UPDATED: State preparing further defense of assault weapons ban
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[January 24, 2023]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Attorney General Kwame Raoul on Monday filed a petition
asking an appellate court to vacate a temporary restraining order that
was issued late Friday afternoon blocking enforcement of the state’s
recently-passed assault weapons ban.
Raoul’s office filed the petition in the 5th District Appellate Court in
southern Illinois, arguing that Effingham County Judge Joshua Morrison
had abused his discretion and the plaintiffs are unlikely to succeed in
their lawsuit, thus the restraining order was granted incorrectly.
Morrison’s late Friday order applies to only the 800-plus plaintiffs in
the case filed by Tom DeVore, the unsuccessful 2022 GOP candidate for
attorney general.
“Although disappointing, it is the initial result we’ve seen in many
cases brought by plaintiffs whose goal is to advance ideology over
public safety,” Gov. JB Pritzker said in a statement shortly after the
order was announced.
House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, D-Hillside, and Senate President
Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, issued similar statements within hours of the
judge’s decision.
“We passed the Protect Illinois Communities Act to get dangerous weapons
off the street and create a safer state,” Harmon said in a statement.
“This ruling will be appealed. We look forward to our day in court to
zealously advocate for our neighbors who are weary of the gun violence
epidemic.”
But the Illinois State Rifle Association, which has filed a separate
challenge to the law in federal court, applauded Morrison’s ruling,
saying the ruling is “a clear indication” that Pritzker and lawmakers
“rammed this law through improperly.”
In his ruling Friday, Morrison sided with the plaintiffs’ argument that
there were legitimate issues about whether the law violates their rights
to due process and equal protection because it limits most people’s
Second Amendment right to keep and bear certain firearms, while at the
same time exempting some groups of people from the law but not others.
But Morrison also devoted much of the opinion to the procedural
shortcuts lawmakers used to pass the bill – shortcuts routinely used in
order to pass legislation quickly, especially when the General Assembly
is facing statutory or constitutional deadlines.
In this case, the law’s underlying bill, House Bill 5471, passed through
both chambers in its final form during the final two days of the
legislature’s “lame duck” session earlier this month, with Pritzker
signing the bill the night of Jan. 10. At noon the next day, Jan. 11,
newly-elected lawmakers were sworn in and a new biennial session began,
meaning the process would have had to start over after that point.
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A House committee held multiple hearings on the bill in December, but at
that time the draft language of the bill was contained in HB5855.
The Illinois Constitution requires that bills be read by title into the
record on three different days in each chamber, a process that would
normally take at least five days to complete. But at the tail end of the
lame duck session, lawmakers didn’t have that much time, so engaged in a
commonly-used maneuver known as “gut and replace.”
That means the Senate took a bill that had already passed the House – in
this case, one amending a portion of the state’s Insurance Code dealing
with public adjusters – gutted it of all its content and replaced that
content with the language of the assault weapons ban. Then they sent the
“amended” bill back to the House for an up-or-down concurrence vote.
“This Court finds that the Defendants unequivocally and egregiously
violated the Three Readings Rule of the Illinois Constitution in order
to circumvent the Constitutional requirements and avoid public
discourse,” Morrison wrote.
Morrison also said he believes the legislation violates the
Constitution’s requirement that bills be limited to only one subject,
unless they deal with appropriations, codification, revision or
rearrangement of laws. He said the assault weapon bill violates that
provision because it contains provisions that also relate to human
trafficking and drug trafficking.
The Illinois Supreme Court, however, has historically declined to strike
down legislation based on either of those two arguments, ruling
repeatedly that if the speaker of the House and president of the Senate
both certify that a bill was properly passed, the court would not
second-guess that decision.
Morrison was just elected as a 4th Circuit judge in November. Prior to
that, he had been the state’s attorney in Fayette County and was among a
group of state’s attorneys who sued the state to challenge the
constitutionality of the sweeping criminal justice reform law passed in
2021 known as the SAFE-T Act.
In 2020, during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Morrison also wrote
to Raoul to question the enforceability of Pritzker’s emergency orders
at the time. DeVore later cited that letter as part of his 2022 campaign
for attorney general.
Editor’s note: This story has been updated to reflect
the attorney general’s latest legal filings.
Capitol
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