OPINION
Appellants American Arms International (“AAI”) and Gilbert Indoor Range, LLC (“GIR”) appeal the judgment of the district court upholding the decision of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (“ATF”) to revoke AAI’s firearms dealer’s license and to deny GIR’s application for a new firearms license. Over the past three decades, Charles Gilbert, the owner of both AAI and GIR, has been cited by the ATF multiple times for numerous violations of the regulatory requirements of the Gun Control Act of 1968 (“GCA”), codified as amended at 18 U.S.C. § 921 et seq. (2006). The decision to revoke AAI’s license and to deny GIR’s licensе application was prompted by a 2003 ATF inspection of Gilbert’s operations in which thousands of record-keeping and other violations were discovered. Our de novo review of this appeal reveals no error in the district court’s grant of summary judgment to ATF, and we therefore affirm.
I.
The ATF first inspected Gilbert’s operations in February 1984, and the inspection revealed that Gilbert had failed to record both the transfer of twenty-three firearms and the acquisition of six National Firearms Act (“NFA”) firearms in the store’s Acquisition and Disposition Records (“A & D Records”). 1 ATF cited Gilbert for these and other violations.
In 1991, an ATF inspector found another discrepancy in an inventory of Gilbert’s NFA firearms, as well as at least one other record-keeping violation. The inspector recommended that ATF issue an admonitory letter. In June 2000, an inspection revealed nineteen instances where Gilbert failed to record the date of sale in his A & D Records and numerous failures to ensure proper completion of ATF Form 4473.
In December 2000, when Gilbert was applying to renew his dealer’s license, an ATF inspector met with him to review the federal firearms regulations, including all reсord-keeping, requirements. An ATF inspector held a similar review of the regulations with Gilbert in September 2002, covering requirements for maintenance of A & D Records, proper completion of ATF Form 4473, and reporting of missing firearms.
Nonetheless, in an August 2003 inspection of Gilbert’s operations, inspectors discovered thousands of regulatory violations. A review of Gilbert’s inventory revealed that 427 firearms were missing, meaning they were not loeatable either in physical inventory or the A & D Records. The inspection further found a number of discrepanciеs in the A & D Records, including the following: on 85 occasions, Gilbert failed to record disposition information in the A & D Records within seven days of disposition; on 118 occasions, Gilbert failed to report a federal firearms license number in the acquisition section of the A
&
D Records; on two occasions, Gilbert failed to report the name and address of the person from whom a firearm was received; and, on one occasion, Gilbert failed to record the disposition date of a firearm in the A & D Record. The inspection further found that Gilbert had been using an expired ammunition manufacturer license number rather than his actual dealer’s license number to stamp at least 250 ATF Forms 4473.
3
The inspection also turned up numerous additional violations related to improperly filling out ATF Form 4473, including failing on thirty occasions to properly complete the needed information for a transfer of NFA weapons to non-licensees; failing in thirteen instances to obtained the required additional documentation to establish residence for legal-alien purchasers prior to transferring a firearm; and failing on six occasions to include National Instant Criminal Background Check (“NICS”) information with ATF Form 4473. Gilbert was also cited for failing to timely report the theft or loss of firearms; transferring a firearm to a Virginia resident in violation of Virginia and federal law, transferring a firearm to
As a result of the 2003 inspection, ATF issued a Notice of Revocation of License to AAI on January 21, 2005. The Notice indicated that AAI had willfully violated the provisions and regulations of the GCA and it detailed the aforementioned history of noncompliance. On January 13, 2006, the ATF issued a Notice of Denial for GIR’s application for renewal of its federal firearms license.
At Gilbert’s request, a hearing regarding these decisions was held before an ATF Hearing Officer on March 30, 2006. At this hearing, Gilbert, represented by counsel, introduced no evidence to contest the factual basis for the revocation and denial, and he refused to testify when called as a witness by the Government. On May 22, 2006, thе Hearing Officer issued his report, recommending revocation and denial.
