| EXCLUSIVE: Documents Show FBI and ATF Warrantless Surveillance Through Gun Background Checks 
 By Emily Miller January 13, 2023 Updated: January 13, 2023
 
 The  Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) has been  tracking gun owners without a warrant in a coordinated system with the  FBI, according to documents exclusively reviewed by The Epoch Times.
 
 Hundreds  of pages of documents produced to Gun Owners of America from a Freedom  of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit show ATF agents telling the FBI to  daily monitor specific people through the federal background system when  they lawfully purchase guns.
 
 The records show dozens of ATF  agents requesting the monitoring of law-abiding people through the FBI’s  National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) The FBI calls  this secret system with the ATF the “NICS Monitoring Services.” This is a  manual, daily check of firearm sales to see if a specific person buys a  gun for as long as the ATF agent wants.
 
 “They are basically  tracking—without a warrant—every gun purchase by these people,” Rob  Olson, an attorney for Gun Owners of America (GOA), told The Epoch  Times. “There’s no legal process here. At best, this is highly  questionable, if not outright unlawful.”
 
 A spokesman for ATF declined to comment. The FBI did not respond to a request for comment.
 
 No Probable Cause
 
 The  NICS system is supposed to be used only to ensure that those prohibited  from possessing a firearm are stopped at the point of sale. Yet the ATF  and FBI are using it to find fugitives and to track those they suspect  of being straw purchasers.
 
 The secret system works by agents  emailing the FBI a completed document called “ATF Investigations  Information Form for Monitoring Firearms Purchasers in the NICS.” The  agents are instructed that they  may request monitoring gun purchases of  people “who are under criminal investigation for violations or  potential violations of law.”
 
 That means they are monitoring  people who buy guns but have not broken the law. The people put in the  “NICS Monitoring Services” are never notified and seemingly have no way  to appeal being watched without a warrant.
 
 “If they had probable  cause, they could seek a warrant from a judge, but they aren’t doing  that,” explained Olson. “They are just deciding they have some reason to  believe a certain person’s exercise of Second Amendment rights needs to  be monitored. And it’s their own system so they make up their own  standards.  There doesn’t appear to be any oversight here.”
 
 The  records turned over by the ATF are all from 2020 and 2021. The GOA  first uncovered in 2021 that the FBI and the ATF coordinated using NICS  to monitor the firearm purchases of those they suspect of criminal  activity.
 
 Permanent Surveillance
 
 The  requestor agent gives the FBI a reason for the request and the length  of time they want the suspect monitored for buying a gun, ranging from  30 to 180 days.
 
 However, one of the newly released documents from  the GOA’s FOIA that is buried in the hundreds of pages turned over by  the ATF shows that there is no limit to how long the FBI will monitor a  person’s gun purchases.
 
 “I will monitor your suspect for 180  days, at the end of 180 days I will contact you and ask if you would  like to continue for another hundred days and keep repeating this  process until such time as you wish the investigation stop,” an FBI  official emailed an ATF agent.
 
 Olson said the ATF is misusing the  FBI’s background check system so that they can keep gun purchase  records that would otherwise be destroyed. Federal law dictates NICS  records for completed, approved gun purchases must be deleted from the  government database within 24 hours. This is why it takes daily  monitoring by the FBI to keep the suspects under watch for buying a gun  for as long as the ATF agent wants.
 
 Minorities Targeted
 
 The  NICS monitoring form includes the suspect’s name, date of birth, social  security number, gender, race, place of birth, and state of residence.
 
 ATF  records obtained by GOA and reviewed by The Epoch Times reveal that the  suspects being monitored by the FBI are overwhelmingly minority. For  example, out of 19 completed forms in March and April of 2021, only  three people were listed as white. The races of the others being watched  were black, Hispanic, and Asian. Two of the 19 were women.
 
 Monitoring During Chauvin Verdict
 
 One  of the documents from the FOIA shows an ATF agent requesting NICS  monitoring for a man attempting to buy a shotgun in Minnesota 30 minutes  after the guilty verdict for former Minneapolis Police Officer Derek  Chauvin for murdering George Floyd.
 
 The agent did not even claim  in the April 20, 2021 email that his suspect could be a straw purchaser.  He just said he may use a gun for rioting.
 
 The ATF agent wrote  that the request for monitoring the man was due to his “‘behavior and  appearance” at the gun store. He wrote that the suspect had his “hood  up, acting strange, and making statements of ‘do anything to get the  shotgun tonight’ are indicative of influencing an [Federal Firearm  Licensee] and obtaining a firearm for nefarious purposes.”
 
