‘Assault Weapon’ Bans Look More Legally Vulnerable Than Ever

According to Sen. Feinstein, an AR-15 is a military weapon. No militaries use civilian AR-15s. It is most likely she is getting civilian AR-15s confused with M16s or M4 carbines.
Sen. Feinstein calls for a ban on ‘assault weapons’ …whatever that is…? File Photo

Washington, DC – -(AmmoLand.com)- Three days after Washington became the 10th state to enact an “assault weapon” ban, a federal judge temporarily blocked enforcement of a similar law in Illinois.

That decision, which was published last Friday, may signal the demise of a long-running public policy fraud that falsely depicts an arbitrarily defined category of semi-automatic rifles as good for nothing but mass murder.

“Assault weapon” bans, which typically cover specific models along with features such as adjustable stocks, pistol grips, flash suppressors, and barrel shrouds, have always been logically dubious. And under the constitutional test that the Supreme Court recently established, they look more legally vulnerable than ever.

These laws never made much sense. With or without the features that states such as Washington and Illinois have deemed intolerable, a rifle fires the same ammunition at the same rate with the same muzzle velocity.

Even President Joe Biden, who wants Congress to revive the federal “assault weapon” ban that expired in 2004, has conceded that the law left would-be killers with plenty of alternatives that were “just as deadly.” And contrary to the claim that the rifles targeted by this sort of legislation are the “weapon of choice” in mass shootings, handguns account for more than three-quarters of the firearms used in such crimes and an even larger share of the firearms used in gun homicides generally.

The Supreme Court’s precedents suggest that “assault weapon” bans are unconstitutional as well as illogical.

The Court has said the Second Amendment applies to firearms that are commonly used for lawful purposes, and last June it explicitly rejected the sort of “interest-balancing” test that lower courts had previously used to uphold “assault weapon” bans.

Instead of weighing a law’s purported public safety benefits against the burdens it imposes, the justices said, courts should ask whether it is “consistent with this Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.” In a federal lawsuit they filed immediately after Washington enacted its “assault weapon” ban last week, the Second Amendment Foundation and the Firearms Policy Coalition argue that the state cannot meet that test.

“The only historical tradition that can remove a firearm from the Second Amendment’s protective scope,” the complaint says, is “the tradition of banning dangerous and unusual weapons.” But that category does not include “arms that are in common use” for legal purposes, “as the firearms Washington has banned unquestionably are.”

The Second Amendment Foundation notes that AR-15-style rifles covered by Washington’s law “are among the most popular firearms in the nation, and they are owned by millions of Americans.” They cite survey data indicating that “about 24.6 million Americans have owned AR-15 or similar modern semiautomatic rifles.”

The SAF made the same argument in Illinois, and U.S. District Judge Stephen P. McGlynn found it persuasive. In granting a preliminary injunction against that state’s “assault weapon” ban, McGlynn concluded that the law was probably inconsistent with the right to keep and bear arms, adding that Illinois legislators seem to have ignored that likelihood and the Supreme Court decisions underlying it.

In the survey cited by the SAF, two-thirds of the respondents who reported owning AR-15-style rifles said they used them for recreational target shooting, while half mentioned hunting and a third mentioned competitive shooting. Sixty-two percent said they used the rifles for home defense, and 35% cited defense outside the home.

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee nevertheless insists these rifles “have no reason other than mass murder,” because “their only purpose is to kill humans as rapidly as possible in large numbers.” Illinois Senate President Don Harmon (D-Oak Park) likewise maintains that killing innocent people is the “only intent” of the rifles his state banned.

Ascribing intent to inanimate objects reflects the magical thinking of politicians who argue that certain guns are inherently evil. That position is plainly at odds with a reality that courts may no longer be able to ignore.


About Jacob Sullum

Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine. Follow him on Twitter: @JacobSullum. During two decades in journalism, he has relentlessly skewered authoritarians of the left and the right, making the case for shrinking the realm of politics and expanding the realm of individual choice. Jacobs’ work appears here at AmmoLand News through a license with Creators Syndicate.

Jacob Sullum
Jacob Sullum
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DDS

“their only purpose is to kill humans as rapidly as possible in large numbers.” — Gov. Inslee

If we were to accept Gov. Inslee’s argument at face value, why do we let cops have them?

Last edited 2 years ago by DDS
Cappy

Did y’all notice that the NRA jumped right on this case?
Yeah, me neither.
And that’s why SAF, CCRKBA, and GOA get my support and NRA gets nothing from me except scorn.

gregs

as i have mentioned many times before, a firearm is an inanimate object that requires human interaction to function, whether for good or evil.
it seems odd that the governors of these lawless states who don’t prosecute firearms crimes blame an inanimate object for the crimes. if they would go after the very small number of criminals in a very small number of places who commit the majority of crimes that would greatly reduce the violence ascribed to firearms. but like the author said, they do not live in reality, and that is obvious.

DIYinSTL

If there are 176 thousand transferable machine guns (https://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/atf-reveals-the-number-of-registered-machine-guns/) registered in the U.S., doesn’t that take them out of the “unusual” category? No good reason to ban new ones of those either.

Logician

She’s half the way there, she’s basically brain dead now!!

The other Jim

Senator 90 Years Old next month; her eyes look as if she is snoozing as she stands there. Or lifting that 6.5 Pound Rifle has caused such a depletion of energy that she needs an immediate 30-minutes in her rocking chair.

Rob J

Banners do not bother themselves with logic, they terrorize the public through perception. They utilize perception and ignorance (willful or uninformed) to push their narrative in their zealous attempt to disarm the populace. As stated in the article, the cosmetics of a firearm can not influence the velocity of the bullet, nor can it influence how deadly the projectile fired from a firearm can be if used against another living being. Banners have indoctrinated the populace that their “logic” applies to firearms when it falls apart applied to anything else. Apply their “logic” to any vehicle on the road with… Read more »