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Buckeye Reporter

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

Federal firearm bans: A brief history

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Dean Rieck, Executive Director at Buckeye Firearms Association | LinkedIn

Dean Rieck, Executive Director at Buckeye Firearms Association | LinkedIn

Laws restricting firearms in federal facilities are a relatively recent development in the United States. At the time of the Bill of Rights' ratification, only courtrooms, legislative chambers, and polling places on Election Day typically prohibited weapons. The Supreme Court's Bruen opinion notes few "sensitive places" with such prohibitions historically.

The 1960s marked a shift when the federal government began banning firearms in its buildings. This change is highlighted in the United States v. Ayala case, which questions whether prohibiting weapons in post offices violates Second Amendment rights. Initially ruled unconstitutional by a district court, this decision is under appeal.

Documents from the Ayala case reveal that until the 1920s, armed mail clerks were common due to mail train robberies. Regulations banning weapons on federal property emerged in 1964 and were codified for postal properties by 1972.

In 1988, Congress passed statute 18 USC Chapter 44 Section 930, prohibiting weapons in federal facilities except for specific exceptions like law enforcement activities or other lawful purposes, though these remain vaguely defined.

A reinforcement of this ban occurred in 1998 through postal regulations. Historically, there was no broad prohibition against carrying weapons in government buildings until these mid-20th-century regulations and statutes came into effect.

This historical context underscores that bans on firearms within government buildings are not longstanding traditions but rather modern measures impacting Second Amendment rights.

Republished with permission from AmmoLand.

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