On June 24, 2006, ATF’s Director of Industry Operations for the Baltimore Field Division, Arthur Herbert, issued a Final Notice of Revocation/Denial to Gilbert. The Final Notice stated that Gilbert had “willfully engaged in repeat violations of the Gun Control Act.” (
Gilbert’s petition for review asked the district court to “1) decide that [ATF] erred and was not authorized to revoke AAI’s license or to deny GIR’s license application; 2) order [ATF] to withdraw the revocation and denial; and 3) award such other relief, including costs and attorney’s fees ... as appropriate.” (J.A. 32.) Instead, the district court granted summary judgment to ATF on February 19, 2008.
The administrative record was essentially the only evidence before the district court at summary judgment. The only additional evidence Gilbert provided to the district court was his own affidavit in which he denied that any of the violations for which he was cited by the ATF were willful. He characterized many of them instеad as “clerical” in nature. Then, while not specifically denying any of the violations (except the allegation that he operated as a gunsmith at an unlicensed premises), he proceeded to explain the circumstances surrounding each violation: how he remedied (or attempted to remedy) the violation, how he had arranged alternative procedures for accomplishing the purpose of the given violated regulation, or how he had been unaware of the unlawful nature of his actions at the time. Hе also noted that in a May 2001 inspection, the inspector had told him that AAI was doing a “good job.” (J.A.227.)
In granting summary judgment to ATF, the district court found there was “substantial evidence to support Respondent’s finding that Petitioner willfully committed ‘hundreds of ... violations ... after a history of previous violations.’ ” (J.A. 54 (alteration in original).) “Revocation,” the court continued, “was not only ‘authorized’ but well justified where Petitioners contin
After thе district court denied Gilbert’s Motion to Alter Judgment, he timely appealed to this court. In his appeal, Gilbert challenges the district court’s finding that his violations of the GCA were willful and he questions the lawfulness of several of the regulations which he was found to have violated.
II.
“The Attorney General may, after notice and opportunity for hearing, revoke any license issued [pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 923] if the holder of such license has willfully violated any provision of [the GCA] or any rule or regulation prescribed by the Attorney General under [the GCA],...” 18 U.S.C. § 923(e) (2006);
see also
27 C.F.R. § 478.73(a) (2008) (“Whenever the [ATF] Director of Industry Operations has reason to believe that a licensee has willfully violated any provision of the [GCA] ... a notice of revocation of the license ... may be issued.”).
5
A federal court reviewing such a revocation may grant summary judgment “if no genuine issue of material fact exists about whether [the licensee] willfully violated an applicable statutory or regulatory provision.”
Armalite, Inc. v. Lambert,
In determining whether a genuine issue of material fact exists, we must view the evidence in the light most favorable tо the nonmoving party.
Id.
at 286. However, a nonmovant cannot defeat summary judgment with merely a scintilla of evidence.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
III.
Gilbert first argues that in granting summary judgment, the district court applied an erroneous interpretation of the word “willfully” to find that Gilbert had “willfully violated” the GCA. Gilbert contends that the district court improperly relied on the interpretation of “willfully” used in
RSM, Inc. v. Herbert,
Gilbert is correct that, to the extent there is a conflict between
RSM
and
Prino,
we are bound to follow Prino’s interpretation.
McMellon v. United States,
In
Prino,
this Court interpreted the term “willfully” as used in 18 U.S.C. § 923(d)(1)(C), which permits the denial of a firearms license application where the
“ ‘Willful’ means action taken knowledgeably by one subject tо the statutory provisions in disregard of the action’s legality. No showing of malicious intent is necessary. A conscious, intentional, deliberate, voluntary decision properly is described as willful, ‘regardless of venal motive.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Intercounty Constr. Co. v. Occupational Safety & Health Review Comm’n.,
Years later, in
RSM,
this Court interpreted the term “willfully” as used in 18 U.S.C. § 923(e).
