OPINION OF THE COURT
ADAMS, Circuit Judge.
At stake in the present appeal is the vitality of several key provisions of the Gun Control Act of 1968,1 a statutory program which restricts the right to bear arms of convicted felons and other persons of dangerous propensities.2
[67]*67Two principal issues pertaining to the Act confront the Court., First, we must determine whether Congress contemplated the use of an outstanding criminal conviction as a predicate for a firearms violation where the defendant questions the constitutionality of the prior conviction but failed to challenge it prior to the proceedings involving the weapons offense. If such a conviction was intended to be so utilized, we then must decide whether there is any constitutional impediment to the regulatory regimen provided by Congress.
I.
In July, 1972, defendant Bennie Graves was indicted on two counts for violating provisions of the Gun Control Act. The first count alleged that Graves had abridged 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(a)(6)3 and 924(a)4 in connection with the purchase of a shotgun when he certified on a firearms registration form that he had not been convicted of a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term of at least one year although, in fact, he knew that he had been. The second count of the indictment charged Graves with contravening 18 U.S.C. Appendix § 1202(a)5 because, after having been convicted of a felony, he willfully and knowingly received and possessed a shotgun that had moved in interstate commerce.
Underlying the firearms indictment was a state conviction for larceny of an automobile. In April, 1971, a state court had found Graves guilty of that crime, an offense punishable by a term of imprisonment exceeding one year. Graves never sought to overturn his state conviction either by direct appeal or by any mode of collateral attack. Nor did he attempt to expunge it from his record through a pardon or to seek administrative relief from the strictures of the Act.
Immediately prior to his trial on the firearms charges, Graves moved to dismiss the indictment, claiming that the outstanding state conviction had not been constitutionally obtained. Graves grounded his motion on the proposition that, when arrested for auto larceny, he was seventeen years old; that the offense thus could have been disposed of by juvenile authorities; but that the juvenile court, after a hearing, decided to transfer the case to the adult criminal court, where Graves -ultimately was convicted.
In the pretrial motion in the present case, Graves asserted that, at the hearing preceding transfer of the larceny charge to the adult court, he had been denied certain [68]*68procedural safeguards mandated by due process and explicated by the Supreme Court in Kent v. United States.6 Graves claimed, therefore, that his conviction for auto larceny was constitutionally defective and hence could not contribute to liability under the firearms statutes. The district court did not agree with that contention and refused to dismiss the indictment.
A trial then was held before the district judge sitting without a jury. Graves and the prosecution stipulated the basic facts pertaining to the acquisition and subsequent possession of the shotgun.7 Upon entry of the stipulation, Graves moved for a judgment of acquittal, reiterating, in essence, the arguments that he had proffered in his pretrial motion to quash the indictment. The government responded that any constitutional infirmities in a prior conviction that had not yet been expunged could not constitute a defense to the firearms charges. Moreover, the government insisted that no proof as to the validity of the outstanding conviction was necessary for the present prosecution.
Subsequently, in May, 1975, the district judge, consonant with his denial of the pretrial motion, found Graves guilty on both counts, and sentenced him to prison under the Federal Youth Corrections Act.8 Graves then filed an appeal which was heard by a panel of this Court. Thereafter, the case was set down for rehearing before the Court in banc.
We now affirm the guilty verdicts on both counts.
II.
To ascertain whether Congress intended that an outstanding felony conviction could lead to liability under the firearms statutes, even though a defendant asserts constitutional flaws in the prior conviction, we must examine those materials which may afford [69]*69insight into Congressional intent: (a) the language of the statutes, (b) the legislative history, and (c) the opinions of other courts which have endeavored to interpret the statutes.
These materials suggest that the legislative draftsmen desired persons with extant, though arguably unconstitutional, convictions to forbear from the purchase and possession of firearms until their convictions are voided by the courts or until they are freed from such disability by executive action. Failure to so refrain was intended to subject such persons to the penalties specified in the Act. Congress, in our view, did not expect disputes over the constitutional validity of a prior conviction to intrude upon trials of federal weapons offenses, at least in the type of factual context presented by this case.
A. THE STATUTORY PROGRAM.
Our inquiry opens with an examination of the provisions under which Graves was charged and the overarching statutory program within which they operate.9 The enactments alleged to have been violated fall within two separate titles of the Gun Control Act: 18 U.S.C. App. § 1202(a) is found in Title VII, and 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(a)(6) and 924(a) comprise part of Title IV.10 Coverage of these titles overlaps; each one limits the right of convicted felons and certain other persons to receive or transport guns.11 Nevertheless, the two titles are not wholly congruent. With minor exceptions, only Ti-tie VII directly regulates the possession of firearms by the named individuals. Title IV, unlike Title VII, bars false statements by participants in weapons transactions.
