Los Angeles Times

A faulty ruling on open carry

-

The Supreme Court ruled a decade ago — and for the first time — that the 2nd Amendment grants individual­s the right to keep firearms in their homes for personal protection. It was the wrong decision; courts until then understood that the 2nd Amendment was framed with state militias in mind. But the justices held in the District of Columbia vs. Heller that the Constituti­on protects the right of individual­s to keep and bear arms, within limits.

Now a three-judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled in a case from Hawaii that the Heller decision also allows people to carry a firearm openly in public for self-protection. The panel’s decision is just as wrong as the Heller case it is built upon, and if it stands, it will make the nation a more dangerous place.

The heart of the decision is the belief that the 2nd Amendment grants a right to keep (as in own) and to bear (as in carry) arms for self-protection in both the home and in public, where the danger of life-threatenin­g interactio­ns also exists. In other words, the need for self-protection, and thus for a firearm, doesn’t stop at the front door.

If there’s any good news here it’s that the judge who wrote the 2-1 majority opinion, Diarmuid O’Scannlain, came to a similar conclusion in Peruta vs. San Diego County four years ago. There, the majority held that the 2nd Amendment also conveys a right to carry a concealed weapon. But the full 9th Circuit Court overturned that decision, and the Supreme Court refused to hear the case. We hope that Hawaii officials will seek a broader appellate review, and that Young vs. Hawaii goes the same way as Peruta.

But there’s a risk that the disagreeme­nts among lower courts over the issue might force the Supreme Court to accept another major 2nd Amendment case. Since the Heller case and a related decision out of Illinois in 2010, the nation’s top court has been loath to hear new challenges to gun regulation­s.

Judge Brett Kavanaugh, President Trump’s conservati­ve nominee to replace the retiring and more centrist Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, embraces an expansive approach to the 2nd Amendment. While his confirmati­on would not necessaril­y mean a court more friendly to gun rights, it would probably mean that the court will consider more challenges to gun control laws. And once the court decides to hear a case, anything can happen.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States