Federal and local law enforcement agencies have launched the “Don’t Lie for the Other Guy” public awareness campaign across the St. Louis metropolitan area to combat illegal straw gun purchases. Running through September 4, 2026, the joint initiative between the ATF, the U.S. Attorney’s Office, and the National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF) warns residents that buying a firearm on behalf of someone else is a federal felony carrying up to 15 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Fueled by recent local cases—including a Ferguson man whose 27 straw-purchased firearms surfaced at crime scenes across three states—officials are clamping down on proxy buying to disrupt the flow of illegal weapons to violent criminals.
ST. LOUIS, MO – July 15, 2026 (STL.News) Federal prosecutors, regional law enforcement leaders, and firearm industry representatives gathered in St. Louis to announce a sweeping public education and enforcement blitz targeting illegal “straw” firearm purchases. The multi-agency initiative aims to cut off the supply of black-market firearms at the retail counter before they can be deployed in violent crimes across Missouri and neighboring states.
The regional blitz, titled the “Don’t Lie for the Other Guy” campaign, is a highly targeted effort developed by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) and the National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF). Running through September 4, 2026, the campaign will blanket the St. Louis metropolitan area with digital billboards, roadside displays, transit posters, streaming audio commercials, and geotargeted mobile advertisements designed to reach an estimated 8.3 million digital impressions.
Understanding the Mechanics of a Straw Purchase
A “straw purchase” occurs when an individual who is legally permitted to pass a federal background check purchases a firearm on behalf of someone else. Typically, the actual buyer is a “prohibited person”—someone legally barred from owning a firearm due to a felony conviction, domestic violence misdemeanor, underage status, active order of protection, or undocumented citizenship status. In other instances, straw purchases are made by individuals attempting to keep their names completely disassociated from a firearm transaction to facilitate trafficking.
Law enforcement officials emphasize that the deception begins the moment a proxy buyer fills out the federal paperwork. To complete a purchase from a Federally Licensed Firearms (FFL) dealer, a buyer must fill out the ATF Form 4473 (Firearms Transaction Record). Question 21.a on this form explicitly asks if the applicant is the actual transferee/buyer of the firearm. Checking “yes” when purchasing the weapon for another person constitutes perjury and a direct violation of federal law.
Escalated Federal Penalties: The Bipartisan Safer Communities Act
The legal landscape for straw purchasing shifted significantly with the passage of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, which established straw purchasing and firearms trafficking as distinct, standalone federal offenses under Title 18 of the U.S. Code (Sections 932 and 933).
The updated statutory framework levies devastating penalties against violators:
- Basic Straw Purchase Felony: Convictions carry a maximum penalty of up to 15 years in federal prison and a fine of up to $250,000.
- Aggravated Offenses: If an individual makes a straw purchase with the knowledge or intent that the firearm will be used to commit a felony, act of terrorism, or a drug trafficking crime, the maximum prison sentence increases to 25 years.
- Interstate Trafficking: Additional severe federal charges apply if weapons are purchased with the intent to smuggle them across state lines.
“The United States Attorney’s Office urges anyone asked to purchase a firearm for another person to refuse,” stated U.S. Attorney Thomas Albus for the Eastern District of Missouri. “No payment, favor, or personal relationship is worth the serious criminal consequences that can and will result from participating in a straw purchase.”
The Local Impact: The Case of Lamondre Haynes
To demonstrate the direct connection between retail-level deception and street-level bloodshed, ATF Special Agent in Charge Bernard “Butch” Hansen highlighted the recent federal prosecution of 33-year-old Lamondre Haynes of Ferguson, Missouri.
On June 2, 2026, Haynes entered a guilty plea in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri to federal charges stemming from an extensive straw-purchasing operation. According to public court records, Haynes acted as a regular proxy buyer, acquiring at least 27 firearms from various retail outlets across eastern Missouri.
The timeline of Haynes’ operations illustrates how rapidly straw-purchased firearms transition into crime guns:
- April 2, 2025: Haynes purchased two Glock pistols from a licensed dealer in St. Louis County. He was accompanied by a convicted felon from Illinois, who provided the cash for the transaction. Haynes signed Form 4473 claiming the guns were for himself.
- May 1, 2025: Haynes expanded his geographic footprint, visiting two separate firearm retailers in St. Charles, Missouri, where he purchased an additional two Glock pistols and two AK-style pistols.
- The Aftermath: Law enforcement subsequently recovered Haynes’ straw-purchased firearms across Missouri, Illinois, and Kentucky. The weapons were seized during arrests involving violent assaults, drug distribution, and illegal weapon possession. Notably, one of the Glock pistols purchased in St. Charles was recovered by police in Columbia, Illinois, after it was used in a violent carjacking during which the victim was shot.
Retailers Serving as the First Line of Defense
A major component of the “Don’t Lie for the Other Guy” initiative focuses heavily on the retail level. The NSSF provides specialized training kits and educational modules to local FFL retailers to help staff identify red flags of a proxy transaction before a sale is completed.
According to the ATF, key behavioral indicators at the gun counter include:
- A buyer who appears entirely unfamiliar with the layout, operation, or caliber of the firearm they are trying to purchase.
- A customer who continuously references their mobile device, sends text messages, or remains on an active phone call receiving instructions from a third party while selecting a weapon.
- An individual accompanied by another person who directs the transaction, selects the firearm, or attempts to handle the physical cash exchange outside the store.
- A buyer who exhibits extreme reluctance or anxiety regarding the standard FBI National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) verification.
St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department Chief Robert Tracy emphasized that public cooperation is equally vital to reducing gun violence. He urged residents to ask critical questions if approached by acquaintances or family members offering money to buy a weapon.
“The first crime committed with many crime guns isn’t committed on the streets,” said Agent Hansen. “It happens at the gun counter, when someone lies on a federal firearms form to buy a gun for someone else… One decision can have life-changing consequences for an entire community.”