1. Title VII: 18 U.S.C. App. § 1202(a)
Section 1202 proscribes the possession, receipt or transportation, in interstate commerce, of firearms by classes of persons that Congress deemed likely to misuse them. Those covered include convicted felons, mental incompetents, dishonorable dischargees from the armed forces, individuals who renounce their citizenship, and illegal aliens.12 And there are only limited exemptions to the coverage of the Act. A convicted felon, for example, may become immunized from statutory liability if he secures a pardon expressly authorizing him to carry weapons.13
On its face, § 1202 affords insight into Congressional intent with respect to the problems raised by this case. The provision speaks to the person who “has been convicted by a court . . . of a felony.” It contains no requirement that the conviction be obtained in any particular manner. Thus, textually, it is the fact of conviction which calls into play the disability imposed by Title VII.
We note also that § 1202, despite its location within the federal criminal code, is essentially regulatory in nature. It is unlike most other criminal laws which proscribe acts that are in themselves pernicious, e. g., kidnapping, theft or embezzle[70]*70ment. By contrast, the receipt or possession of firearms does not constitute conduct that is inherently harmful. As a result, Congress has not interdicted such behavior altogether. Rather, what the legislative authors have done is to impose controls on activities involving weapons.
The Congressional declaration set forth in § 1201 voices concern regarding the deleterious effects of firearms use by persons with possibly dangerous inclinations.14 Not surprisingly, the prohibitions established by Title VII are somewhat sweeping, indicating that the draftsmen desired to regulate individuals having even the slightest potential for threatening community safety. We cannot say — certainly on the record before us — that it was unreasonable for Congress to have believed that a person with an outstanding felony conviction, even one that has been attacked as unconstitutional, may be somewhat more likely than the average citizen to utilize a gun improperly. And the statutory terms suggest that an outstanding conviction may contribute to liability under Title VII and its central provision, § 1202.
2. Title IV: 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(a)(6) and 924(a)
Section 922(a)(6) declares that it is unlawful for any person “knowingly to make any false or fictitious oral or written statement . ” in connection with the acquisition of firearms.15 While this provision in itself does not oblige a prospective gun purchaser to divulge any criminal infractions on his record, the Treasury Department requires, as a precondition to acquisition of a weapon, completion of an application form on which the purchaser must state whether he ever has been convicted of a crime punishable by imprisonment for more than one year.16 To deny an outstanding felony conviction on such form would appear to subject the purchaser of firearms to liability under § 922(a)(6). Section 924(a) delineates the penalties for making the false representations in the acquisition or transfer of weapons.
Under the legislation, comprehensive records are to be kept with respect to all firearms transactions. No person is exempt from the regulatory coverage of the Act. Importers, manufacturers, dealers, collectors and purchasers alike must submit the information mandated by federal authorities. Indeed, the disclosure sections of Title IV do not differentiate in their treatment of felons and non-felons. Facially, §§ 922 and 924 are designed to punish any material misrepresentation concerning a weapons transaction, whether or not the misrepresentation relates to a conviction. They do not penalize an individual for being a convicted felon, but only for failing to answer truthfully questions about his criminal record. Even more so than § 1202, then, these provisions are essentially regulatory as contrasted with being strictly criminal in nature.
A question which immediately arises is whether Congress envisaged the prosecution of an individual with an outstanding [71]*71conviction, though one asserted to be unconstitutional, when he denies ever having been a felon. Inspection of § 922(a)(6), and Title IV as a whole, suggests that a person who is a convicted felon must divulge the fact of his conviction, regardless of whether or not he believes it to be unconstitutional. And the registration form hardly intimates that a prospective purchaser of a firearm is entitled to conceal a conviction that has not been vitiated, any more than he could suppress any other fact material to the transaction.
From the statutory language, it is apparent that the legislative framers intended to elicit detailed and accurate information so as to be able to monitor the movement of guns. In this regard, it is equally evident that Congress wished to penalize a person with an outstanding, though assertedly unconstitutional, conviction for failing to disclose the fact of such criminal adjudication.
We recognize that such an interpretation of §§ 922 and 924 tangentially implicates a conviction which may at some future time be deemed constitutionally infirm. Nevertheless, two components of Title IV strongly indicate that Congress intended that such a conviction could conduce to liability under the statutes. These features will be reviewed not only for their relevance to our discussion of Title IV, but also as support for the analysis concerning Title VII.17
Sections 922(g) and (h), like § 1202(a), provide that it is illegal for convicted felons and other specified persons to receive or transport firearms.18 The classes of persons covered by § 922, however, vary somewhat from those regulated by § 1202. In addition to convicted felons and mental incompetents, Title IV places firearms restrictions on illicit drug users, drug addicts, fugitives from justice and persons under indictment for crimes punishable by imprisonment in excess of one year.
