Chattanooga Times Free Press

Supreme Court prepares to hear case on New York’s gun permit law

- BY JESSICA GRESKO

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court is preparing to hear a gun rights case that could lead to more guns on the streets of New York and Los Angeles and threaten restrictio­ns on guns in subways, airports, bars, churches, schools and other places where people gather.

The case the justices will hear Wednesday comes as gun violence has surged, and it could dramatical­ly increase the number of people eligible to carry firearms as they go about their daily lives. The case centers on New York’s restrictiv­e gun permit law and whether challenger­s to the law have a right to carry a firearm in public for self-defense.

Gun control groups say if a high court ruling requires states to drop restrictio­ns, the result will be more violence. Gun rights groups, meanwhile, say the risk of a confrontat­ion is precisely why they have a right to be armed for self-defense.

Gun rights advocates hope that the court with a 6-3 conservati­ve majority is poised to side with them. They want the court to say the New York law is too restrictiv­e, as are similar laws in other states. Gun control advocates acknowledg­e the court’s compositio­n has them concerned about the outcome.

“The stakes really could not be higher,” said Jonathan Lowy, chief counsel at the gun control group Brady.

The court last issued major gun rights decisions in 2008 and 2010. Those decisions establishe­d a nationwide right to keep a gun at home for self-defense. The question for the court now is whether there’s a similar Second Amendment right to carry a firearm in public.

The question isn’t an issue in most of the country, where gun owners have little difficulty legally carrying their weapons when they go out. But about half a dozen states, including populous California and several Eastern states, restrict the carrying of guns to those who can demonstrat­e a particular need for doing so. The justices could decide whether those laws, “may issue” laws, can stand.

The fact that the high court is hearing a gun rights case at all is a change after years in which it routinely turned them away. One gun case the justices did agree to hear ended anticlimac­tically in 2020 when the justices threw out the case.

But following the death of liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg last year and her replacemen­t by conservati­ve Justice Amy Coney Barrett, the court agreed to wade into the gun debate again.

Eric Tirschwell, the legal director at Everytown for Gun Safety, said there’s “reason to be concerned” for groups like his that “a type of law that the court was not interested in or willing to review in the past, they now are.”

The New York law the court is reviewing has been in place since 1913 and says that to carry a concealed handgun in public for self-defense, a person applying for a license has to demonstrat­e “proper cause,” an actual need to carry the weapon. When local officials issue a gun license, it’s either unrestrict­ed — allowing the person to carry a gun anywhere not otherwise prohibited by law — or restricted, allowing the person to carry a gun in certain circumstan­ces. That could include carrying a gun for hunting or target shooting, when traveling for work or when in backcountr­y areas.

The New York State Rifle & Pistol Associatio­n and two private citizens challengin­g the law have told the Supreme Court it “makes it effectivel­y impossible for an ordinary, law-abiding citizen to obtain a license to carry a handgun for self-defense.”

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