Analysis-U.S. Supreme Court ruling provides ammunition for gun law
challenges
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[June 24, 2022]
By Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme
Court's ruling striking down New York state's limits on carrying
concealed handguns in public is likely to provide legal ammunition to
challenge other regulations around the country even as Congress
considers modest reforms.
In a 6-3 ruling, the court for the first time recognized that
individuals have a right to carry a firearm in public under the U.S.
Constitution's Second Amendment, which protects the right to bear arms.
The ruling, authored by conservative Justice Clarence Thomas, declared
unconstitutional a New York law that required people to have good cause
to obtain a permit to carry a concealed firearm.
The decision also clarified for future cases how courts must assess
whether regulations are valid under the Second Amendment, requiring them
to be comparable with the type of restrictions traditionally adopted
throughout U.S. history dating back centuries.
As a result of the ruling, government entities defending gun
restrictions must make additional arguments that the law in question is
consistent with that history.
Because many gun statutes are not easily comparable to historical
restrictions, it could make them vulnerable to legal attack. These
include bans on assault-style weapons and high-capacity magazines as
well as "red flag" laws to keep firearms away from people deemed a
danger to themselves or others.
"I think this opinion is going to lead to a tremendous amount of
litigation over the constitutionality of gun restrictions," said Adam
Winkler, an expert on the Second Amendment at the UCLA School of Law in
Los Angeles.
The ruling is "written so broadly as to call into question a wide
variety of gun safety laws," Winkler added. That could include
provisions of modest gun safety legislation currently being considered
by Congress, Winkler said.
A bipartisan package of modest gun safety measures advanced in the U.S.
Senate on Thursday. The legislation aims, among other things, to tighten
background checks for would-be gun purchasers convicted of domestic
violence or significant crimes as juveniles. It does not include broader
measures favored by Democrats including President Joe Biden such as bans
on assault-style rifles or high-capacity magazines.
Royce Barondes, a University of Missouri School of Law professor who
teaches firearms law, said he expects that some previous challenges to
gun regulations that were rejected by courts "are more likely to be
successful after this case."
Among the state regulations that are now "suspect" are restrictions on
giving firearms licenses to people from out of state and bans on
"standard capacity" ammunition magazines, which can vary based on the
model, Barondes said.
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Guns are displayed after a gun buyback event organized by the New
York City Police Department (NYPD), in the Queens borough of New
York City, U.S., June 12, 2021. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/File Photo
Several challenges to gun restrictions are still
seeking the Supreme Court's review, including to a New Jersey ban on
ammunition magazines that can hold more than 10 rounds.
Thursday's ruling did make some concessions,
acknowledging that governments could enact prohibitions on firearms
in certain "sensitive places" and stating that regimes used in 43
states to issue concealed carry licenses when certain requirements
are met are likely lawful.
Two conservative justices who joined in the ruling offered what
might be some parameters as to its scope. Justice Brett Kavanaugh
wrote in a concurring opinion joined by Chief Justice John Roberts
that the decision has some limits, specifically some of licensing
requirements that states maintain including background checks and
firearms training.
In future gun cases, Kavanaugh and Roberts could be pivotal votes.
If they join the three liberal justices, that would be enough to
forge a majority in a future ruling.
As such, gun control advocates were hopeful that many regulations
could withstand legal scrutiny even under the Supreme Court's new
test.
Jonathan Lowy, a lawyer at the gun control group Brady, said laws
banning high-capacity magazines and assault-style semiautomatic
weapons should be upheld because the Supreme Court already decided
in a 2008 ruling that found an individual right to bear arms in the
home that there is a historic tradition supporting bans on
"dangerous and unusual weapons."
Thursday's ruling noted that some cases "implicating unprecedented
societal concerns or dramatic technological changes may require a
more nuanced approach."
Barondes said that while he did not think that language was designed
to validate bans on assault-type rifles, "I wouldn't rule out lower
courts using that as a tool to validate such a ban."
Lowy and other gun control activists expressed frustration that the
court's conservative majority, in their view, selectively used
historical evidence to support invalidating New York's measure while
ignoring history that favored the state, which they fear could be
the same approach used in subsequent cases.
"I do think there is room for reasonable objective judges to uphold
most gun laws," Lowy said. "But the question is: Who is making the
decision?"
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung; Editing by Will
Dunham)
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