Of these categories of individuals, the most pertinent to our inquiry here is the group containing indicted persons. An indictment ordinarily has limited legal effect, reflecting the deliberations of grand jurors as to probable cause for believing that the indictee might be guilty. Unlike a conviction, the indicted offense remains unproved, at least through trial; the individual named in the indictment remains innocent until guilt is demonstrated.19 Even so, Congress [72]*72undoubtedly found that persons under indictment have a somewhat greater likelihood than other citizens to misuse firearms. And so indictees were included within the prohibitory classification of § 922.
Section 922 would appear to provide some evidence of Congressional intent concerning the issues in this case. This is so since there are a number of similarities between an indictment and a conviction claimed to be unconstitutional. Both may result in the eventual vindication of the defendant, thereby dissolving the disability with respect to firearms. The restriction in either case may be only a temporary one which will be removed when a court frees the defendant from the scrutiny of the criminal justice system or when the executive branch grants a dispensation. To argue, as does Graves, that Congress intended to impose no disability on persons with outstanding convictions that they assert are unconstitutional, but to impose a disability on persons under indictment, would be to charge the legislative framers with a manifest inconsistency. We cannot discern that Congress sought to design such an asymmetrical statutory arrangement.
The other relevant feature of Title IV, insofar as our current inquiry is concerned, consists of subsection (c) of § 925, which affords a procedure to secure relief from any firearms disability imposed on a convicted felon.20 Basically, this provision stipulates that any person with a criminal record may apply to the Secretary of the Treasury for relief from the weapon restrictions dictated by federal law. The Secretary may grant such relief if he is satisfied that the “applicant will not be likely to act in a manner dangerous to the public safety and that the granting of the relief would not be contrary to the public interest.” It is clear that § 925(c) applies to more than Title IV because it refers to disabilities on possession — an activity regulated by Title VII.21
Section 925(c) is quite revealing in connection with the issues under review because that provision affords an individual with an outstanding conviction, that he contends was unconstitutionally rendered, an additional method with which to attack such conviction aside from the usual direct appeal, a petition for post-conviction relief or the pardon procedure. No reason appears why assertions as to unconstitutional[73]*73ity could not be considered in the course of the decision by the Secretary.
More importantly, the presence of the relief provision suggests that Congress expected felons, from time to time, to challenge their convictions and, in so doing, remove any prohibition before resuming their place among the ranks of users of firearms. Failure to overturn their disability, either judicially through an appeal or a post-conviction proceeding or administratively through the Secretary or pardoning authorities, would reinforce the viability of the statutory restriction. It follows that Congress did not plan that the constitutionality of an underlying conviction would be adjudicated during the very prosecution for the firearms violation, at least where the defendant has not even sought to void such conviction through other available channels. Also, it is questionable whether Congress intended to permit such an individual to attack, or require the government to demonstrate, the validity of a prior conviction during a trial for misrepresentation on the requisite registration form.
In sum, the Gun Control Act in itself contains evidence, somewhat sparse but nonetheless telling, regarding the intent of Congress as to the questions posed in this action. The language of the statute suggests that the legislative framers sanctioned the use of an outstanding criminal conviction as a predicate for a firearms violation, even where the defendant questions the constitutionality of the prior conviction during his trial on the gun charges. This is particularly so where, as here, the defendant, before resuming the use of firearms, has in no way challenged such conviction through any of the procedures contained in the Act.
B. THE LEGISLATIVE HISTORY.
1.
On the face of the statutes, it appears that Congress intended that an outstanding conviction, even one claimed to be unconstitutional, could give rise to a firearms disability. However, our analysis may not terminate with such a conclusion. Rather, it is fitting to examine the legislative history to decide whether our reading of Titles IV and VII is congenial with the views of the framers expressed at the time of the passage of the legislation.22 Such a history frequently facilitates a judicial determination of the purposes of the draftsmen.
Consisting of brief committee reports on Title IV and explanations of the Gun Control Act by its sponsors in the Senate and House, the applicable legislative record is somewhat limited in scope and does not speak directly to the precise issues raised in this case. Nevertheless, the statutory history does provide some clues regarding the Congressional intent. Careful consideration of what is available leads us to reaffirm our reading of the legislative terms.
