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Federal Gun Deregulation Won’t Save You From an Illinois Weapons Charge

W. Scott Hanken

By: W. Scott Hanken | Former Sangamon County Prosecutor | Springfield Criminal Defense & DUI Attorney |
Voted “Best Attorney” — Illinois Times Best of Springfield & State Journal-Register Reader’s Choice | Springfield, IL • Sangamon County • (217) 544-4057 • hankenlaw.com


THE SHORT ANSWER

The Trump administration’s 2026 rollback of more than three dozen federal firearms regulations changes how the ATF polices dealers and licenses. It does nothing to Illinois’s own gun laws. If you’re arrested in Sangamon County for a FOID violation or Aggravated Unlawful Use of a Weapon, you’re being prosecuted under state law that Washington cannot touch.

My phone rang three times last week with the same question. Callers had read headlines about Washington loosening gun rules and assumed it applied here too. It doesn’t, and that misunderstanding can cost you your freedom.


What Did the Federal Government Actually Change?

On April 29, 2026, the Department of Justice and ATF announced 34 final and proposed rule changes. The package flows from Executive Order 14206, signed in February 2025, which directed the Attorney General to review federal firearms regulations for perceived Second Amendment infringements.

The changes mostly hit federal dealer licensing. The ATF ended its zero-tolerance revocation policy for licensed dealers. It narrowed the definition of who counts as “engaged in the business” of selling guns, which weakens a 2024 rule aimed at closing the so-called gun show loophole for unlicensed sellers. Fingerprinting requirements got simpler. Some restrictions tied to past mental health commitments loosened too.

None of that rewrites a single word of the Illinois Criminal Code.


Why Doesn’t Federal Deregulation Help Someone Charged in Springfield?

Here’s the piece most people miss. Federal law sets a floor, and states build their own structure on top of it. Illinois built one of the strictest structures in the country, and every brick of it is state law.

Your FOID card obligation comes from the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act, 430 ILCS 65, passed by the Illinois legislature. Your exposure for carrying a loaded, uncased gun without a valid FOID card or concealed carry license comes from Aggravated Unlawful Use of a Weapon, 720 ILCS 5/24-1.6. Neither statute mentions the ATF. Neither depends on federal dealer rules. A Sangamon County prosecutor doesn’t need Washington’s permission to charge you, and Washington rolling back its own rules doesn’t take that power away.

Would rolling back a federal dealer-licensing rule change what a Springfield police officer finds during a traffic stop on MacArthur Boulevard? It wouldn’t. The gun is either legally possessed under Illinois law or it isn’t.


Does Illinois Still Require Background Checks on Private Gun Sales?

Yes, independently of anything happening in Washington. Federal deregulation targeted the rule requiring more unlicensed sellers nationwide to run background checks. Illinois never relied on that federal rule to begin with. Under state law, a private seller must contact the Illinois State Police through its firearm transfer verification portal before completing a sale, obtain an approval number, and keep a transfer record. That obligation sits in state statute. It survives regardless of what the ATF decides to do with federal dealer oversight.


A Realistic Scenario

Consider a situation that plays out often in Sangamon County. A driver crosses into Illinois from Missouri with a handgun in the center console, legally purchased and owned back home. He hears news coverage about federal gun deregulation and assumes the rules eased everywhere. A routine stop for a burned-out taillight turns into a search, the gun surfaces, and he has no Illinois FOID card and no concealed carry license.

That single assumption can turn a taillight stop into a Class 4 felony charge for AUUW, one to three years in prison on conviction. His home-state license means nothing here. Ignorance of Illinois law is not a defense, and neither is a news headline about federal policy.


Can You Be Held in Jail Before Trial on a Gun Charge?

Often, yes. Under the SAFE-T Act’s Pretrial Fairness Act, 725 ILCS 5/110-6.1(a)(6), non-probationable AUUW sits among the enumerated detainable offenses. Related reading: “Illinois SAFE-T Act: What Happens at a Detention Hearing in Springfield” at hankenlaw.com. A weapons charge is exactly the kind of case where that battle gets fought early and fast. The State has to prove three things by clear and convincing evidence before a judge can order you held. Miss one, and you go home while the case proceeds.

