Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GINSBURG.
Plaintiffs Stephen Dearth and the Second Amendment Foundation, Inc. (SAF), seeking declaratory and injunctive relief, claim that portions of 18 U.S.C. § 922 and related regulations are unconstitutional because they prevent Dearth from purchasing a firearm. The district court dismissed the suit for lack of standing. Because we conclude Dearth does have standing, we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand the case to the district court for further proceedings.
I. Background
The plaintiffs challenge 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(a)(9) and (b)(3) and implementing regulations promulgated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), which together make it impossible for a person who lives outside the United States lawfully to purchase a firearm in the United States. Section 922(a)(9) makes it unlawful for “any person ... who does not reside in any State to receive any firearms unless such receipt is for lawful sporting purposes.” Accord 2,1 C.F.R. § 478.29a. Section 922(b)(3) prohibits the sale or delivery of a firearm by a licensed dealer to “any person who the licensee knows or has reasonable cause to believe does not reside in ... the State in which *501 the licensee’s place of business is located,” except this prohibition does “not apply to the loan or rental of a firearm ... for temporary use for lawful sporting purposes.” * In order to ensure compliance, the ATF requires the seller to obtain from the purchaser a completed form (Form 4473) listing certain personal information. See 27 C.F.R. §§ 478.124(a), (c)(1). Question 13 on Form 4473 asks for the purchaser’s state of residence. See id. § 478.124(c)(1). *
Dearth is an American citizen who resides in Canada and no longer maintains a residence in the United States. In 2006 and again in 2007 Dearth attempted to purchase a firearm in the United States. On both occasions, he “could not provide a response to Question 13” on account of his residing in Canada; therefore “the transaction was terminated.” Compl. ¶¶ 22-23. Dearth alleges he still intends, if he may do so lawfully, to purchase firearms in the United States for the purposes of sporting and self-defense, and to store those firearms with his relatives in Ohio.
Dearth and the SAF, a non-profit organization that promotes the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms, filed the present action in the district court, which subsequently granted the Government’s motion to dismiss for lack of standing. It held the merchants’ refusals to sell firearms to Dearth did not support his standing to sue under the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201, 2202.
Hodgkins v. Holder,
II. Analysis
In considering de novo whether Dearth has standing, we assume the factual “allegations of the complaint relevant to standing are true.”
Young Am.’s Found, v. Gates,
In a case of this sort, where the plaintiffs seek declaratory and injunctive relief, past injuries alone are insufficient to establish standing. Rather, Dearth must show he is suffering an ongoing injury or faces an immediate threat of injury.
See Los Angeles v. Lyons,
We agree with Dearth that the Government has denied him the ability to purchase a firearm and he thereby suffers an ongoing injury. Dearth’s injury is indeed like that of the plaintiff in
Parker,
who had standing to challenge the District of Columbia’s ban on handguns because he had been “denied a registration certificate to own a handgun.”
The Government nonetheless argues Parker does not control both because here it did not affirmatively deny Dearth’s application to purchase a firearm and because Dearth does not claim he has a right to be issued a “permit” or “license” by the Government. As to the first distinction, we hold the Government cannot so easily avoid suit when it has erected a regulatory scheme that precludes Dearth from truthfully completing the application form the Government requires for the purchase of a firearm. Like the plaintiff in Parker, Dearth twice attempted to go through the “formal process” of applying to purchase a firearm and each time failed because of the laws and regulations he now challenges.
As for its second effort to distinguish
Parker,
the Government places undue weight upon our statement there that the plaintiff was “asserting a right to a registration certificate, the denial of which [was] his distinct injury.”
The Government also argues Dearth cannot show he suffers either the “continuing, present adverse effects,”
Lujan,
In
Lujan,
the case upon which the Government relies for this point, various environmental organizations challenged a regulation that limited application of a section of the Endangered Species Act to the
*503
United States and the high seas.
Id.
at 557-59,
Dearth alleges in his complaint he “has many friends and relatives” in the United States “whom he intends to continue visiting on a regular basis.” Dearth also states directly that he “intends to purchase firearms within the United States, which he would store securely at his relatives’ home in Mount Vernon, Ohio,” allegations that, when tested by a motion to dismiss, we presume to “embrace those specific facts that are necessary to support the claim.”
Lujan,
The Government objects that it remains speculative whether Dearth will again come up against the statutes and regulations he is challenging, citing
Golden v. Zwickler,
In this case, there is no similar contingency that makes Dearth’s injury conjectural; indeed his injury is present and continuing. In light of Dearth’s stated intent to return regularly to the United States, only to face a set of laws that undoubtedly prohibit him from purchasing a firearm, we conclude his injury is sufficiently real and immediate to support his standing to challenge those laws. *
*504 III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the order of the district court dismissing this ease for lack of standing is reversed and the matter is remanded to the district court for further proceedings.
So ordered.
Notes
Section 922(b)(3) contains another exception not relevant here.
Form 4473 can be viewed at http://www.atf. gov/forms/download/atf-f-4473 .pdf. According to 27 C.F.R. § 478.11, "An individual resides in a State if he or she is present in a State with the intention of making a home in that State.”
Accordingly, we need not consider whether Dearth has pre-enforcement standing. Nor, because the SAF raises no issue not also raised by Dearth, need we decide whether it has standing.
Environmental Action, Inc. v. FERC,