Apparently, Congress initiated its efforts to develop an effective gun program at the behest of President Johnson. In February of 1967, he “urge[d] the 90th Congress to place [such legislation] high on its agenda in this session.”23 The President also declared that “[t]o pass strict firearms control laws at every level of government is an act of simple prudence and a measure of civilized society. Further delay is unconscionable.”24 While this plea may have spurred drafting of the Gun Control Act, further impetus was provided by the [74]*74assassinations, by gunmen, of Dr. Martin Luther King and Senator Robert F. Kennedy. The legislation was enacted shortly after these tragic acts of violence.
From the onset of its consideration of Titles IV and VII, it was Congress’ objective to limit access to firearms to clearly “responsible [and] law-abiding persons.”25 The legislative history demonstrates deep solicitude over the ever-escalating misuse of firearms. Members of the Senate and House recognized that the “problem of gun abuse ... is real, it is urgent and it is increasing each year . . . .”26
The response was the strict federal firearms controls requested by the President, subjecting to regulation convicted felons and other individuals who might be more prone to weapons misuse than the general public. Given the legislative objective to impose effective controls, and the concomitant desire not to promulgate a “half-way measure,”27 we believe that Congress did have in mind curtailing access to firearms by felons with outstanding convictions, even where these prior convictions are alleged to be unconstitutional.
Some evidence as to the Congressional design on this issue is provided by the floor speeches of Senator Long, a principal sponsor of Title VII. Speaking of the classes of persons whose privilege of firearms use would be limited, the Senator said that the disability applied to “persons who, by their actions, have demonstrated that they are dangerous, or that they may become dangerous.” 28 Such language evinces, we submit, that Congress wished to regulate all persons who might be more likely than the average citizen to commit illicit acts with guns. The prohibitions of Title VII, as well as of Title IV, would attach once there is evidence of the possibility of misuse, including, it would appear, the fact of conviction.
In explaining to his colleagues the effect of Title VII, Senator Long invoked an analog in tort law:
In large part, Title VII is based on the legal theory that every dog is entitled to one bite. . . . But if the dog thereafter attacks a second neighbor, the owner is liable because he has been placed on notice that his dog is dangerous.
So, under Title VII, every citizen could possess a gun until the commission of his first felony. Upon his conviction, however, Title VII would deny him the right to possess a firearm in the future...29
Once a conviction is rendered, then, the prohibitions set forth by the statute take hold without more. It may be that the convicted felon can show that the “first bite” constitutes a legal nullity, or that it never occurred at all. But it is questionable whether Congress intended to permit such a person to reclaim the privilege of possessing or receiving weapons before he has attempted to bring about the invalidation of his criminal record or to secure an executive dispensation.
Another statement of Senator Long addressed to the treatment of convicted felons bears on our inquiry here: “What [Title VII] seeks to do is to make it unlawful for a firearm . . . to be in the possession of a convicted felon who has not been pardoned and who has therefore lost his right to possess firearms.”30 Previously, we observed that under the statute even a pardon does not restore such “right” unless the [75]*75pardon expressly so states.31 The pardon provision, and Senator Long’s reference to it, indicate that the statutory disability is not one which was meant to be circumvented merely on a felon’s belief that his conviction was obtained in an unconstitutional manner.
Once the firearms restriction attaches to an individual, the fact of conviction may trigger a Gun Control Act proceeding — at least until the disabled status is eradicated either judicially or administratively. To subject persons with general pardons to liability, but to excuse those with unchallenged, but supposedly unconstitutional convictions, would foster disharmony in the application of the Act. There is precious little basis for saying that Congress intended to do so.
On the House side, explanations of the Gun Control Act similar to those of Senator Long were submitted by its proponents there. One such comment was proffered by Representative Pollock, who noted: “The overall thrust is to prohibit possession of firearms by criminals or other persons who have specific records or characteristics which raise serious doubts as to their probable use of firearms in a lawful manner.”32
An outstanding conviction, even one claimed to be constitutionally defective, may well raise questions whether the individual should be allowed to have access to weapons. The most obvious way for a person to remove doubts about his ability to deal with guns properly is to challenge the source of the doubts — namely, the prior conviction. It is reasonable to assume, therefore, that Congress expected a convicted felon to undergo the relatively modest inconvenience of a restriction on firearms use until he has obtained a judicial invalidation of his conviction or has secured an executive authorization lifting that restriction. To divine any other objective on the part of Congress might undercut the safeguards afforded by the Gun Control Act and increase the exposure of the public to continuing threats of crimes of violence. This we are unwilling to do.
2.
