HomeDirectorySubmit NewsSubscriptionsAbout UsAdvertiseRecent Posts

 
People like this. Be the first of your friends.

Appeals Court Rules Against D.C. Gun Owners in Heller II

Friday, October 21st, 2011 at 9:19 AM

Appeals Court Rules Against D.C. Gun Owners in Heller II

No Gun Rights for You DC

Appeals Court Rules Against D.C. Gun Owners in Heller II

NRA-ILA

NRA - ILA

FAIRFAX, Va. --(Ammoland.com)- In a split ruling in an ongoing NRA-supported case challenging the restrictive gun laws established by the Washington D.C. government in defiance of the Supreme Court’s 2008 Heller decision, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has upheld a number of highly restrictive gun laws.

Unfortunately, the court ruled that the District’s general handgun registration requirement is constitutional. However, the court reached that conclusion by misreading the Supreme Court’s Heller decision as presuming that any type of “longstanding” restriction is constitutional, so it only upheld the more traditional aspects of the registration system, such as the requirements that the registrant provide his or her name and address, a description of the firearm and certain other basic information.

By contrast, the court found that other D.C. requirements, such as fingerprints, a vision requirement, ballistics tests and mandatory training, were “novel” and therefore need to be reviewed again by a lower court under a tighter standard of scrutiny. Similarly, the court found that long gun registration is “novel” in the U.S. and returned that issue to the lower court as well.

D.C. laws banning “assault weapons” and magazines that hold more than 10 rounds of ammunition were also wrongly found to be constitutional. The Supreme Court said in Heller that “arms” are protected under the Constitution if they are “in common use,” and the D.C. Circuit found it “clear enough in the record that semi-automatic rifles and magazines holding more than ten rounds are indeed in ‘common use,’” based on Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives production statistics showing that “1.6 million AR-15s alone have been manufactured since 1986,” and that the banned magazines are even more prevalent.

But the court also found — based largely on the testimony of a Brady Campaign lawyer to the District of Columbia Council — that “the District ha[d] carried its burden of showing a substantial relationship between the prohibition of both semi-automatic rifles and magazines holding more than ten rounds and the objectives of protecting police officers and controlling crime.”

Fortunately, in a long and well reasoned dissenting opinion that may provide a road map for other courts, Judge Brett Kavanaugh rejected the majority’s reasoning. Rather than the “intermediate scrutiny” employed by the majority or any other “balancing test,” Judge Kavanaugh would have applied a standard based on “text, history, and tradition.” Under that standard, he argued that “it would strain logic and common sense to conclude that the Second Amendment protects semi-automatic handguns but does not protect semi-automatic rifles,” which “have not traditionally been banned and are in common use today.”

Judge Kavanaugh also would have rejected the entire registration system, arguing that D.C.’s type of total gun registration system is not “traditional” and “remains highly unusual today.”

The NRA strongly disagrees with the outcome, and is reviewing the decision and considering all options.

“When it comes to self-defense, semi-automatic firearms of all types are an increasingly popular choice for most Americans, and the court itself admitted that semi-automatics are in common use, with millions of these guns sold in recent years,” said Chris W. Cox, Executive Director of the NRA Institute for Legislative Action. “Law abiding residents of the District should have the same access to these tools as residents of nearly all of the 50 states.”

Tags: , , , ,
 Email   Print     
 
People like this. Be the first of your friends.

JFK, the NRA, & Heller – Three Degrees Of Separation

Tuesday, September 27th, 2011 at 9:21 AM

JFK, the NRA, & Heller – Three Degrees Of Separation
By John Snyder

Gun Rights Policies with John Snyder

Gun Rights Policies with John Snyder

Arlington, VA - In front of the JFK bust at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, DC, John Snyder talks with Dick Heller about NRA support for Heller’s Second Amendment challenge to DC gun control, noting that Kennedy was an NRA Life Member.

“There is a deep connection between the memory of President John F. Kennedy, the National Rifle Association, and Richard Heller’s Second Amendment court challenges to District of Columbia firearms control,” gun law expert John M. Snyder noted here today.

“Few people realize it, but our late president was a Life Member of the NRA,” said Snyder, named the Gun Dean by Human Events. “As a matter of fact, Kennedy was featured prominently firing a shotgun in the 1966 United States Information Agency film, ‘Years of Lightning, Day of Drums.’”

“Today,” continued Snyder, “the NRA supports Dick Heller’s second challenge to District of Columbia gun control law on Second Amendment grounds. Dick first challenged the DC ban on private handgun possession in a case supported by philanthropist Bob Levy. In its 2008 District of Columbia v. Heller decision, the U.S. Supreme Court accepted the arguments of attorney Alan Gura and ruled the DC law unconstitutional as a violation of individual Second Amendment gun rights.

“Subsequently, the DC government enacted a gun control statute continuing to mandate firearms registration as a condition of gun ownership. It imposed severe requirements as preconditions for registration. It is that statute which Heller now is challenging with NRA support in the case of Heller v. District of Columbia, known as Heller Two.. Now it’s in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit. His attorneys Stephen Halbrook and Richard Gardiner maintain that a registration requirement for possession violates the fundamental right to bear arms of the Second Amendment as elucidated by the Supreme Court in Heller One.”

“There it is,” said Snyder. “There truly is a connection between JFK, NRA and Heller’s Second Amendment challenge to DC gun control.”

www.GunRightsPolicies.org

GunRightsPolicies.org
John M. Snyder
Manager
Telum Associates, LLC
Arlington, VA
202-239-8005

About John Snyder:
Named the Gun Dean by Human Events, “the senior rights activist in Washington” by Shotgun News, a “champion of the right to self-defense” by The Washington Times, and “dean of gun lobbyists” by The Washington Post and The New York Times, John M. Snyder has spent 45 years as a proponent of the individual Second Amendment civil right to keep and bear arms as a National Rifle Association editor, public affairs director of the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms, treasurer of the Second Amendment Foundation, and founder of www.GunRightsPolicies.org.

A former Jesuit seminarian, Snyder is founder/manager of Telum Associates, LL.C., founder/chairman of the St. Gabriel Possenti Society, Inc., a director of Council for America, and serves on the boards of the National Association of Chiefs of Police and the American Federation of Police & Concerned Citizens. He is also the author of the book Gun Saint. Visit: www.GunRightsPolicies.org

Tags: , , , , ,
 Email   Print     
  1. Login with Facebook:
    Log In
    Powered by Sociable!
  2. Facebook Activity