'' from the shoulder--that is, making 
a ``short-barreled rifle''--without complying with the requirements of 
the NFA. This is far from the ``incidental'' use of an arm brace as a 
shouldering device as described in ATF's 2017 guidance (see footnote 
8), but is instead marketing material that directly contradicts the 
purpose or intent that the manufacturer conveyed to ATF. Although not a 
determinative factor, the actual use by members of the firearms 
industry, firearm writers, and the general public may provide further 
indication of the design and intent. These sources provide insight into 
the ways that manufacturers market their products. Finally, although 
the above are the most common objective factors that demonstrate the 
design and intent of a manufacturer or maker, other factors may be 
relevant. For example, if FATD classified a firearm with an arm brace 
as a ``pistol,'' that classification would be subject to FATD's review 
if the manufacturer sold the product with the instruction that the 
weapon is actually designed and intended to be fired from the shoulder.
    This compilation of relevant objective factors is consistent with 
what has been applied in evaluations of firearms with an attached 
stabilizing brace previously conducted by FATD at the request of the 
firearms industry. By setting out these factors in this notice, ATF is 
ensuring members of the public are equally aware of the criteria when 
considering the making or purchase of a firearm. As explained above, 
FATD's classifications allow industry members to plan, develop, and 
distribute products that comply with the law, and thereby reduce their 
risk of incurring criminal or civil penalties, or potentially costly 
corrective actions, including a possible recall by the manufacturer.
    In order to ensure consistency in classifying firearms, FATD uses 
the following procedure. A firearm voluntarily submitted to FTISB for 
classification is assigned to a Firearms Enforcement Officer (``FEO'') 
who evaluates the firearm. This may include disassembly, test-firing, 
or other processes necessary to determine whether a submission falls 
under the purview of the NFA, GCA, or AECA. That FEO produces a draft 
report and that report is peer reviewed by another qualified FEO, and 
includes a review of the steps taken in the evaluation, the analysis 
and the conclusions. Therefore, it is not the case that a single FEO is 
solely responsible for a particular classification. Because of this, 
prior to any necessary legal review and before the classification 
letter is signed and finalized, at least two FEOs have reviewed the 
submission. No classification will depend upon the physical attributes 
of a particular FEO including, for example, whether a firearm is too 
heavy to be held and fired in a single hand by the individual examiner, 
as all FEOs apply the evaluation factors objectively, not subjectively, 
based on the objective features of the submission that demonstrate, in 
the present case, the design of the weapon and the intent of the maker 
or manufacturer. After the review by two FEOs, the classification is 
then reviewed by the Chief, FTISB, to further ensure consistency.
    On August 19, 2020, the Department of Justice (DOJ) published 
regulations defining ``guidance documents'' and the required procedures 
that the Department and its components must follow to issue guidance 
documents consistent with Executive Order 13891. See 28 CFR 50.26. The 
regulation defines the term ``guidance document'' as ``an agency 
statement of general applicability, intended to have future effect on 
the behavior of regulated parties that sets forth (i) a policy on a 
statutory, regulatory, or technical issue, or (ii) an interpretation of 
a statute or regulation.'' 28 CFR 50.26(a)(1). As ATF started to 
receive samples of firearms configured with an arm brace for 
classification, FATD applied objective factors to interpret the NFA and 
GCA definitions of ``firearm'' to determine when attachment of an 
accessory purporting to be a stabilizing brace to a specific firearm 
results in a configuration subject to the provisions of the NFA. Due to 
the rise of firearms configured in this manner and a correlating 
increase in the number of classification requests from industry, ATF is 
publishing this list of objective factors it considers when classifying 
such firearms, including an explanation as to why those factors are 
important, to aid industry and the public in understanding ATF's 
interpretation and application of the NFA and GCA definition of 
``firearm'' when evaluating these types of firearms configurations. 
Although there is no requirement that a guidance document be published 
for notice and comment,\9\ ATF has decided to publish the proposed 
objective factors in the Federal Register for a brief comment period, 
given the public interest surrounding these issues. ATF will consider 
the comments it receives before finalizing this guidance.
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    \9\ Only ``significant guidance documents,'' as defined 28 CFR 
50.27(a)(2), are required to be made available for public notice and 
comment for at least 30 days, except when the Department or 
component finds that notice and public comment are impracticable, 
unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest. 28 CFR 
50.27(c)(2)(iii).
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    ATF recognizes that before issuance of this notice, there was a 
misunderstanding by some that a pistol assembled with any item 
purported to be a stabilizing brace still would be considered a 
``pistol'' regardless of other characteristics. The objective factors 
discussed here make clear that while some stabilizing braces may 
lawfully be used on pistols without bringing the firearm within the 
purview of the NFA, that is not necessarily the case for every 
``pistol'' because some firearms are configured or have characteristics 
such that they meet the statutory definition of ``rifle or shotgun'' 
(hereafter, ``affected stabilizer-equipped firearms''). ATF understands 
that most individuals who acquired affected stabilizer-equipped 
firearms did so in good-faith reliance on representations, made by 
those selling the stabilizing braces or the firearms, that those 
firearms were not subject to the NFA.
    Consequently, following issuance of this notice, ATF and DOJ plan 
to implement a separate process by which current possessors of affected 
stabilizer-equipped firearms may choose to register such firearms to be 
compliant with the NFA. As part of that process, ATF plans to expedite 
processing of these applications, and ATF has been informed that the 
Attorney General plans retroactively to exempt such firearms from the 
collection of NFA taxes if they were made or acquired, prior to the 
publication of this notice, in good faith. This separate process may 
include the following options: registering the firearm in compliance 
with the NFA (described above), permanently removing the stabilizing 
brace from the firearm and disposing of it, replacing the barrel of the 
firearm (16'' or greater for a rifle, or 18'' or greater for a 
shotgun), surrendering the firearm to ATF, or destroying the firearm.