With respect to solely § 922(a)(6), the legislative history fortifies the conclusion set forth in Part IIA that the provision places an obligation on all prospective gun purchasers to provide full and honest information, and bars false statements in firearms transactions. The House Report declares that § 922(a)(6) “prohibits the making of false statements . . . by a person in connection with the acquisition or attempted acquisition of a firearm ,”33 The Report goes on to indicate that § 922(a)(6) is one of the “record-keeping provisions” of Title IV.34
Clearly, then, § 922(a)(6) and its companion penalty provision, § 924, impose liability upon firearms registrants who fail to tell the truth. Since Graves falsely denied having a criminal record even though he knew he had one, the application of these statutes to him would appear to be warranted. Graves is not being punished under § 922(a)(6) for being a convicted fel[76]*76on. Rather, he is being penalized for failing to disclose his criminal record. As a result, punishment may be appropriate even though Graves argues that his prior conviction was obtained unconstitutionally.
C. INTERPRETATIONS OF OTHER COURTS AS TO CONGRESSIONAL INTENT.
As the problems raised by the case at bar are not wholly novel ones, it is necessary to review the pronouncements of courts in other circuits that are arguably relevant here. At this stage in our analysis, we confine our consideration to those opinions which make reference to the matter of Congressional intent.
Two circuits have considered, in contexts that might be perceived to be somewhat related to the present one, whether Congress desired to prohibit felons from firearms use before their convictions are overturned.35 Cursorily, both declarations as to intent might seem to be contrary to our position. In Dameron v. United States, the Fifth Circuit stated that it need not
look further than the statute to determine legislative intent. The statute should explicitly set forth application to unconstitutional convictions, if it is so intended. We read the statute to prohibit the interstate transportation of firearms by those who have been constitutionally convicted of a felony.36
Subsequently, in a footnote in United States v. Cody, the Eighth Circuit, relying on Dameron, said that “the broad interpretation applied to the word ‘convicted’ does not extend to defendants whose prior convictions are invalid for error of the sixth amendment right to counsel.”37
Graves avers that Dameron and Cody indicate that Congress did not anticipate the use of an outstanding, though assertedly unconstitutional, conviction in a firearms prosecution, even where the defendant has neglected to invalidate the prior conviction or to procure administrative relief from the weapons disability. We do not so read these two opinions.
Significantly, Dameron concerned a factual setting markedly different from that at hand. In Dameron, the felony conviction which had preceded the firearms violation later was held unconstitutional by a state court. Following that determination, the Fifth Circuit granted Dameron’s motion to set aside the gun conviction. By contrast, in the present controversy, there has been no adjudication by any tribunal that Graves’ larceny conviction suffers from a constitutional malady. Nor has he ever attempted to excise the weapons disability through administrative means. It has not been established that the defendant’s conviction was obtained in an unconstitutional manner. As a result, it is highly questionable whether the statements in Dameron concerning Congressional intent deal with the questions with which we are concerned.38
Cody it appears is also inapplicable. The statement in Cody, as to intent, constitutes dictum, since that case did not involve an antecedent conviction that was unconstitutional, or even asserted to be so tainted. Rather, Cody focused on an attempt to overturn a firearms conviction when the prior criminal judgment was annulled on [77]*77purely technical, nonconstitutional grounds.39 The Eighth Circuit refused to upset the weapons violation. Moreover, the intent issue under scrutiny here really had no bearing on the outcome of Cody, thereby undermining Graves’ attempted reliance on that case.
Even assuming as does Graves, that Dameron and Cody stand for the proposition that Congress did not intend that outstanding convictions maintained to be defective on constitutional grounds could lead to liability under the firearms statutes, we still would be disinclined to accede to such an interpretation as to the application of the Gun Control Act.
In our view, the keystone of a judicial evaluation of the design of Congress lies in painstaking examination of the Act, including the statutory framework within which it is contained, as well as the legislative history. Yet Dameron and Cody do not appear to have utilized these basic interpretative aids. Instead, each of the two opinions immediately turned to the possible constitutional impediments to such a statutory arrangement. Only after concluding that the Constitution may bar such a legislative program did the Fifth and Eighth Circuits declare that Congress could not have intended to require expungement of unconstitutional convictions as a precondition to lawful access to firearms. As Dameron and Cody delved into the constitutional concerns before grappling with the question of legislative intent, a procedure that may have been in reverse from an analytical standpoint, we decline to follow such an approach, even assuming that Graves’ evaluation of those cases is correct.40
For these reasons, the declarations as to legislative purpose rendered in Dameron and Cody lend little support to Graves’ thesis.
We are more amenable to the asseverations of other courts concerning Congress’ intent in related situations. Of these, the most noteworthy is the opinion of the Ninth Circuit in United States v. Liles,41 There the Court dealt with the question whether Congress sought to impose liability under Title VII on a felon who purchased a gun pending an appeal which ultimately overturned his conviction. Liles thus found himself in the anomalous position of going to prison for a § 1202 violation, even though the prior crime was, in fact, annulled before his trial on the firearms charge.
