Good catch. Technically, I'm pretty sure that so long as the sear was manufactured before 1985, it is legal. No idea how one could prove the sear's born on date though. Regardless, accuracy is not improved with a legal sear.
Let us not lose sight that machine guns are legal to own, albeit expenseive to acquire and still must conform to the 1985 rule. However, the BATF is s-l-o-w AF in issuing a $200 "Tax Stamp" for them.
Originally Posted by Why_Yes_I_Do
Manufactured before 1985 and
REGISTERED with BATFE before 1985. That is how they know it is legal.
The Gun Control Act of 1968 as amended in 1985 controls this issue.
An auto sear is regulated in the same way as an entire machinegun, forms to fill out, deep background check, Fees and tax stamp* all of it. The firearm and everything about you become a matter of record with the government. A fully automatic firearm or the parts to make it so fit within the statutory definition of what constitutes a machinegun.
The BATFE applied the same regulations to Bump Stocks and the Supreme Court found that Bump Stocks do not fall within the statute's definition og a machinegun.
I do not understand why this is so hard for folks to grasp. The fundamental issue is regulatory overreach.
There are cases fermenting and brewing in the court system dealing with regulatory overreach in OSHA, EPA and other agencies that are no different from the Bump Stock thing.
In ech case, the agencies have exceeded what they are allowed to do by law. However commendable or benaficial the struck-down regulations are, they must be addressed through new federal legislation by both houses of Congress. . . and then signed in to law by whoever is President.