The Sentinel-Record

Second Amendment case could topple restrictio­ns

- Eric Ruben Eric Ruben is an assistant professor of Law, Southern Methodist University. The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

The stakes in one of the most significan­t Second Amendment cases in U.S. history are high.

The Supreme Court’s ruling in New York State Rifle & Pistol Associatio­n v. Bruen, expected by mid-2022, could declare a New York state restrictio­n on carrying concealed handguns in public places unconstitu­tional.

Such a ruling in favor of the plaintiffs, which include a National Rifle Associatio­n affiliate, could loosen gun regulation­s in many parts of the country.

In my view as a Second Amendment scholar, this case is also noteworthy in that how the court reaches its conclusion could affect the Second Amendment analysis of all weapons laws in the future. The court is set to hear oral arguments on Nov. 3. Long on the books In 1911, after an increase in homicides, New York instituted a handgun permitting system. In 1913, the permitting system was amended to address concealed carrying.

For more than a century, someone seeking to carry a concealed handgun for self-defense in the state has needed to file a permit applicatio­n showing that they have what the law calls “proper cause.”

To obtain an unrestrict­ed permit, applicants must “demonstrat­e a special need for self-protection distinguis­hable from that of the general community,” such as by showing they are being stalked.

New York’s attorneys defend this restrictiv­e approach to issuing concealed carry permits as an effective means to reduce gun violence. In 2020, there were 43,592 gun deaths in the United States, including suicides and homicides. There are also over 80,000 nonfatal firearm injuries each year.

New York has some of the strictest gun laws in the country, and its homicide rate is below the national average.

The plaintiffs

Robert Nash and Brandon Koch were denied unrestrict­ed concealed carry permits because a judge determined that they did not satisfy New York’s proper-cause standard.

Instead, Koch was issued a license to carry a concealed handgun for self-defense while traveling to and from work. Both plaintiffs’ licenses also permit them to carry concealed handguns for hunting and target practice, and for self-defense in areas not “frequented by the general public.”

Along with the NRA’s New York affiliate, Nash and Koch contend that these limitation­s on their ability to carry a concealed handgun violate their right to bear arms. They assert a broad view of the right to carry a handgun, one that extends virtually “whenever and wherever” the need for self-defense might arise.

New York’s law defies that conception of the Second Amendment.

The Heller ruling’s muted effects

In considerin­g Bruen, the Supreme Court will focus on the meaning of an important precedent: District of Columbia v. Heller.

When the Supreme Court issued its Heller ruling in 2008, a 5-4 majority struck down Washington, D.C.’s ban on the possession of handguns in the home. The court held for the first time that the Second Amendment protects an individual’s right to keep and bear arms.

Writing for the majority, the late Justice Antonin Scalia declared that the “central component” of the Second Amendment was not a “well regulated Militia,” but rather “the inherent right of self-defense.”

But the majority’s decision included cautionary language that lower-court judges have since relied on to uphold gun laws.

“The right secured by the Second Amendment is not unlimited” and is “not a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose,” Scalia wrote. His opinion even contained a list of “presumptiv­ely lawful regulatory measures,” such as restrictio­ns on the possession of firearms by felons or bans on carrying them in sensitive places like schools and government buildings.

The NRA and other gun rights supporters have bristled at the general acceptance by judges of the constituti­onality of laws restrictin­g firearm use.

That discontent culminated in Bruen.

Concealed handguns

In 1980, most Americans lived in places that either banned concealed carry or had a New York-style “proper cause” permitting regime. An NRA push beginning in the late 1980s loosened public carry laws around the country.

In states where gun rights advocates possess relatively little clout, they hope that Bruen will accomplish through the courts what they have failed to accomplish through the political process.

Today, New York is one of eight states requiring that people seeking to carry concealed handguns have a “proper” or “good” cause. California, Delaware, Hawaii, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, New Jersey and Rhode Island have similar laws on the books.

If the court strikes down New York’s law, Americans in those states could expect an increase in the number of people legally carrying handguns in their communitie­s. Anyone who wants to carry a concealed handgun would have an easier time doing so.

A ‘text, history and tradition test’

Bruen could also be a turning point for how judges evaluate all Second Amendment cases — whether they’re about assault weapons, tasers or felon-in-possession offenses.

Until now, judges have generally assessed whether such restrictio­ns are justified by current public safety concerns.

Many gun rights advocates are asking the Supreme Court to reject that approach. Instead, they want judges to decide cases on the sole basis of history and tradition unless the judiciary’s interpreta­tion of the text of the Second Amendment resolves the issue. This is known as the “text, history and tradition” test.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh is credited with first articulati­ng this test in a dissent he issued prior to his rise to the Supreme Court.

Justices Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett all have embraced similar judicial philosophi­es to some degree.

But there’s a catch: Guns have always been regulated in America.

New York’s regulation has been on the books for over a century and had a legacy that extended back even further.

If the justices abandon a convention­al approach for the text, history and tradition test, I would expect a new round of lawsuits over weapons laws that have already survived prior court challenges. Gun rights advocates would likely, for example, sue over restrictio­ns on large-capacity magazines or safe storage requiremen­ts in places where those issues have already been resolved.

This litigation would call on judges to rule on the sole basis of a difficult historical exercise: comparing modern laws addressing modern guns and contempora­ry gun violence to the laws, practices and weapons of a bygone era.

Trump’s justices may tip the scales

The court has three main options.

It could uphold New York’s law. It could strike it down. Or it could find a middle ground, such as issuing a narrow ruling that punts big questions about gun restrictio­ns down the road.

Chief Justice John Roberts has steered his colleagues toward narrow rulings before. But he will hold little sway if the three justices former President Donald Trump appointed team up with Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas, the court’s two other conservati­ves, on a far-reaching majority opinion.

Trump conferred with the NRA before nominating Gorsuch, Kavanaugh and Coney Barrett — all of whom received the gun group’s blessing.

The ruling will underscore the significan­ce of their presence on the court.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States