East Bay Times

California gun laws headed to high court?

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.

California has some of the nation’s tightest gun control laws and virtually no session of the Legislatur­e ends without additional restrictio­ns being enacted.

In polling and by their votes, California­ns have heartily endorsed making gun purchases and ownership increasing­ly more difficult.

As California’s restrictiv­e laws proliferat­ed, however, the state’s current and would-be gun owners complained that notwithsta­nding their political popularity, the laws violate California­ns’ constituti­onal right to bear arms, codified in the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on.

Those complaints are now likely to reach the U.S. Supreme Court because of Tuesday’s decision by the 9th District Court of Appeals upholding two of the state’s most controvers­ial gun control laws, banning the sale and possession of magazines holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition. One was enacted by the Legislatur­e and the other in a ballot initiative (Propositio­n 63) sponsored by Gavin Newsom in 2016 when he was lieutenant governor.

A federal judge in San Diego, Roger Benitez, became a hero to gun owners when he struck down Propositio­n 63’s 10-round magazine limit two years ago, saying that it unconstitu­tionally interfered with using guns for self-protection. “The statute hits at the center of the Second Amendment and its burden is severe,” Benitez wrote.

Newsom had become governor when Benitez ruled and denounced the judge as a “wholly-owned subsidiary of the gun lobby and the National Rifle Associatio­n.”

A three-three judge panel of the 9th Circuit Court sided with Benitez but on Tuesday, the full 11-judge court, dividing along ideologica­l lines, ratified the magazine laws. It declared that they “reasonably supported California’s effort to reduce the devastatin­g damage wrought by mass shootings.

The majority opinion added that requiring owners of higher-capacity magazine to get rid of them is not an illegal government “taking” because “the government acquires nothing by virtue of the limitation on the capacity of magazines.”

The case sparked a welter of opinions from individual members of the court both endorsing the majority opinion and dissenting.

Three judges appointed by former President Donald Trump were sharply critical of the majority, saying, “these magazines are lawfully owned by millions of people nationwide” and warning that applying California’s law across America would “require confiscati­ng half of all existing firearms magazines in this country.”

Newsom, of course, hailed the ruling that upheld his ballot measure, tweeting, “Weapons of war don’t belong on our streets. This is a huge victory for the health and safety of all California­ns.”

California being what it is, the nation’s most populous state with some of the nation’s tightest gun laws, the eventual outcome of the magazine capacity case could have wide effects. Blue state prosecutor­s filed briefs supporting California’s position while those in Texas and other red states backed Benitez’s ruling.

The possibilit­y of it becoming a landmark case was enhanced when lawyers for gun owners who challenged the state’s magazine limit immediatel­y promised that they would appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

If, as Tuesday’s decision indicated, judicial attitudes about gun control laws divide along ideologica­l lines, California’s limit on magazine capacity could face rough treatment from the Supreme Court’s 6-3 conservati­ve majority.

In recent decisions, the Supreme Court has become increasing­ly critical of restrictiv­e gun laws and has a landmark case now pending, involving New York’s ban on carrying guns outside the home.

During arguments a few weeks ago, majority justices gave every indication they would overturn the law, criticizin­g it for interferin­g with citizens’ rights to self-defense. That’s essentiall­y the same line of reasoning that Benitez adopted in overturnin­g California’s magazine limit.

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