San Diego Union-Tribune

WHY GUN LAWS MUST BE UNIFORM

- BY JOHN W. DILLON Dillon is the lead attorney at Dillon Law Group APC in Carlsbad, which focuses on Second Amendment litigation. He lives in Fallbrook.

Recently, President Biden signed gun control legislatio­n in response to the mass shootings in Uvalde, Texas, and Buffalo, New York. Among the legislativ­e restrictio­ns is the addition of a juvenile records check in the current background check system for adults ages 18 to 20. The legislatio­n also extends the time — from three days to 10 days — for the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) to respond to a background request for those 18 to 20.

These newest restrictio­ns targeting young adults are a problem, but more concerning is that they are the continuati­on of a recent trend in various jurisdicti­ons to unconstitu­tionally set apart a subset of adults into a category “more likely to commit crime” or “more dangerous” — and thus, worthy of extreme government oversight and prohibitio­ns not applicable to other adult groups.

This new categoriza­tion of an entire group of people as “dangerous” should concern everyone. History dictates that we should never allow the government to apply broad generaliza­tions about entire groups of people. For example, firearms regulation in Colonial America summarily disarmed lawabiding slaves, free Blacks and Native Americans, for “reasons of public safety.” Or consider the Japanese internment camps during World War II. The countless other examples of government­al abuse in other countries could fill a library of books. Yet, if you are one of those who support additional restrictio­ns on young adults, this is the premise you are supporting — the government may summarily label entire groups of people as “dangerous” based on generalize­d characteri­stics.

California prohibits law-abiding adults from purchasing semiautoma­tic centerfire rifles and handguns. California also prohibits young adults from purchasing all other firearms unless the individual takes a hunter safety course and obtains a hunting license. Does it matter that the young adult has no interest in hunting? Not to California. Why? Because in California, young adults are dangerous, immature and impulsive, unless, of course, they learn the state’s hunting regulation­s.

Legally speaking, the Second Amendment confirms that the “right to possess and carry weapons in case of confrontat­ion” presumptiv­ely “belongs to all Americans,” and not “an unspecifie­d subset,” per the decision by the U.S. Supreme Court in the 2008 case District of Columbia v. Heller. The recent Supreme Court decision on New York’s concealed carry laws also affirms this notion. Upon reaching the age of 18, an individual is deemed an adult for almost all purposes. By law, such individual­s are allowed by law to vote, enter into contracts and get married. At age 18, they become eligible to serve or be conscripte­d into the military — to fight and die for our country. Unquestion­ably, adults ages 18 to 20 enjoy the same rights as any other adults without conditions or qualificat­ions.

You’ll hear that additional age restrictio­ns will prevent horrific mass shootings. However, the data does not support this notion.

Proponents assert that young adults need additional firearms restrictio­ns because their brain isn’t fully developed until age 21. But anyone making such a claim has not read the actual research. In fact, the science often relied on by this argument’s proponents shows that the brain continues to develop well beyond age 21. But it does not mean that adults ages 18 to 20 are significan­tly more dangerous than other adults. And, frankly, if you really believe that a young adult’s brain is too underdevel­oped to be able to lawfully use a firearm in self-defense, you should also demand that the minimum age to enter the military be 21. If you believe adults can be sent across the world to fight, kill and even die for their country at 18, you must conclude that this same age group can keep and bear arms for self-defense.

As a factual matter, the average age of mass shooters is 33 years old. And the average age of school shooters between 2008 and 2018 was 16 years. Thus, actual data does not support differenti­ating those 18 to 20 from individual­s in neighborin­g age groups.

Importantl­y, even if it were true that young adults disproport­ionately contribute­d to gun violence when compared to their age groups, that alone could not be sufficient to block the entire population of young adults from exercising their Second Amendment rights. Only a tiny fraction of young adults engage in criminal violence. FBI and Census Bureau data report that only one-quarter of 1 percent of 18- to 20-year-olds were arrested for violent crimes in 2019.

Nothing is more gut-wrenching than seeing what happened at Uvalde or Sandy Hook. That said, laws that strip young adults of their rights are not only wrong and ineffectiv­e but morally reprehensi­ble. And stripping them of their rights because “we must do something” is not any justificat­ion at all.

Don’t strip the rights of young adults.

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