Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Gun law ruling creates turmoil

Lower courts confused on what can remain on the books

- By Alanna Durkin Richer and Lindsay Whitehurst

WASHINGTON >> A landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision on the Second Amendment is upending gun laws across the country, dividing judges and sowing confusion over what firearm restrictio­ns can remain on the books.

The high court’s ruling that set new standards for evaluating gun laws left open many questions, experts say, resulting in an increasing number of conflictin­g decisions as lower court judges struggle to figure out how to apply it.

The Supreme Court’s so-called Bruen decision changed the test that lower courts had long used for evaluating challenges to firearm restrictio­ns. Judges should no longer consider whether the law serves public interests like enhancing public safety, the justices said.

Under the Supreme Court’s new test, the government that wants to uphold a gun restrictio­n must look back into history to show it is consistent with the country’s “historical tradition of firearm regulation.”

Courts in recent months have declared unconstitu­tional federal laws designed to keep guns out of the hands of domestic abusers,felony defendants and people who use marijuana. Judges have shot down a federal ban on possessing guns with serial numbers removed and gun restrictio­ns for young adults in Texas and have blocked the enforcemen­t of Delaware’s ban on the possession of homemade “ghost guns.”

In several instances, judges looking at the same laws have come down on opposite sides on whether they are constituti­onal in the wake of the conservati­ve Supreme Court majority’s ruling.

“There’s confusion and disarray in the lower courts because not only are they not reaching the same conclusion­s, they’re just applying different methods or applying Bruen’s method differentl­y,” said Jacob Charles, a professor at Pepperdine University’s law school who focuses on firearms law.

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