 “In my  professional observation and review of various law enforcement  bulletins stemming from the Chauvin trial, officer-involved shootings,  and general unrest during the last year, groups will use various means  to incite violence to further ideologies, to include the use of firearms  against government entities, persons, and property,” wrote the FBI  agent.
 
 It is assumed all monitoring requests in the documents  were granted by the FBI because NICS officials email back and forth with  the FBI agents until records requests are completed properly.
 
 Suspicion Over Women Buying Shotguns
 
 Another  form shows the ATF had the FBI monitoring NICS in 2021 for a black male  suspect because he “stated he was purchasing the firearms to provide to  female family members during the COVID-19 quarantine.”  The agent wrote  that he “found this reasoning to be suspicious” because the man  purchased a shotgun and rifle.
 
 The agency’s theory as to why a  woman would not use a rifle or shotgun for self-defense is not provided.  Of note, Pres. Joe Biden said he owns shotguns and advises his wife,  Dr. Jill Biden, to use them for self-defense.
 
 When he was vice  president in 2013, Biden was asked at a White House town hall if his  efforts to ban guns would make people more vulnerable to criminals.
 
 “If  you want to protect yourself, get a double-barrel shotgun,” Biden  replied. “As I told my wife — we live in an area that’s wooded and  somewhat secluded — I said, ‘Jill, if there’s ever a problem, just walk  out on the balcony here, walk out, put that double-barrel shotgun and  fire two blasts outside the house. I promise you, whoever’s coming in is  not going to.’”
 
 The man who the ATF reported was buying for a  female relative was also surveilled because he purchased “numerous  firearms of the same make/model/caliber over a short time frame.” It’s  unclear how the ATF knew of the man’s previous gun purchases. All the  other details are hidden behind the large parts of black redacted  information on the next pages.
 
 Finances Monitored with Gun Purchases
 
 There  is no legal limit on the number or monetary value of guns that can be  bought. Nevertheless, a black woman in Arizona was “NICS flag approved”  for being a possible straw purchaser because the agent reported her  “income for 1st Qtr totals $1,948.67.”  It’s unclear how the ATF knew  the woman’s income. “Let’s expedite considering her criminal history and  considering 9mm’s are weapons of choice for the cartel,” the special  agent emailed NICS on Aug. 6, 2020. Much of the document is redacted.
 
 A  black woman in Ohio was put on NICS monitoring for at least 90 days in  July 2020 due to her finances. The ATF agent wrote: “Permission for NICS  flag, income is [redacted] for the quarter & she has spent over  $8500 on firearms between 2/7-7/22? and referred to an “attached ROI.”  It is unclear how this alone provided sufficient cause to monitor this  woman’s gun purchases.
 
 A white man in Texas was put in the system  for six months because he is suspected of firearms trafficking for  purchasing $40,000 worth of guns with “no verifiable income.” The agent  wrote that the type of gun, which is not given, is “known to be firearms  commonly trafficked domestically and in furtherance of cartel related  activities in Mexico.” There is no minimum income for buying guns.
 
 Illegal ATF Power?
 
 Gilbert  Ambler, an attorney who represents the GOA, told The Epoch Times: “The  FBI-ATF expansion of the NICS program to maintain records relating to  firearm purchasers who have passed the background check is clearly  contrary to the intent of the law, which seeks to prevent government  agencies from violating the privacy of gun owners through the  construction of such a database.”
 
 Ambler said that it is illegal  for the FBI and ATF to maintain a database of people who they are  “suspicious of” but who pass a background check.
 
 The attorney  cited one law that prohibits using NICS to “establish any system for the  registration of firearms, firearm owners, or firearm transactions or  dispositions, except with respect to persons prohibited from receiving a  firearm.”
 
 In addition, Ambler pointed to another federal law  that prohibits using NICS “for the registration of firearms, firearm  owners, or firearm transactions or dispositions” except for people who  are prohibited from receiving a firearm.” Yet, the people in the secret  NICS monitoring system are not prohibited from buying guns.
 
 When  GOA filed a FOIA request to get information on its “NICS Monitoring  Services,” the FBI responded immediately. The ATF, however, did not  respond at all. GOA filed a lawsuit for records on any ATF efforts to  utilize NICS “for the covert surveillance of individual American  citizens, by monitoring their firearm purchases.” The ATF sent 14 files  (some with over 100 pages) to GOA on Jan. 9. Five of the files are  marked “final,” but the agency’s production of records to GOA is  ongoing.
 
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