In a notable about-face, New Jersey Attorney General Michelle M. Miller has begun dialing back her aggressive pursuit of Glock’s private sales records after facing mounting public backlash and serious legal pushback. What began as an expansive subpoena demanding years of detailed transaction data from the iconic American firearms manufacturer now appears to be shrinking under scrutiny, with the AG’s office suddenly open to “narrowing” the scope. This reversal speaks volumes about the power of sustained pressure from gun owners, industry advocates, and constitutional attorneys who correctly framed the demand as a blatant fishing expedition designed to harass a lawful manufacturer rather than solve any legitimate public safety issue.
For the 2A community, this episode perfectly illustrates the standard progressive playbook: use the machinery of state government to turn regulatory compliance into de facto harassment, hoping manufacturers will eventually capitulate rather than fight in court. Glock, to its credit, refused to simply roll over and hand over proprietary business information that could be weaponized by anti-gun bureaucrats to target lawful dealers and customers. The fact that Miller is softening her tone suggests the combination of bad optics, potential court losses, and growing awareness that such tactics only energize the gun-rights base has forced a tactical retreat. It also highlights how quickly these “common-sense” demands evaporate when exposed to real constitutional scrutiny and public accountability.
The broader implication should not be lost on anyone who values the Second Amendment. This wasn’t about crime; New Jersey’s violent criminals aren’t exactly filling out Form 4473 at their local FFL. It was always about control, data collection, and laying groundwork for future traceability schemes that treat law-abiding gun owners as suspects. While today’s softening is a small victory, it should serve as a reminder that eternal vigilance remains the price of freedom. The moment the pressure eases, expect the same players to return with more sophisticated versions of the same unconstitutional overreach. The 2A community’s rapid, coordinated response proved once again that organized resistance still works, even in deep-blue strongholds.