Title 18 › Part PART I— - CRIMES › Chapter CHAPTER 40— - IMPORTATION, MANUFACTURE, DISTRIBUTION AND STORAGE OF EXPLOSIVE MATERIALS › § 843
People who apply for a user permit, a limited permit, or a license to import, make, or deal in explosive materials must use the form and give the information the Attorney General requires. That includes names and ID for employees who will handle explosives, plus fingerprints and a photo for each responsible person. Fees are charged: up to $50 for a limited permit and up to $200 for other licenses or permits. Regular licenses and user permits last no more than 3 years. Limited permits last no more than 1 year. Permits and licenses can be renewed under the same rules and with a renewal fee up to one-half of the original fee. If the application and fee are properly filed, the Attorney General must issue a license or permit within 90 days if certain conditions are met: the applicant and responsible persons are not disqualified under section 842(i); the applicant has not willfully broken these rules; the applicant has a business location in a State; storage meets safety and security standards as inspected or verified (with special rules for limited permits and renewals); the applicant knows the state and local laws where they will do business; employees who will handle explosives are not disqualified; and limited-permit holders say they will receive explosives no more than 6 separate times in a 12-month permit period. The Attorney General can revoke a license or permit for violations or loss of eligibility. Anyone denied or revoked must get a written notice explaining why, can ask for a hearing, and may appeal to a U.S. court of appeals within 60 days after the written decision. Licensees must keep records, let inspections of records and stored explosives during business hours, post the license or permit where the business operates, and, when asked by the Secretary, manufacturers or importers must provide samples and chemical information (with reimbursement rules for samples and shipping). The Secretary will also check and notify employers about whether named employees or responsible persons are disqualified, and will issue a clearance letter or a notice explaining the finding and how to appeal.
Full Legal Text
Crimes and Criminal Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
18 U.S.C. § 843
Title 18 — Crimes and Criminal Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73