The Supreme Court may soon have another showdown on the Second Amendment, according to Amy Swearer. “The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit upheld Maryland’s ban on so-called assault weapons earlier this month, likely setting the stage for the next major Second Amendment showdown at the Supreme Court.”
The case, Bianchi v. Brown, features
Maryland residents who challenge the constitutionality of a 2013 state law that
generally prohibits them from buying or possessing any firearm deemed an “assault
weapon.”
The statute defines that term to include
hundreds of specific models of semiautomatic rifles, as well as any other
semiautomatic rifle that either (1) has a fixed magazine capable of holding
more than ten rounds, (2) has an overall length shorter than twenty-nine
inches, or (3) has both a detachable magazine and at least two of the following
three features: a folding stock, flash suppressor, or grenade or flare
launcher.
While semiautomatic rifles aren’t outright
prohibited, Maryland residents are required to buy heavily modified “featureless”
versions of those guns. The plaintiffs argue that this prohibition on owning
virtually all of the most popular semiautomatic rifles in the nation violates
the Second Amendment.
The Supreme Court hasn’t definitively
addressed the question of whether the Second Amendment protects the possession
of semiautomatic rifles, but to say that its overall Second Amendment
jurisprudence favors the plaintiffs’ argument is an understatement, to say the
least.
First, in District of Columbia v. Heller,
the Supreme Court in 2008 struck down the District of Columbia’s total ban on
the possession of handguns and explained that the Second Amendment’s
protections extend “prima facie to all instruments that constitute bearable
arms, even those that were not in existence at the time of the founding.”
The right is not unlimited, and the
Supreme Court noted a historical tradition of “prohibiting the carrying of ‘dangerous
and unusual weapons.’” It emphasized, however, that handguns are “commonly
possessed by law-abiding citizens for lawful purposes,” and constitute a “class
of ‘arms’ that is overwhelmingly chosen American society” for exercising their
natural right of self-defense.
Most recently, in New York State Rifle
& Pistol Ass’n v. Bruen, the Supreme Court explained that judicial analyses
of Second Amendment challenges must be based on text, history, and tradition,
and not on any interest-balancing tests that allow courts to determine whether
the government has a sufficiently compelling reason for the regulation.
Bruen didn’t specifically delve into what
types of arms are protected, but the case is nonetheless instructive about how
courts must go about discerning the answer to that question: When the law
regulates conduct that is protected by the plain language of the amendment, the
government must demonstrate that the law is consistent with the nation’s
historical tradition of firearms regulation.
Under the Bruen test, the government doesn’t
have to show a historical doppelganger for its modern law, but at the very
least, it needs to provide evidence of historical laws that were relevantly
similarly both in how they burden the right to keep and bear arms, and
in the reason for why the laws burden that right. Additionally, the
historical tradition must be formed by more than a handful of late-in-time
historical outliers.
In short, under the Supreme Court’s
jurisprudence, the government would have to show some longstanding national
tradition of not only banning the civilian possession of semiautomatic rifles
like the AR-15, but banning them because they are a type of weapon that
is so inherently dangerous and unusual that it’s not commonly possessed by
law-abiding citizens for lawful purposes. It can’t do so.
Swearer
continued her article by explaining the “semiautomatic rifles like the AR-15 are
hardly a new invention” with the “first successful semiautomatic rifle design
was produced in the 1880s.” In addition, new features – “such as pistol grips,
collapsing stocks, and barrel shrouds” – that assault and non-assault rifles “have
no bearing on the weapon’s lethality, functionality, or concealment.”
Leftists
continue their attempts to destroy Americans’ right “to keep and bear arms.” I
hope that the Supreme Court takes this case and rules once and for all.
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