LEGISLATIVE ALERT: HB702 TAXPAYER-FUNDED GUN DESTRUCTION
VIRGINIA 2026 SESSION

Your Tax Dollars Buying Guns Just to Destroy Them

An analysis of HB702's perverse incentives, zero accountability measures, and the infrastructure for gun control expansion.

BILL NUMBER
HB702
HOUSE VOTE
62-34
SENATE VOTE
39-0
IMPLEMENTATION
JAN 1, 2028

How the Program Works

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Two Options

Local law enforcement can choose give-back (no payment) or buy-back (compensation required). State Department of Police establishes the program framework.

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No Price Controls

Agencies set their own compensation rates. No mandated amounts, no price caps, no accountability measures for how much is paid per firearm.

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Mandatory Destruction

All collected firearms MUST BE DESTROYED. No resale to licensed dealers. No secondary market. All firearms melted down or destroyed.

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Dedicated State Fund

Virginia establishes a dedicated state fund for implementation. Taxpayers foot the bill. No spending caps or oversight limits specified.

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Local Control

Individual agencies decide participation levels, compensation rates, and how aggressively they promote the program in their communities.

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Effective Date

Implementation deadline: January 1, 2028. All local law enforcement must have programs established by that date.

TAXPAYER ACCOUNTABILITY THREAT LEVEL
No spending caps • No price limits • No oversight • Blank check authority

The Perverse Incentive

Here's the Problem

With no price controls on compensation and no accountability for how much agencies pay, a massive perverse incentive exists:

People will manufacture cheap firearms specifically to sell them to the buyback program.

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Cheap Firearm Manufacturing

Manufacturers create low-cost firearms specifically designed for buyback programs. Zero profit margin on the unit itself—they're just vehicles for extracting state funds.

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Guaranteed Buyers

Virginia is creating a guaranteed buyer with a blank check. No price limit means sellers can demand premium prices for cheap firearms, and the state has to pay.

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Economic Inefficiency

Taxpayer dollars are used to purchase new firearms at inflated prices, only to destroy them. The money flows from Virginia taxpayers to manufacturers—not from criminals turning in guns.

ECONOMIC WASTE POTENTIAL
No spending limits • No price negotiation • Incentive structure rewards manufacturing cheap guns

Your taxes. Their program. Zero accountability.

HB702 hands local law enforcement a blank check to buy and destroy firearms with no spending limits, no price controls, and no oversight.

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The Money Trail

Key Issues:

  • ⚠️ No Mandated Compensation Amounts — Agencies decide pay rates. What's to stop one agency from paying $500/gun when the manufacturer's cost is $200?
  • ⚠️ No Price Controls — If an agency announces it will pay $600 per firearm, people manufacture cheap guns and line up.
  • ⚠️ Dedicated State Fund with No Caps — The state commits money but sets no limits on how much can be spent.
  • ⚠️ No Transparency Requirement — How much was paid? For what? To whom? These details remain opaque.
FISCAL ACCOUNTABILITY LEVEL
Virtually nonexistent • No price negotiation • Blank check authority

Why Mandatory Destruction?

The Issue

HB702 mandates that ALL collected firearms be destroyed. They cannot be resold to licensed dealers, cannot enter the legal secondary market, and cannot be preserved as historical artifacts.

Instead, they're melted down or destroyed at taxpayer expense.

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Double Cost to Taxpayers

First, Virginia buys the firearms. Then, Virginia pays to destroy them. This is economically wasteful compared to states that allow resale to licensed dealers.

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Compare Other States

Some state buyback programs allow legal resale to licensed dealers. This recovers costs, reduces taxpayer burden, and still removes guns from the street.

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Lost Revenue Opportunity

Valuable or collectible firearms could be sold to legitimate dealers, generating revenue to offset buyback costs. Instead, Virginia throws that value away.

The Bigger Picture

One of 25+ Gun Control Bills

HB702 doesn't exist in isolation. The 2026 Virginia legislative session passed 25+ gun control bills. This buyback program is part of a coordinated infrastructure for gun restriction expansion.

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Legislative Package

HB702 is one piece of a comprehensive gun control legislative package passed during the 2026 session. It's part of a broader strategy.

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Infrastructure for Expansion

Once the buyback program is established and funded, it creates infrastructure that future legislatures can expand—larger budgets, more aggressive promotion, mandatory participation.

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Long-Term Trajectory

The 2028 implementation date gives time to assess outcomes and plan the next expansion cycle. This is a long-term infrastructure play, not a one-off program.

The Timeline

PASSED: February 2026
HB702 passes House 59-34. Senate votes 21-19 to pass. Governor has 30 days to sign, veto, or allow passage.
GOVERNOR'S DESK: March 2026
Bill sent to Governor Abigail Spanberger. Constitutional deadline to sign/veto: April 13, 2026.
ENROLLED: Expected Signature
Bill expected to be signed into law. Becomes Virginia Code § [section]. Department of State Police begins rule-making.
RULE-MAKING: 2026-2027
Virginia Department of State Police develops regulations and guidance for local agencies. Program framework finalized.
IMPLEMENTATION: January 1, 2028
All local law enforcement agencies must establish give-back or buy-back programs. Firearms collection and destruction begins.

The Bottom Line

Virginia wants to spend your money buying guns to melt them down.

HB702 creates a taxpayer-funded gun buyback program with:

  • No spending caps or limits
  • No price controls or negotiation
  • Mandatory destruction of all firearms
  • Perverse incentives for cheap gun manufacturing
  • Infrastructure for future expansion

This is one of 25+ gun bills passed in 2026. It's a long-term play to establish buyback infrastructure that future legislatures will expand.

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