The
United States, a nation with high levels of gun
violence, could witness an increase in firearms carried in public if the
Supreme Court rules as expected in a major new case that could recognize wider
gun rights under the US Constitution.
اضافة اعلان
The court, with a 6–3 conservative majority believed to hold
a broad view of the right to keep and bear arms guaranteed by the
Constitution’s Second Amendment, on Monday agreed to hear a case that could
lead to the most impactful gun rights ruling in more than a decade. It took up
the case in the aftermath of a spree of mass shootings and vows by Democratic
President
Joe Biden to pursue new gun control measures.
The National Rifle Association (NRA)-backed lawsuit
challenges New York state’s restrictions on people carrying concealed handguns
in public. Lower courts rejected arguments by two gun owners and the NRA’s New
York affiliate that the restrictions violate the Second Amendment. The justices
are due to hear the case in their term that begins in October.
“If the court rules as expected, that New York state law
infringes the right to carry a gun in public, we’re likely to see a vast
increase in the number of guns carried on the streets of America’s major
cities,” said University of California, Los Angeles law professor Adam Winkler.
The court issued major Second Amendment rulings in 2008 and
2010 that established an individual’s right to keep a gun at home for
self-defense in cases involving gun control laws in Chicago and Washington, DC.
“Those cases were dealing with the only two city-wide
handgun bans in country, so if you take that off the books it doesn’t really
change the state of play for most people,” said Joseph Blocher of Duke
University School of Law’s Center for Firearms Law. “The kind of law being
challenged here affects tens of millions more people.”
To carry a concealed handgun without restrictions under New
York’s law, applicants must convince a firearms licensing officer that they
have an actual — rather than speculative — need for self-defense.
Striking down New York’s restrictions would endanger similar
laws in seven other states including California, the most populous one. But the
Supreme Court potentially could go further by fashioning a test for lower
courts to assess the legality of gun control measures such as whether any
analogous regulation existed during the country’s early history.
Gun control advocates have said this could endanger measures
that states already have implemented and many lower courts have upheld
including expanded criminal background checks for gun buyers and “red flag”
laws targeting the firearms of people deemed dangerous by the courts.
Blocher said it is unlikely that most present-day gun laws
would be struck down even under such a test because “the tradition of gun
regulation in the United States is rich.”
Gun control advocates and their Democratic allies have
argued that comprehensive gun control measures are needed to combat firearms
violence. NRA leader Wayne LaPierre famously said in 2012: “The only thing that
stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.”
Gun rights advocates and their Republican allies in the past
decade have wanted the Supreme Court to further expand gun rights. With the
court moving rightward with the addition of three conservative justices — Neil
Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett — appointed by Republican former
President Donald Trump, they hope now is the time.
Barrett last year replaced the late liberal Justice Ruth
Bader Ginsburg, who dissented in the 2008 and 2010 gun rulings. Chief Justice
John Roberts often takes a cautious approach in major cases but with six
conservatives on the court now, the conservative bloc could prevail even
without him.
In her previous role as a judge on a Chicago-based federal
appeals court, Barrett wrote a 2019 dissenting opinion that could preview how
she would approach the New York case.
Barrett analyzed early US history on gun laws, concluding
that a measure that bars people convicted of felonies from owning firearms
could be unconstitutional when applied to people who show no sign of being a
danger to society.
“History is consistent with common sense: it demonstrates
that legislatures have the power to prohibit dangerous people from possessing
guns,” Barrett wrote. “But that power extends only to people who are
dangerous.”