The Pak Banker

The Supreme Court's bad history

- Steven Lubet

The six conservati­ve justice on the U.S. Supreme Court have seemingly come to think of themselves as historians, able to excavate the original meaning of the Constituti­on from archival sources revealed to them in the briefs of petitioner­s and respondent­s.

The result has been bad history and worse law, culminatin­g in last term's New York State Rifle & Pistol Associatio­n v. Bruen, where the majority invalidate­d New York's restrictio­ns on carrying concealed handguns because it was deemed inconsiste­nt with "this nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation."

According to Justice Clarence Thomas's opinion, a gun control statute can be upheld only if there is an "American tradition justifying" its specific provisions, meaning similar laws in force around 1791 (when the Second Amendment was adopted) or 1868 (when the Fourteenth Amendment was rati- fied, which made the Bill of Rights applicable to the states).

It turns out, however, that historical similarity is in the eye of the beholder. Thomas thus dismissed the many 19th century gun control laws as non-analogous "outliers," while privilegin­g "his own preferred sources" to conclude that "American government­s simply have not broadly prohibited the public carry of commonly used firearms for personal defense."

Actual historians quickly pointed out the flaws in Thomas's law office history, pointing out numerous precedents for the New York law in question. As Fordham's

Saul Cornell explained, "a host of localities had enacted similar laws starting in the 1870s," almost immediatel­y following ratificati­on of the Fourteenth Amendment, which should have provided ample historical support for the New York statute. Thomas actually acknowledg­ed in a footnote that he based his analysis only "on the historical record compiled by the parties," rather than original research, which allowed him to scan the briefs and "pick out his friends," as Chief Justice John Roberts once described judges' selective use of evidence.

It is unsurprisi­ng that poor history leads to unmanageab­le law. Three lower court judges recently discovered that the Bruen standard is almost impossible to apply reasonably to contempora­ry circumstan­ces. As Slate's Mark Joseph Stern put it, "modern technology has made guns vastly more powerful and deadly, and the exponentia­l growth in population creates new challenges that were not present hundreds of years ago."

District Judge Joseph Goodwin, sitting in West Virginia, determined that he could not enforce the federal criminal law against knowing possession of a firearm with an obliterate­d serial number despite "the usefulness of serial numbers in solving gun crimes." The Bruen opinion, as Judge

Goodwin noted, did not permit him to consider the government's crucial interest in apprehendi­ng criminals and saving lives, but instead limited him to searching for a "historical tradition" of potentiall­y similar laws.

Of course, there were no such laws. Serial numbers were unknown in 1791; they came into wide use only with the advent of mass production of firearms. "The first legal requiremen­t for serial numbers did not appear until 1934," and then only for machine guns; their removal was not criminaliz­ed until 1938. "Serial numbers were not broadly required for all firearms . . . until the passage of the Gun Control Act of 1968," 100 years after ratificati­on of the Fourteenth Amendment.

Although "firearms with an obliterate­d serial number are likely to be used in violent crime," Judge Goodwin recognized that "the Supreme Court has forbidden me from considerin­g" public safety or crime prevention. And because "serial numbers were not required or even commonly used" in the relevant time periods, he reluctantl­y held that "the modern regulation is unconstitu­tional" under the Second Amendment.

Mississipp­i District Judge Carlton Reeves faced a similar problem in a prosecutio­n under "the federal statute prohibitin­g felons from possessing firearms." The defendant argued that "Founding?era legislatur­es did not strip felons of the right to bear arms simply because of their status as felons," while the government asserted that the law was indeed "part of the historical tradition of regulating firearms possession."

Reeves was at a loss. "Historical consensus on this issue is elusive," he said, and "this Court is not a trained historian." In an unusually sharp critique of the Supreme Court, he added that the justices "distinguis­hed as they may be, are not trained historians."

Moreover, no judges are "experts in what white, wealthy, and male property owners thought about firearms regulation in 1791. Yet we are now expected to play historian in the name of constituti­onal adjudicati­on."

Rather than "cherry-pick the history" himself, Reeves therefore proposed to "appoint a historian to serve as a consulting expert . . . to help the Court identify and sift through authoritat­ive sources on founding?era firearms restrictio­ns."

Even domestic abusers get a pass under Bruen, as Texas District Court Judge David Counts ruled in U.S. v. Perez-Gallan. With "historical analysis being the only tool" permitted, Counts determined that the Second Amendment required him to dismiss charges against a gun-carrying defendant who was under a restrainin­g order for "threatenin­g . . . domestic violence."

“The defendant argued that "Founding?era legislatur­es did not strip felons of the right to bear arms simply because of their status as felons," while the government asserted that the law was indeed "part of the historical tradition of regulating firearms possession." Reeves was at a loss. "Historical consensus on this issue is elusive," he said, and "this Court is not a trained historian." In an unusually sharp critique of the Supreme Court, he added that the justices "distinguis­hed as they may be, are not trained historians.”

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