The Union Democrat

Supreme Court strikes down New York concealed gun law in 6-3 decision

- By TIM BALK

The Supreme Court ruled on Thursday that New York’s century-old concealed carry handgun law violates the Second Amendment, a finding long feared by local officials who viewed the law as a linchpin in efforts to curb the proliferat­ion of pistols on New York City streets.

The 6-3 decision, which is the court’s most significan­t gun rights ruling in more than a decade, rejected the state’s Sullivan Act, a regulation that limited concealed carry handgun licenses to New Yorkers with specific defense needs.

The court’s conservati­ve majority was widely expected to gut the gun law after hinting at their opposition during oral arguments in the fall. But the decision in the case, New York State Rifle & Pistol Associatio­n v. Bruen, landed a blow to New York Democrats and promised swift political outcry from Brooklyn to Buffalo and beyond.

Justice Clarence Thomas, writing for the majority on a court remade by President Donald Trump, wrote that the New York law violates the Constituti­on by preventing “law-abiding citizens with ordinary selfdefens­e needs from exercising their right to keep and bear arms.”

Gov. Kathy Hochul, responding minutes after the ruling’s release at a news conference in Midtown Manhattan, called the ruling “appalling” and “frightful in its scope.” She said her legal team was poring over the 135-page opinion.

“The language we’re reading is shocking,” the governor told reporters. “It is particular­ly painful that this came down at this moment, when we’re still dealing with families in pain from mass shootings.”

The decision came 40 days after the bloody massacre in Buffalo, though that shooting was carried out with an assault rifle.

Hochul said she intended to call the Legislatur­e to a special session to shore up the state’s handgun laws, but she did not immediatel­y set dates.

Lawmakers will now be operating under judicial edicts from Washington that have significan­tly expanded constituti­onal gun rights in the 21st century. In 2008, the Supreme Court held in a landmark decision that Americans have a personal right to possess guns that is baked into the Second Amendment.

That 5-4 ruling, in District of Columbia v. Heller, struck down a strict gun control law in Washington that outlawed possession of handguns at home. The New York ruling went further, extending firearm protection­s in the public realm.

Two upstate New Yorkers, Robert Nash and Brandon Koch, had challenged the state’s law after unsuccessf­ully attempting to acquire unrestrict­ed handgun carry licenses, saying their constituti­onal right to bear arms had been abridged.

The Supreme Court agreed.

New York Mayor Eric Adams, who had said for weeks that the Supreme Court’s potential move was keeping him up at night, declared Thursday that the the opinion had made every New Yorker less safe, and had ignored the “shocking crisis of gun violence” in American cities.

“Today’s Supreme Court decision may have opened an additional river that is going to feed the sea of gun violence in our city and in our nation,” Adams said in a news conference at City Hall.

Still, Police Commission­er Keechant Sewell stressed that the top court had sent the case back to a lower court for further action, buying local authoritie­s time before the law vanishes from the books.

“If you carry a gun illegally in New York City, you will be arrested,” Sewell said. “Nothing changes today.”

Adams pledged to deploy the full force of the city’s remaining legal powers toward limiting gun violence, and he said the city would be reviewing its definition of socalled sensitive locations, where carrying firearms is banned.

“We cannot allow New York to become the Wild Wild West — that is unacceptab­le,” Adams said. “Our work begins now.”

The Supreme Court’s three liberal justices dissented in the case, and two key conservati­ve swing jurists — Justice Brett Kavanaugh and Chief Justice John Roberts — joined in a concurring opinion that appeared to limit the sweep of the court’s move.

In the concurring opinion, they said shall-issue gun licensing laws in 43 states remain constituti­onal. Those laws allow people who meet certain criteria to acquire permits.

The concurring opinion left open New York’s abilities to institute licensing laws, even as Thomas’ opinion limited the reach of such laws.

“We believe that we have some options on the table, and that’s what we’re pursuing,” Hochul said, but added: “This is a deeply disturbing day. It flies in the face of everything we’ve been trying to do here to protect citizens.”

President Joe Biden said in a statement that he was “deeply disappoint­ed,” adding that the Supreme Court’s majority opinion “contradict­s both common sense and the Constituti­on, and should deeply trouble us all.”

He urged state legislatur­es to continue to pass new gun laws.

“For centuries, states have regulated who may purchase or possess weapons, the types of weapons they may use, and the places they may carry those weapons. And the courts have upheld these regulation­s,” Biden said in the statement.

“I call on Americans across the country to make their voices heard on gun safety,” he added in the statement. “Lives are on the line.”

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