Week of February 16, 2026
Purpose:
This weekly update provides factual, plain-language summaries of new, proposed, or recently issued laws, regulatory actions, and agency developments affecting the firearms industry and firearm owners in the United States.
Disclaimer:
This post is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice, political advocacy, or endorsement of any legislation, regulation, policy, or public official. Laws and enforcement practices may change, and application can vary by jurisdiction. Readers should consult official government sources or qualified legal counsel for guidance specific to their situation.
Federal Updates
ATF Regulatory Enforcement & Industry Liaison Activity
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Status This Week: No new formal rulemakings or Federal Register publications were issued specific to firearms regulation in the past week.
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Ongoing: The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) continues its regulatory enforcement and compliance partnership programs, including outreach by its Senior Industry Partnership Advisor to FFL holders and industry stakeholders. This liaison serves as a primary contact for regulatory clarification and compliance questions.
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Who It Affects: Federal Firearms Licensees (FFLs), manufacturers, and regulated entities.
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Source: Official ATF firearms industry page — ATF regulatory and compliance overview: https://www.atf.gov/firearms
Federal Statutory Framework Reference — Firearms Laws
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While not a new development this week, a comprehensive reference on federal firearms law outlines how the National Firearms Act (NFA) and the Gun Control Act (GCA) structure federal regulation of firearm transfer, possession, and licensing. This remains pertinent for industry compliance context.
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Reference: Congressional Research Service overview of federal firearms law (current statutory context): https://www.congress.gov/crs_external_products/IF/PDF/IF11038/IF11038.9.pdf
State-Level Updates
Colorado Legislative Firearms Proposals
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Status: Several firearm-related bills have been introduced in the Colorado legislative session, with activity in the past week.
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Summary: A package of proposed measures would expand the state’s “red flag” extreme risk protection statute, introduce additional regulatory requirements for firearm dealers, and extend restrictions on so-called “ghost guns” (unserialized firearms or parts). One of the proposals expanding red flag authority passed the State Senate and is now under consideration in the House.
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Who It Affects: Firearm owners and dealers in Colorado.
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Note: As of this week these proposals remain in committee or chamber consideration; none have been enacted.
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Source: Colorado legislative news coverage: https://www.axios.com/local/denver/2026/02/11/colorado-gun-laws-2026
Court Decisions & Regulatory Notices
Federal Case Law & Ongoing Litigation Tracking
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There were no major new published federal court decisions on firearms issues in the past week. A key U.S. Supreme Court decision from 2025, Bondi v. VanDerStok, addressed federal regulatory definitions of “firearm” under the Gun Control Act and remains relevant to ongoing litigation and enforcement interpretation.
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Reference: Bondi v. VanDerStok (2025) summary — U.S. Supreme Court case interpreting ATF regulatory definitions: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bondi_v._VanDerStok
What This Means in Practice
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Federal Compliance: FFL holders and industry representatives should continue to utilize official ATF compliance resources and the Industry Liaison contact for questions or clarifications on regulatory interpretation.
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State Legislative Monitoring: With ongoing firearm-related proposals in Colorado’s legislature, dealers and owners in that state should track bill progress and committee activities. Proposed changes to red flag statute frameworks and dealer requirements could have compliance implications once enacted.
Monitoring continues for new state and federal regulatory developments, legislation, and published court decisions that become public during the upcoming week.
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Disclaimer
This post is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice, political advocacy, or endorsement of any legislation, regulation, policy, or public official. Laws and enforcement practices may change, and application can vary by jurisdiction. Readers should consult official government sources or qualified legal counsel for guidance specific to their situation.
