Seismic ruling on gun law
WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court concluded Thursday that the Second Amendment and its right “to keep and bear arms” protects the gun rights of individuals, rather than just a state’s right to maintain a militia.
Justice Antonin Scalia, speaking for the court, said the history of the Second Amendment shows its authors intended to protect the “right of the people” as individuals to have weapons, both to defend themselves and their community.
The landmark decision, which struck down the District of Columbia’s gun ban, will have wide-ranging legal, political and public safety consequences.
There will be more lawsuits, probably lots of them. Some gun laws will survive, while others will fall. The decision will help showcase the Supreme Court as a potential issue in the 2008 presidential campaign and will put some other politicians on the spot.
Most immediately, the court’s decision in District of Columbia v. Heller poses myriad questions for which answers are still a work in progress.
Q. Does this eliminate all gun restrictions?
A. No.
Scalia, writing for the court’s majority, stressed that the Second Amendment doesn’t guarantee an “unlimited” right to bear arms. Scalia cited as legitimate long-standing prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill, as well as bans on carrying firearms into schools and government buildings.
Laws imposing “conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of arms” are also probably safe, Scalia wrote, adding that his list of Second Amendment-friendly gun restrictions “does not purport to be exhaustive.”
Q. But the ruling will extend beyond Washington, D.C.’s, gun ban, right?
A. Yes, although not right away.
The latest federal compilation of state and local firearm laws is some 458 pages long, and it was published in 2005, so it’s not up to date. Boston, Chicago and Denver, for instance, ban the possession and sale of assault weapons. Los Angeles and San Francisco ban the sale of .50-caliber handguns. Oakland, Calif., bans the sale of ultra-compact handguns.
An untold number of these existing laws will be subject to challenge. This will take time and money as lawsuits are filed and ordinances are revised.
“At the very least,” the American Bar Association predicted in a legal filing, “(a) shift in the law will prompt years of litigation regarding the constitutionality of statutory, regulatory and administrative provisions.”
Q. Will the ruling allow those who are arrested or convicted on gun charges to challenge their cases?
A. Yes.
“Virtually every defense attorney” whose client is facing “a gun count” in the indictment is obligated to seek dismissal, said Jack King, a D.C. attorney and the director of public affairs for the National Association of Criminal Defense lawyers.
The impact could be extensive because many of the gun charges are linked to drug raids, he said, adding that, “Very often guns go with drugs in this town.”
Fifteen percent of state inmates and 13 percent of federal inmates carried a handgun during commission of their crimes, according to Bureau of Justice Statistics figures.
Q. How about federal gun laws? Will they be affected?
A. Potentially yes, although most firearm regulations are at the state or local level.
Congress has passed a number of firearms laws in the past, such as a since-expired assault weapon ban written in 1993. Only time will tell which gets challenged next.
“I fear that the District’s policy choice may well be just the first of an unknown number of dominoes to be knocked off the table,” Justice John Paul Stevens wrote in dissent, adding that resulting litigation will “surely give rise to a far more active judicial role.”
Q. What kind of gun laws will probably survive?
A. Narrowly tailored laws may be safe, along with laws that target the most sophisticated weaponry.
Scalia and the court’s majority stress D.C.’s “absolute” prohibition of handguns and the fact that the District “totally bans” such firearms.
Presumably, laws that have a narrower focus will have a better chance in court.