By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Gun GravyGun GravyGun Gravy
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Firearms
  • Tactical
  • Videos
Reading: Virginia Judge Blocks Spanberger’s Assault Firearm Ban Statewide Days Before It Takes Effect
Share
Font ResizerAa
Gun GravyGun Gravy
  • Latest News
  • Firearms
  • Tactical
  • Videos
Search
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Firearms
  • Tactical
  • Videos
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
Gun Gravy > Latest News > Virginia Judge Blocks Spanberger’s Assault Firearm Ban Statewide Days Before It Takes Effect
Virginia Judge Blocks Spanberger’s Assault Firearm Ban Statewide Days Before It Takes Effect
Latest News

Virginia Judge Blocks Spanberger’s Assault Firearm Ban Statewide Days Before It Takes Effect

Jim Flanders
Last updated: June 25, 2026 10:49 pm
Jim Flanders Published June 25, 2026
Share
SHARE

Key Takeaways

  • A Virginia judge has blocked the state’s new assault firearm ban, issuing a preliminary injunction that prevents enforcement while the case goes on.
  • The injunction applies to the entire state, allowing licensed dealers to sell firearms while it remains in effect, but local law enforcement may still enforce laws.
  • Plaintiffs, including John Crump and several gun organizations, argue that the ban violates the Virginia Constitution’s right to bear arms.
  • The state plans to appeal the ruling, asserting that the ban is necessary for public safety despite the judge’s decision.
  • This case is part of a broader legal challenge to SB749, with other cases pending decisions in various jurisdictions.

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

LANCASTER, VA — A Virginia judge has blocked the state’s new “assault firearm” ban statewide, six days before it was set to take effect on July 1.

Lancaster County Circuit Court Judge John S. Martin granted a preliminary injunction Thursday in Crump v. Katz, barring the Virginia State Police from enforcing the ban while the case proceeds. He read the ruling from the bench. The injunction runs through December 31, 2026, or until the court issues a final order, according to Courthouse News.

This is the lawsuit I have been following since gun owners filed it one day after Gov. Abigail Spanberger signed SB749 into law. The plaintiffs are Second Amendment journalist John Crump, Gun Owners of America, Gun Owners Foundation, the Virginia Citizens Defense League, and the Virginia Citizens Defense Foundation. The defendant is Virginia State Police Superintendent Col. Jeffrey S. Katz, sued in his official capacity.

The case turns on the Virginia Constitution. The plaintiffs argued SB749 violates Article I, Section 13, which protects the right to keep and bear arms. The Commonwealth took the remarkable position that the provision is a collective, militia-tied clause rather than an individual right, which would leave Virginians with less protection under their own constitution than they have under the Second Amendment. Judge Martin was not willing to let the ban take effect while that argument plays out.

There is also a wrinkle on who is carrying the case. According to plaintiff John Crump, who described the ruling on a livestream, the judge found GOA and VCDL lacked standing but that Crump, as a gun owner directly hit by the ban, did. The written order is not public yet, so I am treating that as preliminary until it spells out the court’s reasoning, which Van Cleave expects as soon as tomorrow.

The scope of the ruling matters as much as the result. The Commonwealth asked the judge to limit the injunction to Lancaster County. He refused. The state then asked him to stay his own order. He refused that too. The injunction now applies to the Virginia State Police across the entire Commonwealth, effective immediately.

Read that part carefully, though. The order runs against the State Police, and since dealer sales clear through the State Police background check system, licensed dealers across Virginia can sell these firearms again while the injunction holds. That is why this is being reported as a block on the sales ban. What the order does not do is bind local commonwealth’s attorneys or local police. That gap is real enough that the plaintiffs in a separate Washington County case argued the same day for a broader injunction reaching all law enforcement, not just the State Police. Until a court closes that gap, a local prosecutor who wants to charge someone over a private transfer is not bound by Thursday’s ruling.

More from USA Carry:

VCDL President Philip Van Cleave confirmed the injunction reaches both the assault firearm ban and the law’s prohibition on publicly carrying those firearms. The fate of the magazine restriction, the 15-round cap that was also set to hit July 1, is not yet clear. Van Cleave said he expected to know more soon. I will update readers once the written order spells out the full scope.

Van Cleave was confident about what comes next. “We expect the Commonwealth to appeal and we expect to prevail,” he said.

The Commonwealth is not done. Attorney General Jay Jones, in a statement posted by his office, called the ruling disappointing and said the state will “urgently file a motion to stay this ruling and appeal this temporary injunction.” He repeated the administration’s line that the ban keeps Virginians safe.

Gov. Spanberger’s office stood by the law, saying the governor believes firearms built to inflict maximum casualties do not belong near schools, families, or on Virginia streets.

House Minority Leader Terry Kilgore welcomed the decision, calling it “welcome, but not unexpected” given the constitutional warnings Republicans raised during the session.

Crump v. Katz is one of several state and federal challenges to SB749. A separate Spotsylvania County case, Curtis v. Katz, was denied a preliminary injunction last week, and an NRA-affiliated case in Washington County was argued the same day as the Lancaster ruling with no decision yet from the bench. The Virginia Supreme Court has convened a three-judge panel to decide whether the state cases should be consolidated.

For now, the broadest gun ban Virginia has passed in a generation is on hold. The state will run to the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court of Virginia to try to undo it before July 1. I will track every step of the appeal and report what the higher courts do.

Read the full article here

You Might Also Like

The 10-Shot Verdict: Why Josue Pizarro’s Self-Defense Claim Faces “Overkill” Charges

Louvre Museum director resigns following $102M theft of crown jewels

Missouri Homeowner Shoots Intruder Dead During Break-In, Before Police Could Arrive

Savannah Guthrie returns to ‘Today’ show studio for first time since mother went missing

Captured Venezuelan dictator Maduro faces New York federal judge after dramatic palace raid

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

We Recommend
UNICEF Warns Children Are At Highest Risk of Ebola
Tactical

UNICEF Warns Children Are At Highest Risk of Ebola

Jim Flanders Jim Flanders June 26, 2026
Kindergarten Graduation Turns Into Donnybrook | Active Self Protection
Keltec KSG Shotgun
California Just Got Another Major Warning That “The Big One” Is Coming
Wave 3 (down) Inbound? Trade and Inventory, BlinkLabNews Downshifting
Trump Says He’s “Working On” National Right-to-Carry After NRA President Presses Him in Pennsylvania
10 Things You Must Know About Lever Action Rifles + 5 Best Lever Guns!
Videos

10 Things You Must Know About Lever Action Rifles + 5 Best Lever Guns!

Survival Gear Survival Gear June 25, 2026
“Jellyfish of Death”: Rescued Pilot Reveals Iran’s Secret Drone Swarm Network
Tactical

“Jellyfish of Death”: Rescued Pilot Reveals Iran’s Secret Drone Swarm Network

Jim Flanders Jim Flanders June 25, 2026
Trump Says Billions of Dollars More Are Needed For Iran War
Tactical

Trump Says Billions of Dollars More Are Needed For Iran War

Jim Flanders Jim Flanders June 25, 2026
  • Latest News
  • Videos
  • Tactical
  • Firearms
2024 © Gun Gravy. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?