Gilbert now suggests that Prino and RSM are in irreconcilable confliсt because he believes that RSM’s interpretation could extend “willfully” to apply to more than the “conscious, intentional, deliberate, and voluntary” action to which Prino was directed. 7 In his view, Prino’s definition would protect a licensee’s conduct in situations where he was aware of the law generally but did not act intentionally or deliberately to violate the law, while RSM’s definition would not. Whatever potential conflicts could manifest between these two standards, however, we are confident that they do not present in this case.
Although
Prino
and
RSM
articulate the “willfulnеss” standard for § 923 a little differently, both hold that malice or improper motive is not necessary to establish willfulness.
Compare Prino,
In
Prino,
the licensee, who had been dealing in firearms since 1954, was cited in a 1975 inspection for a number of record-keeping violations, as well as three illegal sales of handguns to out-of-state residents.
Similarly, in
RSM,
licensee Valley Gun had its license revoked after being cited for numerous violations of the GCA and after being given “an extended opportunity to place [its] operations in compliance.”
In contesting revocation, Valley Gun did not dispute the violations themselves but claimed that it was not aware of some of the applicable regulations and that the recordkeeping violations were simply the result of “human error” and not willful. Id. at 319 (internal quotation marks omitted). While we rejected this argument in Valley Gun’s case, we nonetheless acknowledged that there was a measure of normal human error in terms of GCA compliance that would fall below willfulness:
To be sure, a single, or even a few, inadvertent errors in failing to complete forms may not amount to “willful” failures, even when the legal requirementto complete the forms was known. Yet at some point, when such errors continue or even increase in the face of repeated warnings given by enforcement officials, accompanied by explanations of the severity of the failures, one may infer as a matter of law that the licensee simply does not care about the legal requirements. At that point, the failures show the licensee’s plain indifference and therefore become willful.
Id. at 322.
The facts and outcomes of
Prino
and
RSM
are almost identiсal. Both cases stand for the proposition that, where a licensee receives official warning that his actions violate the GCA and his record of compliance does not change (or, in these cases, gets worse), it is permissible to infer “willfulness.”
RSM,
in fact, serves to explain Prino’s result: at some point, when a licensee shows a continued failure to avoid errors about which it has already been warned that conduct amounts to a willful violation, whether we describe it as “deliberate disregard” or, as
Prino
terms it, “[a] conscious, intentional, deliberate, voluntary decision,”
The decision in
RSM
also does not conflict with the Supreme Court’s decision in
Safeco
in any way that would have significanee for this case. In
Safeco,
the Supreme Court considered the meaning of the “willfulness” requirement in the Fair Credit Reporting Act’s (“FCRA”) provision creating a private right of action for consumers.
10
551 U.S. at-,
Gilbert seems anxious to remind this Court that “willfuness” does not extend to “inadvertent errors or technical mistakes.” (Appellants’ Br. 20.) But
RSM
(and
Prino
and Safeco) would agree with that. In
RSM,
we noted that “a single, or even a few, inadvertent errors” would not amount to a “willful” violation.
RSM,
rv.
As the district court noted, “[although Petitioners contest the factual basis of some of the violations, the government’s burden does not require that the court sustain every violation in order to uphold the revocation.” (J.A. 49.) In fact, a single uncontested violation suffices to uphold the ATF’s revocation decision.
Armalite,
The quantum and variety of violations which the 2003 inspection revealed are staggering, and we will not attempt (and do not need) to address all of them. For purposes of illustration, however, we discuss one example of a category of uncontested violations that clearly demonstrates Gilbert’s plain indifference to and deliberate disregard for the GCA regulations. 13
The 2003 inspection showed 427 missing disposition entries in the A & D Records. Gilbert acknowledges the factual basis for 421 of those. He then explains that somе 275 of those were recorded elsewhere or “merely late.” (Appellants’ Br. 27.) He further claims that because he has now reported the remaining 146 firearms as lost or stolen, he does not need to record them in the A & D Records. These posthoc explanations are unavailing. The fact
Gilbert suggests that his “proper recordation of tens of thousands of firearms over 20 years shows” that his violations were not deliberate or reckless. (Appellants’ Br. 30 (emphasis omitted).) We found unconvincing a similar argument made by the licensee in
RSM. See RSM,
In
RSM,
this Court underscored “the need for strict compliance with the Gun Control Act.”
