Los Angeles Times

Justices’ ruling stokes legal turmoil over gun laws

Landmark decision on 2nd Amendment splits judges, sows confusion on firearm regulation­s.

- By Alanna Durkin Richer and Lindsay Whitehurst Richer and Whitehurst write for the Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — A landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision on the 2nd 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 socalled 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 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.

The legal turmoil caused by the first major gun ruling in a decade will probably force the Supreme Court to step in again soon to provide more guidance for judges.

“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.

“What it means is that not only are new laws being struck down ... but also laws that have been on the books for over 60 years, 40 years in some cases, those are being struck down — where prior to Bruen — courts were unanimous that those were constituti­onal,” he said.

The legal wrangling is playing out as mass shootings continue to plague the country awash in guns and as law enforcemen­t officials work to combat an uptick in violent crime.

Last week, six people were fatally shot at multiple locations in a small town in rural Mississipp­i and a gunman killed three students and critically wounded five others at Michigan State University before killing himself.

Dozens of people have died in mass shootings in 2023, including in Monterey Park, where 11 people were killed as they welcomed the Lunar New Year at a dance hall popular with older Asian Americans. Last year, more than 600 mass shootings occurred in the U.S. in which at least four people were killed or wounded, according to the Gun Violence Archive.

The decision opened the door to a wave of legal challenges from gun rights activists who saw an opportunit­y to undo laws on such issues as age limits and AR-15-style semiautoma­tic weapons. For gun rights supporters, the Bruen decision was a welcome developmen­t that removed what they see as unconstitu­tional restraints on 2nd Amendment rights.

“It’s a true reading of what the Constituti­on and the Bill of Rights tells us,” said Mark Oliva, a spokesman for the National Shooting Sports Foundation. “It absolutely does provide clarity to the lower courts on how the Constituti­on should be applied when it comes to our fundamenta­l rights.”

Gun control groups are raising alarm after a federal appeals court this month said that under the Supreme Court’s new standards, the government can’t stop people who have domestic violence restrainin­g orders against them from owning guns.

The New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals acknowledg­ed that the law “embodies salutary policy goals meant to protect vulnerable people in our society.”

But the judges concluded that the government failed to point to a precursor from early American history that is comparable enough to the modern law. Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland has said the government will seek further review of that decision.

Gun control activists have decried the Supreme Court’s historical test but say they remain confident that many gun restrictio­ns will survive challenges. Since the decision, for example, judges have consistent­ly upheld the federal ban on convicted felons from possessing guns.

The Supreme Court noted that cases dealing with “unpreceden­ted societal concerns or dramatic technologi­cal changes may require a more nuanced approach.” And the justices clearly emphasized that the right to bear arms is limited to law-abiding citizens, said Shira Feldman, litigation counsel for Brady, the gun control group.

The Supreme Court’s test has raised questions about whether judges are suited to be poring over history and whether it makes sense to judge modern laws based on regulation­s — or a lack thereof— from the past.

“We are not 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,” wrote Mississipp­i U.S. District Judge Carlton Reeves, who was appointed by President Obama.

Some judges are “really parsing the history very closely and saying, ‘These laws aren’t analogous because the historical law worked in a slightly different fashion than the modern law,’ ” said Andrew Willinger, executive director of the Duke Center for Firearms Law.

Others, he said, “have done a much more flexible inquiry and are trying to say, ‘Look, what is the purpose of this historical law as best I can understand it?’ ”

Firearm rights and gun control groups are closely watching many pending cases, including several challengin­g state laws banning certain semiautoma­tic weapons and high-capacity magazines.

A federal judge in Chicago on Friday denied a bid to block an Illinois law that bans the sale of so-called assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, finding the law to be constituti­onal under the Supreme Court’s new test.

A state court, however, already has partially blocked the law — allowing some gun dealers to continue selling the weapons — amid a separate legal challenge.

Already, some gun laws passed in the wake of the Supreme Court decision have been rejected. A judge declared multiple portions of New York’s new gun law unconstitu­tional, including rules that restrict carrying firearms in public parks and places of worship. An appeals court later put that ruling on hold while it considers the case. And the Supreme Court has allowed New York to enforce the law for now.

Some judges have upheld a law banning people under indictment over felonies from buying guns while others have declared it unconstitu­tional.

A federal judge issued an order barring Delaware from enforcing provisions of a new law outlawing the manufactur­e and possession of “ghost guns” that don’t have serial numbers and can be nearly impossible for law enforcemen­t officials to trace. But another judge rejected a challenge to California’s “ghost gun” regulation­s.

In the California case, U.S. District Judge George Wu, who was nominated by President George W. Bush, appeared to take a dig at how other judges are interpreti­ng the Supreme Court’s guidance.

The company that brought the challenge — “and apparently certain other courts” — would like to treat the Supreme Court’s decision “as a ‘word salad,’ choosing an ingredient from one side of the ‘plate’ and an entirely-separate ingredient from the other, until there is nothing left whatsoever other than an entirelybu­lletproof and unrestrain­ed Second Amendment,” Wu wrote in his ruling.

 ?? Brittainy Newman Associated Press ?? THE GOVERNMENT that wants to uphold a gun restrictio­n must look back to show it is consistent with the country’s “historical tradition of firearm regulation” in the wake of the Supreme Court’s Bruen decision.
Brittainy Newman Associated Press THE GOVERNMENT that wants to uphold a gun restrictio­n must look back to show it is consistent with the country’s “historical tradition of firearm regulation” in the wake of the Supreme Court’s Bruen decision.

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