State Supreme Court reviewing FOID law constitutionality
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[March 18, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois Supreme Court is
being asked for a second time to decide whether a state law requiring
gun owners to have a firearm permit is unconstitutional – a question the
court previously declined to answer.
The case involves a White County resident, Vivian Claudine Brown, who
was charged in March 2017 with possession of a firearm without a Firearm
Owner’s Identification, or FOID card.
The charge was filed after her husband had called the White County
Sheriff’s Office to report that she had fired a gun in their home. When
officers arrived, they found a rifle beside her bed but no evidence that
she had fired it.
Nonetheless, she was charged with the crime. But a circuit judge in
White County threw out the charge, saying the Illinois law requiring
potential gun owners to fill out a form, provide a picture ID, undergo a
background check and pay a $10 fee to obtain a FOID card was
unconstitutional, at least as it applied to Brown. The judge said it
imposed a burden on Brown’s Second Amendment right to keep a firearm in
her own home for self-defense.
The circuit court went on to say, even though Brown’s attorneys never
raised the issue, that it is impossible to comply with the act in one’s
own home. That’s because it would mean anybody who had knowledge of a
firearm in the home and exclusive control over the area where it was
kept could be construed as possessing the gun and therefore would have
to have their FOID card on their person 24 hours a day.
The state appealed that decision directly to the state Supreme Court,
but in April 2020, the high court declined to answer the question of the
law’s constitutionality. Instead, it said the White County court had
rushed to rule on the law’s constitutionality when it could have decided
the case on other grounds, namely that the General Assembly never
intended the FOID Card Act to apply in the home.
The Supreme Court then sent the case back to White County with
instructions to enter a modified order that did not touch on the
constitutionality question.
The White County court did that, but then in an unusual move, Brown’s
attorneys asked the court to reconsider, arguing that the modified order
forced Brown to take a position she didn’t want to take and one that
would ultimately be overturned on appeal, thus delaying any final
resolution of the case, possibly for years.
The circuit court agreed and reinstated the charges against her. Brown’s
attorneys then filed a new motion to dismiss on constitutional grounds.
The judge then upheld that motion, finding that “any fee associated with
exercising the core fundamental Constitutional right of armed
self-defense within the
confines of one’s home violates the Second Amendment.”
The state then appealed that decision back to the Illinois Supreme
Court.
During oral arguments Wednesday, Assistant Attorney General Garson
Fischer argued that the law imposes only a minimal burden on people
wishing to own firearms and it serves a legitimate state interest of
keeping guns out of the hands of felons and mentally ill individuals.
“It imposes a de minimis burden on law-abiding citizens to allow the
state to determine whether they are, in fact, a law-abiding citizen who
has the absolute right to possess a firearm in their home for
self-defense, or falls into one of these high-risk categories,” he said.
“The FOID Card Act is the mechanism by which the state answers that
question.”
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The Illinois Supreme Court is pictured in
Springfield. (Capitol News Illinois file photo)
Fischer also noted that Brown never applied for a FOID card in the first
place and therefore should not be allowed to argue that the law was
overly burdensome.
Appellate defense attorney David Sigale, however, argued that the law
imposes a significant burden because it provides for criminal penalties
against those who don’t comply, even if they are otherwise entitled
under state and federal law to own a firearm.
In addition, he argued that the law is duplicative because there are
already state and federal laws prohibiting people with felony
convictions or certain kinds of mental illness from owning a gun. He
also noted that the screening process the state uses to determine
whether someone falls into one of those categories is fallible, which
results in people who are eligible for a FOID card having to file
appeals, and sometimes even hire attorneys, to overturn a wrongful
denial.
“So the burden is not de minimis, and the effect is not de minimis,”
Sigale said. “It is not quick, it is not easy.”
Some of the justices, however, still seemed to question whether the
Supreme Court even needs to address the constitutional question. Chief
Justice Anne Burke questioned why Brown’s attorneys asked the White
County court to reconsider a decision that effectively dropped the
charges against her.
“Is it ethical for a criminal defense attorney to move to vacate an
order that grants his client complete relief?” she asked.
Attorneys on both sides, however, argued that it was because the order
that the White County judge would have issued – dismissing the charge on
the grounds that the FOID Card Act doesn’t apply to possessing a gun in
one’s own home – probably would not stand on appeal.
Justice Mary Jane Theis also hinted that the court could send the case
back to White County as it did before. She then asked Sigale what his
ethical obligation would be in defending Brown before an appellate court
if the White County court dismissed the charge on statutory grounds and
the state appealed to the Fifth District Court of Appeals.
“I guess, at best, I would have to say something ethically along the
lines of, if the Fifth District agrees with the position of the circuit
court and that original order, then we'll take the dismissal and go
home,” Sigale said. “But I would not argue that the trial court was
correct.”
The court took the case under advisement but did not indicate how long
it might take to issue a decision.
The case has drawn the attention of national gun control advocates such
as the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence and Everytown for Gun
safety, along with gun rights advocacy groups like Guns Save Life Inc.,
and the Firearms Policy Foundation, all of whom submitted or contributed
to amicus briefs in the case.
The city of Chicago and Cook County also filed an amicus brief in
support of the FOID law, saying it has been an effective tool in helping
them combat gun violence.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
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Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |