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		New York lawmakers to loosen gun laws after Supreme Court ruling
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		 [June 30, 2022]  
		By Jonathan Allen 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York lawmakers 
		will meet in an emergency session on Thursday to loosen the state's 
		gun-licensing laws to conform with a landmark U.S. Supreme Court 
		decision that established a constitutional right for people to carry 
		weapons in public for self-defense.
 
 Last week's Supreme Court decision was in a case challenging New York's 
		century-old gun license laws. The six justices in the court's 
		conservative majority ruled that it was unconstitutional to require 
		law-abiding people to provide "proper cause," or some kind of special 
		need, for concealed-carry handgun licenses for self-defense.
 
 Soon after, New York Governor Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, ordered the 
		extraordinary session of the legislature in Albany, the state capital, 
		to revise the state's gun laws in keeping with the ruling, which she 
		warned would lead to more gun violence.
 
 Thursday's efforts by New York lawmakers to thread the needle of keeping 
		as many gun regulations as possible while obeying the Supreme Court will 
		be closely watched, including by pro-gun groups such as the National 
		Rifle Association. The Supreme Court ruling made it easier to challenge 
		and overturn laws governing weapons.
 
 New York's Democrat-controlled legislature, which had broken for summer 
		recess, is also expected to codify what the Supreme Court called 
		"sensitive places," where the public can be barred from carrying 
		weapons.
 
		
		 
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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 
            
			
			
			 
            The court said it would likely accept courthouses, 
			schools and government buildings as sensitive places, but would 
			frown on applying the label broadly. The ruling explicitly warned 
			lawmakers they could not do anything that would effectively make the 
			entire island of Manhattan a sensitive place.
 In the ruling in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, 
			the court said gun regimes in California, New Jersey, Hawaii, 
			Massachusetts, Maryland and Washington D.C. that are similar to New 
			York's are also unconstitutional.
 
 The revised laws must more closely resemble the gun laws of the 43 
			states identified by the court where officials have less discretion 
			to deny people gun licenses, although the court ruled that people 
			with certain kinds of criminal history or mental illness could still 
			be denied the right to carry weapons.
 
 New York lawmakers are likely to take cues from such language, as 
			well as from the test set out in the ruling that makes a weapons 
			regulation constitutional only if it is similar to limits on arms 
			found in American history, particularly the 18th century, when the 
			Constitution's Second Amendment was ratified.
 
 New York's current gun license rules were codified in 1913.
 
 (Reporting by Jonathan Allen; editing by Donna Bryson and Josie Kao)
 
            
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