Court Hears Arguments in Minnesota’s Ban on Young Adults Carrying Guns

GOA Files New Case Against New York's CCIA, iStock-697763642
Court Hears Arguments in Minnesota’s Ban on Young Adults Carrying Guns, iStock-697763642

A federal hearing about the right of 18 to 20-year-old adults to carry firearms in Minnesota took place in the Eight Circuit Court of Appeals.

The case, Worth v. Jacobson, was brought by Kristin Worth, Austin Dye, the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus (MGOC), the Second Amendment Foundation (SAF), and the Firearms Policy Coalition (FPC) against the Minnesota regulation that forbids citizens under the age of 21 from carrying firearms. The plaintiffs claim that the law violates their right to bear arms.

At the heart of the case is the question, “Who are the people?” The Second Amendment grants the people the right to bear arms. To many, the people are those 18 and over, but the government disagrees with that conclusion. The government argues adulthood doesn’t start until age 21; therefore, those under 21 are not part of “the people.”

The court seemed skeptical of the government’s position that the Second Amendment only applies to those 21 and over. At one point, a judge asked the attorneys for the defendants if someone under 21 had Fourth Amendment protections during a traffic stop. Bruen stated that the Second Amendment is not a second-class right and cannot be treated differently than other rights. If Minnesota’s argument is correct, that would mean that citizens under 21 do not have freedom of speech, the right to vote, or the right to remain silent.

The United States Constitution does set age limits on certain rights, such as a minimum age to be president or serve in Congress. The plaintiffs argued that if the founders wanted an age limit to bear arms, that age limit would be spelled out in the original text of the Second Amendment. The fact that the Founding Fathers didn’t include an age limit in the text signals to the plaintiffs that there wasn’t any intent to have an age limit for the right to bear arms.

Under the Supreme Court’s Bruen decision, for gun laws to be constitutional, they must be consistent with the original text, tradition, and history of the Second Amendment. Since there is no age limit in the original text, the burden of proof shifts to the defense to provide historical analogues from the founding era of similar restrictions.

While most believe the founding era started in 1791 when the Second Amendment was ratified, the government tries to argue it began in 1868 with the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Fourteenth Amendment did not change the meaning of the Second Amendment. It extended the restrictions on the federal government to the state governments.

In 1868, the country entered the Reconstruction Period after the Civil War. Former slave states were worried about formerly enslaved people getting guns and seeking revenge. The states passed racist “Jim Crow” gun laws to prevent freed blacks from obtaining firearms. Minnesota heavily relied on these discriminatory laws in defense of its law banning those under 21 from carrying guns. The judges seemed skeptical of Minnesota’s theories and pushed back against the defense’s reasoning.

Although anything can happen, it was a good day in court for the plaintiffs. No matter who comes out on top, this will not be the end of the battle. The loser will have an opportunity to ask for an en banc hearing where the full bench for the Eighth Circuit will hear the case or appeal to the Supreme Court.


About John Crump

John is a NRA instructor and a constitutional activist. John has written about firearms, interviewed people of all walks of life, and on the Constitution. John lives in Northern Virginia with his wife and sons and can be followed on Twitter at @crumpyss, or at www.crumpy.com.

John Crump

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Darkman

Any court ruling is irrelevant. When Liberal/Progressive democrats, refuse to abide by it. It is the duty and responsibility of ‘We the People’. To ensure that Constitutional Rights and the limitations put on government by those Rights. are abided by. Regardless of political ideology. If the citizenry is unwilling to uphold their responsibilities in regards to the protection of their Rights. Then, they deserve any and all tyranny. They Allow…Period.

StLPro2A

Leftys don;t want citizens under to 21 to implement their 2nd right, but want 16yo to vote. Lefturdism in action.

TGP389

If you can be forced (by drafting) to carry arms for the government, you should be able to buy and carry anything you can afford.

Ledesma

Young adults are sometimes the ones most in need of gun rights.

PMinFl

Nobody younger than Eugene McCarthy, or maybe Hubert Humphrey should be allowed to even look at any firearm of any description. It’s Minnesota after all.

Logician

WHO freaking cares one little bit what ANY man or woman in the totally corrupted legal system/Matrix may say or not say? Not even one of them can be trusted at all for anything, except for this one thing, which is to maintain the illusions of legitimate power and authority over everyone else! Back in about 2007 I think it was, some man took the EXACT SAME FIGURES to seven different CPAs, and he got back seven different amounts that he owed!! HUH? When I mentioned that to the head of the legal department of Mannatech Corporation, he chuckled a… Read more »