RSM,
The judgment of the district court is hereby affirmed.
AFFIRMED
Notes
. The GCA requires firearm dealers to maintain "such records of importation, production, shipment, receipt, sale, or other disposition of firearms at his place of business for such period, and in such form, as the Attorney General may by regulations prescribe.” 18 U.S.C. § 923(g)(1)(A) (2006);
see also
27 C.F.R. § 478.125(e) (2008) ("[E]ach licensed dealer shall enter into a record each receipt and disposition of firearms.”). Failure to properly maintain these records is a violation of federal law. 18 U.S.C. § 922(m) (2006). Proper records maintenance is crucial to law enforcement, which uses the information contained in these records to trace firearms involved in crimes.
See Blaustein & Reich, Inc. v. Buckles,
The NFA imposes a statutory excise tax on the manufacture and transfer of statutorily defined "firearms”, 26 U.S.C. § 5801 (2006), and mandates special registration and recording requirements for those weapons, 26 U.S.C. §§ 5841, 5843 (2006).
. ATF Form 4473 is the record that licensees are required “to keep to verify thаt all over-the-counter transactions involve qualified purchasers.”
Armalite, Inc. v. Lambert,
. The inspector looked at only a sample of ATF Forms 4473 and this particular violation was found on all 250 forms reviewed. Thus it seems likely that the number of violations actually went well beyond the sample number, affecting potentially thousands of ATF Forms 4473.
. Section 923(f)(3) of Title 18 of the U.S.Code. provides:
If after a hearing ... the Attorney General decides not to reverse his decision to deny an application or revoke a license .... [t]he aggrieved party may at any time within sixty days after the date notice was given under this paragraph file a petition with the United States district court for the district in which he resides or has his principal place of business for a de novo judicial review of such denial or revocation.
. The Attorney General has delegated his licensing authority to the Director of ATF. 28 C.F.R. § 0.130(a)(1) (2008).
. Section 924(a)(1)(D) of Title 18 of the U.S.Code provides for criminal penalties for anyone who “willfully violates” the provisions of the GCA. The word "willfully” was introduced into both § 924(a)(1)(D) and § 923(e) at the same time, through the enactment of the Firearm Owners’ Protection Act of 1986, and, in
RSM,
“we presumе[d] that Congress intended the same word used multiple times in a single act to carry a consistent meaning.”
. We note briefly that
Prino
and
RSM
interpret different sections of 18 U.S.C. § 923.
Prino
deals with § 923(d)(1)(C) (approval of application for a firearms license) while
RSM
looks at § 923(e) (revocation of a firearms license). That said, the two uses should be read to have a consistent meaning.
See Ratzlaf v. United States,
. A third compliance inspection was held by order of the district court, and a number of additional record-kеeping violations were found.
Prino,
. In fact, it seems strange that Gilbert presses us so strenuously to follow the Prino standard, when the violations in Prino were even less egregious and protracted than those found in RSM.
. The provision allowed a consumer to bring suit against "[ajnyone who 'willfully fails' to provide notice [of any adverse action based on a credit report] to the consumer.”
Safeco,
. The standard outlined in
RSM
is also consistent with those articulated by our sister circuits who have considered the issue.
See Armalite,
. Gilbert has argued that the district court erred in granting summary judgmеnt on the basis of the administrative record. However, an administrative record is a duly authenticated record that enjoys a presumption of verity.
Langston v. Johnson,
. Having found that ATF has met its burden of showing that there are no genuine issues of material fact with respect to at least one category of violations, we need go no further to decide that the district court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of ATF was appropriate. Therefore, we decline to address the merits of Gilbert’s legal challenges to various other categories of violations.