[[Page 82520]]

    Until that process is separately implemented, and absent a 
substantial public safety concern, ATF will exercise its enforcement 
discretion not to enforce the registration provisions of the NFA 
against any person who, before publication of this notice, in good 
faith acquired, transferred, made, manufactured, or possessed an 
affected stabilizer-equipped firearms.
    This document is not an administrative determination that any 
particular weapon equipped with a stabilizing arm brace is a 
``firearm'' under the NFA. To the extent that the ATF Director 
subsequently issues such a determination, the ATF Director, at the 
direction of the Attorney General, plans retroactively to exempt such 
firearms from the collection of NFA taxes, provided those firearms were 
made or acquired in good faith prior to the publication of this notice. 
See 26 U.S.C. 7805.
    The contents of this document do not have the force and effect of 
law and are not meant to bind the public in any way. This document is 
intended only to provide clarity to the public regarding existing 
requirements under the law or Department policies. This guidance does 
not alter in any way the Department's authority to enforce federal law 
and is not intended to, does not, and may not be relied upon to create 
any rights, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law by any party 
in any matter civil or criminal.

Public Participation

A. Comments Sought

    ATF is accepting comments from all interested persons on the use of 
the objective factors listed in this document. All comments must 
reference this document's docket number, ATF 2020R-10, be legible, and 
include the commenter's complete first and last name and full mailing 
address. ATF will not consider, or respond to, comments that do not 
meet these requirements or comments containing excessive profanity. 
Comments that do not meet these criteria will not be considered. ATF 
will retain anonymous comments and those containing excessive profanity 
as part of this administrative record, but will not publish such 
documents on www.regulations.gov. ATF will treat all comments as 
originals and will not acknowledge receipt of comments. In addition, if 
ATF cannot read your comment due to technical difficulties and cannot 
contact you for clarification, ATF may not be able to consider your 
comment.
    ATF will carefully consider all comments, as appropriate, received 
on or before the closing date, and will give comments after that date 
the same consideration if practical to do so, but assurance of 
consideration cannot be given except as to comments received on or 
before the closing date.

B. Confidentiality

    ATF will make all comments meeting the requirements of this 
section, whether submitted electronically or on paper, available for 
public viewing at ATF and on the internet through the Federal 
eRulemaking Portal, and subject to the Freedom of Information Act (5 
U.S.C. 552). Commenters who do not want their name or other personal 
identifying information posted on the internet should submit comments 
by mail or facsimile, along with a separate cover sheet containing 
their personal identifying information. Both the cover sheet and 
comment must reference this docket number (2020R-10). For comments 
submitted by mail or facsimile, information contained on the cover 
sheet will not appear when posted on the internet but any personal 
identifying information that appears within a comment will not be 
redacted by ATF and it will appear on the internet.
    A commenter may submit to ATF information identified as proprietary 
or confidential business information. The commenter shall place any 
portion of a comment that is proprietary or confidential business 
information under law on pages separate from the balance of the comment 
with each page prominently marked ``PROPRIETARY OR CONFIDENTIAL 
BUSINESS INFORMATION'' at the top of the page.
    ATF will not make proprietary or confidential business information 
submitted in compliance with these instructions available when 
disclosing the comments that it received, but will disclose that the 
commenter provided proprietary or confidential business information 
that ATF is holding in a separate file to which the public does not 
have access. If ATF receives a request to examine or copy this 
information, it will treat it as any other request under the Freedom of 
Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552). In addition, ATF will disclose such 
proprietary or confidential business information to the extent required 
by other legal process.

C. Submitting Comments

    Submit comments in any of three ways (but do not submit the same 
comment multiple times or by more than one method). Hand-delivered 
comments will not be accepted.
     Federal eRulemaking Portal: ATF recommends that you submit 
your comments to ATF via the Federal eRulemaking portal at 
www.regulations.gov and follow the instructions. Comments will be 
posted within a few days of being submitted. However, if large volumes 
of comments are being processed simultaneously, your comment may not be 
viewable for up to several weeks. Please keep the comment tracking 
number that is provided after you have successfully uploaded your 
comment.
     Mail: Send written comments to the address listed in 
ADDRESSES section of this document. Written comments must appear in 
minimum 12-point font size (.17 inches), include the commenter's first 
and last name and full mailing address, be signed, and may be of any 
length.
     Facsimile: Submit comments by facsimile transmission to 
(202) 648-9741. Faxed comments must:
    1. Be legible and appear in minimum 12-point font size (.17 
inches);
    2. Be 8 \1/2\'' x 11'' paper;
    3. Be signed and contain the commenter's complete first and last 
name and full mailing address; and
    4. Be no more than five pages long.

Regina Lombardo,
Acting Director.
[FR Doc. 2020-27857 Filed 12-17-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410-FY-P