Judge Hufstedler, writing for an unanimous panel, said:
Both the broad language of the statute and the legislative history impel us to the conclusion that Congress intended to subject to section 1202(a)(1) all persons, not within the classes expressly exempted, who have been convicted of a felony, and (2) whose convictions have not been invalidated as of the time the firearm is possessed. Congress did not intend to exempt from section 1202(a)(1) one whose status as a convicted felon changed after the date of possession, regardless of how that change of status occurred.42
[78]*78It is clear that the Liles court engaged in the mode of analysis — careful evaluation of the language of the statute and its legislative history — that we believe is requisite to ascertain the legislative intent.
More importantly, Liles would, on its face, seem to encompass the situation before us. Its holding seems to bolster our view that the legislative draftsmen did not forbid the use of outstanding convictions in firearms prosecutions against persons in Graves’ predicament. Indeed, to hold that Congress wished to excuse from liability under Titles IV and VII felons whose antecedent convictions may conceivably be unconstitutional, while penalizing those whose convictions actually have been overturned for other errors, would be to accuse the draftsmen of the Act of engendering a further incongruency. There is no evidence that Congress wished to foster such disparate treatment.43
Every indication is that Congress wanted all persons with outstanding convictions to undergo the inconvenience of a temporary cessation of firearms use. Upon vindication of their claims respecting their rights, or upon relief by executive action, the statutory disability with respect to guns would dissolve. Hence, we conclude that Congress did approve utilization of an outstanding conviction — even one claimed to be unconstitutional — where the defendant has not attempted to render it nugatory prior to a proceeding under the Act.
III.
Having determined that Congress intended that outstanding convictions, even those alleged to be constitutionally imperfect, could contribute to liability under the Gun Control Act, we must now consider whether there are any constitutional impediments to such a legislative program. Graves maintains that the Constitution prohibits any use of such convictions, invoking Burgett v. Texas44 and its progeny45 as well as opinions of several courts of appeals that have applied Burgett in cases somewhat similar to the one before us.46 Because we believe that the concerns addressed in Burgett were of a different dimension, we decline to extend the teachings of that case to the situation here.
A.
In Burgett;47 the petitioner was indicted for felonious assault. Pursuant to state recidivist statutes, he faced greatly increased penalties because of his prior felony convictions. The trial court received one of the convictions into evidence, even though the record of the prior proceeding, on its face, indicated that the petitioner had been denied the assistance of counsel. Burgett then was sentenced under the recidivist statute. In reversing the application of that statute to him, the Supreme Court formulated the following principle:
To permit a conviction obtained in violation of Gideon v. Wainwright to be used [79]*79against a person either to support guilt or enhance punishment for another offense . is to erode the principle of that case. Worse yet, since the defect in the prior conviction was denial of the right to counsel, the accused in effect suffers anew from the deprivation of that Sixth Amendment right.48
Subsequently, the Supreme Court, in United States v. Tucker,49 applied the Burgett rule with respect to sentencing and, in Loper v. Beto,50 to impeachment of a defendant who had testified.
Moreover, at least one court of appeals, in deciding almost the precise issue before us, has deemed Burgett to be controlling. In United States v. Lufman,51 the Seventh Circuit considered an appeal in a firearms proceeding, wherein the underlying felony conviction allegedly rested on an abrogation of the right of counsel. The district court had refused to dismiss the indictment, stating that even if the prior conviction was constitutionally invalid, if could not be collaterally attacked in the weapons proceeding. Relying on Burgett as well as Tucker, however, the Lufman Court reversed the § 1202 conviction.52
Based on the Burgett line of eases, Graves contends that, since he questioned the constitutionality of his prior conviction, the government must demonstrate the validity of that conviction before liability may attach under §§ 1202(a) and 922(a)(6). Also, he insists that an allegedly unconstitutional, though not yet invalidated, conviction cannot support guilt under the Gun Control Act. Yet we do not believe that Graves’ arguments are convincing in this regard. Since the present case differs in important respects from Burgett, the principles enunciated in Burgett and its companion cases are not controlling here.
B.
Initially, we deem Burgett to be in-apposite with respect to the conviction under § 922(a)(6), the provisions dealing with false statements in firearms transactions. The rule announced in Burgett does not appear to be applicable to a statute which penalizes only false representations material to and rendered during firearms transactions. As part of a comprehensive plan of firearms regulation, § 922(a)(6) creates an affirmative obligation to make full and honest disclosures. Since Graves was derelict in his duty when he refused to reveal the fact of his outstanding conviction, even assuming that it was obtained in an unconstitutional manner, imposition of the sanctions prescribed by Congress is warranted.