What Are the Different Illinois Weapons Charges You Could Face?

  • Unlawful Use of a Weapon (UUW) — carrying a firearm without a FOID card or in a prohibited location, typically a Class A misdemeanor that can escalate.
  • Aggravated Unlawful Use of a Weapon (AUUW) — carrying a loaded, accessible firearm without a valid FOID card or concealed carry license, a Class 4 felony that jumps to Class 2 on a repeat or prior felony.
  • Unlawful Possession of a Firearm by a Felon — a Class 3 felony that can rise to Class 2 depending on the underlying prior conviction.
  • Unlawful Sale or Delivery of Firearms — transferring a gun to someone ineligible to possess one; penalties vary by circumstance, from a Class 4 felony up to Class X depending on the specific violation.

These categories are broken down in more detail in “What Are Illinois Weapons Offenses?” and “Understanding What Unlawful Use of a Weapon Means”, both right here on my blog. Both posts are worth reading before your court date, not after.


How Do These Charges Actually Get Defended?

Most Sangamon County weapons cases begin with a traffic stop or a pedestrian encounter, not a planned investigation. That matters. The stop itself has to be lawful. If an officer lacked reasonable suspicion for the initial stop, or expanded a routine stop into a vehicle search without proper justification, everything found afterward can become subject to a motion to suppress.

Possession is the other pressure point. Prosecutors must prove you knowingly possessed the weapon, not merely that a gun existed somewhere in a car with multiple occupants. In my experience defending these cases in the Sangamon County Courthouse at 200 S. 9th Street, that possession element is where cases fall apart more often than people expect.


KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Federal ATF deregulation in 2026 targets dealer licensing and enforcement policy, not Illinois criminal statutes.
  • Illinois still requires a FOID card, 430 ILCS 65, to possess any firearm or ammunition.
  • Aggravated Unlawful Use of a Weapon, 720 ILCS 5/24-1.6, remains a Class 4 felony, Class 2 on repeat.
  • AUUW is a detainable offense under the SAFE-T Act in many circumstances.
  • Out-of-state gun permits do not substitute for Illinois FOID or concealed carry requirements.
  • Private sellers still must verify buyers through the Illinois State Police portal before any transfer.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Does the federal gun rollback mean my Illinois charge will be dropped?

No. Federal deregulation affects ATF dealer oversight. Your case proceeds entirely under Illinois statutes that the federal government has no authority to alter.

Do I still need a FOID card even with the news about looser federal rules?

Yes. The FOID Card Act is Illinois law. It exists independently of anything the ATF does with federal licensing.

Can I be jailed before trial on a weapons charge in Sangamon County?

In many cases, yes. Non-probationable AUUW is a detainable offense under the SAFE-T Act, and the State can petition to hold you pending trial.

What’s the penalty range for a first AUUW offense?

Typically a Class 4 felony, one to three years in prison. A prior felony or a second offense raises it to a mandatory 3 to 7 years as a Class 2 felony.

Does my out-of-state concealed carry permit protect me in Illinois?

Generally not for carrying a loaded, accessible firearm without Illinois-specific licensing. Illinois requires its own FOID card and, separately, its own concealed carry license.


Ready to Fight Your Weapons Charge in Springfield?
Call W. Scott Hanken at (217) 544-4057 or contact us online for a free consultation. We serve clients throughout Springfield, Sangamon County, and Central Illinois.

About the Author: W. Scott Hanken, Attorney at Law
Scott Hanken is a Springfield, Illinois criminal defense attorney with over 37 years of experience, including service as a former Sangamon County prosecutor. He has been voted Best Attorney by the Illinois Times and State Journal-Register, holds an Avvo 10.0 “Superb” rating, and has earned over 270 five-star Google reviews. His firm handles DUI defense, drug crimes, traffic violations, violent crimes, and weapons offenses throughout Sangamon County and Central Illinois.

📍 1100 S 5th St, Springfield, IL 62703 | ☎ (217) 544-4057 | 🌐 hankenlaw.com

This article is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every case is unique — contact an experienced Springfield criminal defense attorney for guidance on your specific situation.

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