United States 2nd Amendment Legal Cases and Law Discussion

California Mag Ban Ruled Unconstitutional

bullethead

Part-time fanfic writer
Super Moderator
Staff Member
Guess what guys - California can now enjoy freedom:
The panel affirmed the district court’s summary judgment in favor of plaintiffs challenging California Government Code § 31310, which bans possession of largecapacity magazines (“LCMs”) that hold more than ten rounds of ammunition; and held that the ban violated the Second Amendment.

The Ninth Circuit employs a two-prong inquiry to determine whether firearm regulations violate the Second Amendment: (1) whether the law burdens conduct protected by the Second Amendment; and (2) if so, what level of scrutiny to apply to the regulation. United states v. Chovan, 735 F.3d 1127, 1136 (9th Cir. 2013)

The panel held that under the first prong of the test, Cal. Penal Code § 32310 burdened protected conduct. First, the panel held that firearm magazines are protected arms under the Second Amendment. Second, the panel held that LCMs are commonly owned and typically used for lawful purposes, and are not “unusual arms” that would fall outside the scope of the Second Amendment. Third, the panel held that LCM prohibitions are not longstanding regulations and do not enjoy a presumption of lawfulness. Fourth, the panel held that there was no persuasive historical evidence in the record showing LCM possession fell outside the ambit of Second Amendment protection.

Proceeding to prong two of the inquiry, the panel held that strict scrutiny was the appropriate standard to apply. First, the panel held that Cal. Penal Code § 32310 struck at the core right of law-abiding citizens to self-defend by banning LCM possession within the home. Second, the panel held that Section 32310’s near-categorical ban of LCMs substantially burdened core Second Amendment rights. Third, the panel held that decisions in other circuits were distinguishable. Fourth, the panel held that this circuit’s decision in Fyock v. City of Sunnyvale, 779 F.3d 991 (9th Cir. 2015), did not obligate the panel to apply intermediate scrutiny.

The panel held that Cal. Penal Code § 32310 did not survive strict scrutiny review. First, the panel held that the state interests advanced here were compelling: preventing and mitigating gun violence. Second, the panel held that Section 32310 was not narrowly tailored to achieve the compelling state interests it purported to serve because the state’s chosen method – a statewide blanket ban on possession everywhere and for nearly everyone – was not the least restrictive means of achieving the compelling interests.

The panel held that even if intermediate scrutiny were to apply, Cal. Penal Code § 32310 would still fail. The panel held that while the interests expressed by the state qualified as “important,” the means chosen to advance those interests were not substantially related to their service.

Chief District Judge Lynn dissented, and would reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment. Judge Lynn wrote that the majority opinion conflicted with this Circuit’s precedent in Fyock, and with decisions in all the six sister Circuits that addressed the Second Amendment issue presented here. Judge Lynn would hold that intermediate scrutiny applies, and Cal. Penal Code § 32310 satisfies that standard.
 

Urabrask Revealed

Let them go.
Founder

If you hold enough feet to the fire they can't bureaucratically bypass the law.
They need to be taught a lesson, a painful one. Sue their asses, put their names on the Felons List, get them fired.
Whatever they try to do to us, they must be made to experience themselves. Otherwise they will never stop using such underhanded tactics.
 

bullethead

Part-time fanfic writer
Super Moderator
Staff Member
Here's an update on Defense Distributed's lawsuit:

Basically, they're getting sued for putting out files/code for running CNC machines and 3D printers to make guns, but they managed to get the case heard in Texas (where DD is based) due to prior precedent set in porn cases. This makes it more likely for them to get a fair hearing, vs having the case heard in New Jersey's circuit.
 

bullethead

Part-time fanfic writer
Super Moderator
Staff Member
Looks like Californians are getting jerked around some more:


Bercerra filed for an en banc hearing with 11 judges from the 9th Circuit, but nobody knows if it even will get taken up.
 

bullethead

Part-time fanfic writer
Super Moderator
Staff Member
Here's a bumpstock related case:

Specific questions the court wants answered:

The Petition and response were circulated to all non-recused active judges of the court. A poll was called, and a majority of the non-recused active judges voted to rehear this matter en banc. Accordingly, the Petition is GRANTED, the court’s May 7, 2020 judgment is VACATED, and this matter is REOPENED. See Fed. R. App. P. 35(a); see also 10th Cir. R. 35.6 (noting the effect of the grant of en banc rehearing is to vacate the judgment and to restore the case on the docket).

Although this entire case will be reheard en banc, the parties shall specifically address the following question in supplemental memorandum briefs:

1. Did the Supreme Court intend for the Chevron framework to operate as a standard of review, a tool of statutory interpretation, or an analytical framework that applies where a government agency has interpreted an ambiguous statute?
2. Does Chevron step-two deference depend on one or both parties invoking it, i.e., can it be waived; and, if it must be invoked by one or both parties in order for the court to apply it, did either party adequately do so here?
3. Is Chevron step-two deference applicable where the government interprets a statute that imposes both civil and criminal penalties?
4. Can a party concede the irreparability of a harm; and, if so, must this court honor that stipulation?
5. Is the bump stock policy determination made by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms peculiarly dependent upon facts within the congressionally vested expertise of that agency?

Also, updates on some 9th Circuit cases:



-Rhode v Bercerra (ammo sale restrictions): date set for oral arguments in front of a 3 judge panel, date is November 9, 2020
-Young v Hawaii (open/concealed carry restrictions): En banc hearing, September 24, 2020
-Duncan v Bercerra (magazine capacity restrictions): still waiting on whether or not it'll go to en banc hearing, next update should be around September 22, 2020
 

Zachowon

The Army Life for me! The POG life for me!
Founder
What function does the FBI fulfill?
being a national unbiased third party in state affairs when it comes to crime. Being able to deal with multistate crimes, crimes committed in several states by one person, and being a domestic force to go against domestic terrorism. Since DoD agencies like NSA, CIA, etc. are only ever allowed to when working with agencies like the FBI.
 

Terthna

Professional Lurker
being a national unbiased third party in state affairs when it comes to crime. Being able to deal with multistate crimes, crimes committed in several states by one person, and being a domestic force to go against domestic terrorism. Since DoD agencies like NSA, CIA, etc. are only ever allowed to when working with agencies like the FBI.
Then clearly the FBI has undergone a great deal of mission creep over the years.
 
PSA: Solvent Traps = Jail Time w/o an NFA Tax Stamp

bullethead

Part-time fanfic writer
Super Moderator
Staff Member

Users who are viewing this thread

Top