Cassity v. United States53 supplies cogent support for our position. There, as in this case, the defendant set forth on a gun registration form the statement that he had no criminal record when, in fact, he had one. In a petition for post-conviction relief, Cassity, trying to secure the benefits of Burgett, asserted that his prior conviction had been obtained because he had been without the assistance of counsel. In rejecting this attempted reliance on Burgett, the Sixth Circuit postulated:
We are satisfied that § 922(a)(6) compels disclosure of all convictions which have not been set aside, whether ultimately shown to have been valid or not. That section penalized [a defendant] for making a false statement. It penalizes him not for being a convicted felon, but for failing to tell the truth about the conviction.
The careful statutory scheme of gun control Congress has provided would be seriously jeopardized if a person convicted of a felony could, when purchasing a fire[80]*80arm, make the statement that he had never been convicted of such felony based upon his own subjective belief that his conviction was constitutionally defective where such conviction had not prior thereto been set aside. We reject petitioner’s contention that this interpretation of Congressional intent in enacting § 922(a)(6) [contravenes] . . . Burgett v. Texas.54
More recently, in United States v. Ransom,55 the Fifth Circuit, relying on Cassity, upheld a § 922(a)(6) conviction based on false statements concerning a prior felony conviction which was, in fact, adjudged unconstitutional soon after the defendant completed the Treasury form.
We subscribe fully to the principles espoused in Cassity and reiterated in Ransom. For even if Graves’ prior conviction may subsequently be declared unconstitutional, it would appear that he nonetheless violated § 922(a)(6) when he lied by hiding the fact of such conviction. The registration form asks if the applicant ever had been convicted of certain crimes. It then provides an opportunity to explain the circumstances relating to any offenses on his record. For an individual to deny falsely a prior conviction, including one that is arguably defective on grounds of unconstitutionality, would call into play the penalties for mendacity in firearms transactions. In our view, there is no constitutional obstacle to punishing one who has failed to disclose an outstanding conviction, even one claimed to have abridged the Constitution.
As stated in Part IIA, it may be claimed that such an interpretation of § 922(a)(6) tangentially implicates the use of a possibly unconstitutional judgment. Yet, for reasons set forth below, primarily concerning § 1202, this incidental relationship, in our opinion, does not run afoul of Burgett and the cases that have followed it.
C.
With respect to § 1202, the provision regulating the possession or receipt of firearms by convicted felons, Burgett is distinguishable from the case at bar for several reasons:
First, in contrast to Burgett, there is no obvious constitutional defect evident on the face of the record in the present case.
Second, Graves had available at least three means of attacking his prior conviction, or at least of ameliorating its effects, prior to his possession of firearms, whereas Burgett had no such recourse.
Third, Burgett was bottomed on a manifest abrogation of the right to counsel — a constitutional guarantee not asserted here.
We now turn to a more detailed discussion of these considerations.
Burgett first is distinguishable from the case at hand because no constitutional infirmity in Graves’ state conviction has yet been established, nor is any blemish apparent on the face of the record. In Burgett there could be no real dispute that the petitioner had lacked the assistance of counsel. The Supreme Court stated: “the certified records of the [prior] conviction on their face raise a presumption that petitioner was denied his right to counsel . and therefore that his conviction was void.”56 By contrast, it is not at all clear [81]*81that Graves was deprived of any constitutional right during his state trial on the auto larceny charge. Indeed, we have considerable doubt whether the state proceedings did contravene the due process clause in any respect.
Had Graves’ conviction been invalidated on constitutional grounds prior to the alleged violation of § 1202, there would have been no basis for imposing the statutory disability on him. Likewise, had that disability been lifted by executive action, for constitutional or other reasons, again there would be no justification for the disability. Nevertheless, the restriction here was a continuing one, a status derived from the fact of conviction and a failure to abide by the resultant weapons prohibition. There would appear to be no ground to deem such restriction a nullity, merely because Graves, having been apprehended on the gun charges, then claimed for the first time that its source was defective.
The second basis for distinguishing between Burgett and the present case rests on the divergent opportunities for other relief available to the defendants in the two instances. In Burgett, the prior conviction occurred long before the Texas prosecution under the recidivist statute. The petitioner had completed his sentence for the previous offense and was under no form of restraint by any state or federal authorities at the time of the trial in question. As a result, he had no opportunity or reason to challenge his outstanding criminal record in separate proceedings. Not only had the occasion for a direct appeal long passed, but he could not even bring a petition for post-conviction relief, either in a state or federal court. Therefore, the only way for Burgett to attack the prior conviction, which he deemed to be unconstitutional, was to raise that issue during the prosecution involving the recidivist statute.
In this case, however, though he failed to so avail himself, Graves did have ample opportunity prior to the commission of the gun offenses to challenge the application of the statutory prohibition as to him. He could have petitioned the Secretary of the Treasury for an order relieving him of his disabled status,57 or requested a pardon specifically restoring his privilege to handle arms.58 Moreover, Graves could have sought habeas relief from the conviction that he believed suffered from a constitutional ailment. For it appears that he still was under the supervision of state authorities, as a result of his larceny conduction, when he ignored the firearms disability.59 Because Graves had available these various avenues with which to free himself from the requirements of the Gun Control Act and the consequences of an assertedly unconstitutional conviction, whereas Burgett had no such opportunity to challenge the application to him of the recidivist statute, it would not appear to be appropriate to apply Burgett to the factual configuration here.
Graves was prosecuted for his failure to observe what may be a temporary disability imposed upon him by the Gun Control Act. If he believed his prior conviction to be constitutionally defective, he could have proceeded, in any number of ways, to have the conviction annulled or to mitigate its effects. All the statute mandates is that, so long as a prior conviction is outstanding, such an individual refrain from handling guns. Inasmuch as Graves did not comply with the dictates of the Gun Control Act, and in no way sets forth any explanation for his refusal to so comply, we believe that, despite Burgett, he is subject to the penalties of the Act.
[82]*823.
Finally, it is questionable whether Burgett governs the constitutional- right that Graves raises in this appeal. As discussed earlier, Graves alleges that his prior state conviction denied him due process, contending that the hearing which resulted in the transfer of his case from juvenile court was contrary to procedures mandated in Kent. By contrast, in announcing the Burgett rule, the Supreme Court was concerned specifically with the Sixth Amendment right to counsel. Indeed, the Court has applied Burgett only in eases involving that fundamental guarantee,60 and has declined to do so where other rights have been concerned, despite opportunities to broaden its holding.61
It is clear that Gideon v. Wainwright,62 the landmark articulation of the right to counsel, constituted the foundation of Burgett. Besides enunciating the rule that a “conviction obtained in violation of Gideon [may not] be used against a person either to support guilt or enhance punishment for another offense,” 63 the Supreme Court expressly rendered its decision in Burgett so that Gideon would not “suffer serious erosion.”64 Thereafter, in both Tucker and Loper, the Supreme Court reaffirmed that Burgett essentially was a “sequel” to or gloss on Gideon.65 Since Burgett has been inextricably linked to Gideon by the Supreme Court, we are reluctant to extend its holding to the type of constitutional infringement alleged by Graves. This is particularly the case because no compelling reason for doing so has been advanced.66
The temptation to extend rights to their logical margins frequently is difficult to resist, and we recognize that this appeal affords an alluring opportunity for such extension. However, the fact is that the judicial process, to a considerable extent, consists of line drawing.67 We believe that Burgett does constitute a line of demarcation across which we should not traverse, absent the imprimatur of the Supreme Court. Such a stance would appear to be proper where to do so would conflict with the legislative design of Congress.
At present, then, Burgett would not seem to stand as an impediment to the use of an outstanding criminal conviction as an antecedent to firearms violations, especially where the defendant challenges the constitutionality of the prior conviction on grounds other than a denial of counsel and previously has refused to avail himself of ample opportunities to eradicate the weapons disability.68
[83]*83D.
As a final point, we recognize that to extend Burgett to prosecutions under the Gun Control Act might well create a new method of collateral attack, i. e., a reevaluation of the constitutionality of prior criminal proceedings within a trial of a weapons offense. To obtain a firearms conviction, under the approach pressed by Graves, the government would have to demonstrate the constitutional validity of outstanding convictions — at whenever a defendant so insists. Yet, there is no evidence that Congress intended this type of procedure — a “trial-within-a-trial” — when it enacted the firearms legislation. Nor is there anything in Burgett or its descendants to indicate that the Supreme Court commanded such an arrangement. Consequently, this Court should not sanction a program which appears to be at variance with the intent of Congress and goes a substantial step beyond the teachings of Burgett.
How best to reconcile the competing interests that emerge here — the interest of Graves to attack collaterally, at any time, an alleged constitutional infirmity, as distinguished from requiring him to challenge the predicate conviction before possessing a weapon — would appear to be within the province of the legislature. And the balance that Congress strikes in this regard is a decision not lightly to be displaced by that of this Court, unless it is outside the pale of fair judgment or reason.69
The convictions of the defendant will be affirmed as to both counts.