Jake Charles Profile picture
Jun 6, 2023 42 tweets 19 min read Read on X
🚨 We've been long waiting on the 3rd Cir's en banc ruling in a 2nd Am case abt the felon-in-possession ban. It's the first post-Bruen en banc 2nd Am ruling--the ct concludes it's unconst'l to permanently disarm at least some w/ felony convictions.

www2.ca3.uscourts.gov/opinarch/21283… Image
Range is a sympathetic plaintiff. He had a decades-old conviction for making false statements to obtain food stamps. According to the terms of federal law, that disqualified him from owning guns for life, even tho the violation was labeled a misdemeanor under PA law. Image
The court noted how the prior three judge panel had reached the opposite conclusion - that Range could be permissibly disarmed under the law.

🧵on that vacated decision
The court noted that Bruen addressed a *where* question concerning the 2nd Am & that cases like the one before it address the *who* question. Another category - *what* questions - will be coming soon as we get appellate precedent on assault weapon bans. Image
The court (properly, in my view) categorizes the first question as the textual inquiry into whether Range qualifies as part of "the people." (Other courts have suggested Bruen's plain-text prong doesn't allow inquiry into whether the person is covered, only whether conduct is). Image
The court agreed that "the people" is not limited to the law-abiding responsible ones Heller, Bruen & McDonald invoked for 4 reasons. It seems most concerned that to limit would license too much govt discretion to exclude folks from 2nd Am rights. ImageImageImage
After rejecting the reliance on the felony/misdemeanor distinction in the law-abiding label, the court also says that the description of "responsible" can't be the right frame either. Image
The court then turns to the 2nd prong: whether historical tradition supports disarming felons. It rejects reliance on the statements in Heller & their repetition by a majority of justices in Bruen that felon bans are presumptively const'l, which the 8th Cir relied on.
Altho Judge Hardiman had written pre-Bruen that he (like then-Judge Barrett) believed the 2nd Am only permitted disarmament of "dangerous" persons, the court here *declines* to settle that important question, saying no matter the metric the govt didnt satisfy its burden. Image
The court rejects the analogues the govt produces & args it makes - the status-based historical laws were too broad; the death penalty for felons is not an apt analogy; mounds of sister circuit precedent are unpersuasive, etc. ImageImage
The decision concludes by stating that it's "a narrow one." That's true - & seems to create its own problems b/c the court does not suggest the principle on which govt *could* disarm individuals. Under this ruling, is the entire fed law unconst'l? As applied only to some?
Concurrences add more detail. Writing only for himself, Trump appointee Judge Porter attacks fed power over guns generally, suggesting even modern laws like the fed laws restricting machineguns are modern inventions w/ no analogue in history (& hence, might be toast under Bruen). ImageImage
Indeed, Judge Porter might even go broader & dismiss the relevance of many old state laws in the search for historical trad'n bc the 2A didnt originally apply agst the states. Paired w/ Bruen's history-only test, that approach cld wipe out modern regulations. Image
Another concurrence, by Judge Ambro (Clinton), joined by Judges Greenaway Jr. (Obama) & Montgomery-Reeves (Biden) wld hold the 2nd Am allows disarming those who "pose a threat to the orderly functioning of government." Image
That concurrence seems to part ways with the majority's reading of the dicta in Heller and Bruen. Image
Citing laws disarming Catholics, disloyal & others, the concurrence says that *danger* is not the key worry but concerns about who would threaten societies norms and values. (That seems much more amorphous than a danger/violence standard, itself open to substantial disagreement.) Image
Finally, that concurrence says SCOTUS is going to have to reconcile its cryptic statements and tests in this area. ImageImageImage
Judge Shwartz (Obama) joined by Judge Restrepo (Biden) dissent, pointing out that the majority's ruling leaves it unclear whether the felon-in-possession law is constitutional in *any* of its applications. Image
That dissent faults the majority for the breadth of its ruling and its rejection of persuasive evidence. ImageImageImage
In one noteworthy response, the dissent points out how the majority vacillates on the time period that matters (something that also happens in the "common use" test for weapon protection & on which I'm writing). Image
The dissent also chides the majority for rejecting the relevance of old status-based laws on the grounds that Range is not a member of those classes. It says those are relevant laws despite being repugnant. I agree, as I'm writing for @StanLRev Online:

papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cf… ImageImageImage
It further suggests that Judge Porter's reading is quite broad & extreme (perhaps adding more explanation for why no one else joined it). Image
Finally, the dissent highlights that now it will be impossible for folks w/ convictions in PA, NJ, and DE to know whether the 2nd Am allows them to have guns or not. For now it's just a guessing game. Image
Judge Krause (Obama) in a solo dissent (though one that the other dissenters expressed agreement with) first notes SCOTUS's move toward a more historically bound test. ImageImage
Then she cites Joseph Blocher & @ericmruben's terrific forthcoming @YaleLJournal piece to describe how a narrow focus on precise historical twins is a bad idea given all the change over time. Image
And she - still in the start of a dissent longer than the majority opinion - marks the significance of what the court is doing. Image
She states that she'll make 3 points in the dissent to clarify what the majority gets wrong. Image
On the history, one thing Judge Krause brings up (and that has mattered a lot in some district courts) that wasn't discussed by the majority is the suggestion that this is an unprecedented social concern & therefore the govt gets more leeway in finding analogues. Image
She goes through a whole bunch of history, arguing that it shows that legislatures had broad authority to disarm those it couldnt trust to use weapons responsibly. It largely echoes the prior panel op (of which she was a member) in using law-abidingness as the breakpoint. ImageImageImage
In discussing the consequences of the majority's approach, she is particularly harsh. Image
She also underscores that the court's rationale not only invalidates the federal law but also calls into question the laws in the 48 states that prohibit access to firearms for those convicted of crimes. Image
What's left of the federal law, she asks? Unclear, according to the majority's rule. ImageImage
I think she has a point here, and it was one of the most striking things when I got to the end of the majority opinion. Just how will lower courts know what to do & how can individuals know what conduct is now permissibly prohibited & which isn't? Image
She identifies a number of specific situations in which it will be incredibly hard to know whether someone's conduct qualifies under the "like Range" test. Image
She lists 3 ways that the decision impact law enforcement, including how it affects the automated background check system for gun purchasing. ImageImage
Finally, Judge Krause suggests the need for SCOTUS to take this case up sooner rather than later. I have to agree that this case is likely headed to SCOTUS quickly - and that the circuit split here increases the chances the Court grants cert in the 5th Cir Rahimi case before it. Image
In the last opinion of the very long set (majority opinion, two concurrences, and three separate dissents), Judge Roth (GHWB) writing alone says Range is in at step 1 but tradition is nonetheless sufficient. Image
He argues for a more detailed analytical framework under Bruen that requires attention to the problem addressed. Image
On the whole, his dissent turns a lot on the commerce clause and the law's restriction to guns with a connection to interstate commerce. & in a way I can't quite fully grasp clearly, he concludes Range does not have standing to bring his claim. Image
Cases like this one scramble political lines b/c the federal law is broad, generating "progressive" concerns abt mass incarceration & racialized enforcement and "conservative" concerns abt overweening federal law trampling 2A rights. Here that played out.
I imagine that this case will head to SCOTUS & it seems hard for the Court to duck a ruling striking down a major federal law--the bread & butter of fed gun crimes, as @brandonlgarrett & I underscored in our @PennLRev piece--esp now that there's a split.

pennlawreview.com/2022/06/16/the… Image
What stands out to me from this & the 8th Cir's contrary decision is that they're essentially standardless. What's the rationale that cld justify modern ones? Not clear. All this, IMO, is a result of Bruen's misguided req to find an analogue.

papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cf… Image

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More from @JacobDCharles

Aug 23, 2024
🚨🚨 Just wild. A federal court has said the longstanding ban on possessing MACHINEGUNS violates the Second Amendment!

I'm fairly certain this will be overturned, but the fact it occurred is another signal that Bruen is simply choose your own adventure.

storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.usco…
The decision, by (who other?) a Trump-appointee, is the first time I've ever seen this happen. Notably, the court dismisses Heller's fairly clear statement that machine guns "may be banned" Image
The court first concludes that machine guns fall within the plain text because they are weapons that may be carried. That kind of plain text literalism would mean suitcase nukes, handheld bio weapons & much else is presumptively covered. Image
Read 9 tweets
Jun 21, 2024
🚨🚨 In HUGE news, the Supreme Court has *upheld* the federal law barring individuals under domestic violence restraining orders from having guns against Second Amendment challenge.

The case may unsettle the Court's prior Bruen decision.



Thread 🧵supremecourt.gov/opinions/23pdf…
The Court had two key issues before it in Rahimi: (1) is this law valid, and (2) how (if at all) should we clarify the Bruen method.

On (1), the Court says yes.

On (2), it's more complicated.
Roberts' opinion for the Court announces a principle about what history shows wrt to disarmament: "our Nation’s firearm laws have included provisions preventing individuals who threaten physical harm to others from misusing firearms."

That could be used in other cases now. Image
Read 21 tweets
Jun 18, 2024
NEW: In the continuing saga over whether Congress & the ATF or federal judges will control US gun policy, Judge Kacsmaryk enjoins ATF's new rule fleshing out when gun sellers have to become federally licensed & perform background checks.

texasattorneygeneral.gov/sites/default/…
Image
The rule implements changes made in the 2022 Bipartisan Safer Communities Act that revised the definition of what it means to be "engaged in the business" of selling firearms which triggers the federal licensing mandate. The revised statutory language says law.cornell.edu/definitions/us…
Image
ATF's 2024 Rule clarifies that the statute contains no min threshold on firearm sales & that even a single transaction coupled w/ other indicia can constitute being engaged in the business. (ATF cites an example of such a prosecution even before this.)

federalregister.gov/documents/2024…
Read 5 tweets
Feb 5, 2024
NEW: A federal court last week declared that CA's law requiring background checks for ammunition purchases violates the Second Amendment.

No matter their merits, Bruen's historical test makes innovative approaches to gun regulation impossible.

michellawyers.com/wp-content/upl…
One of the pernicious effects of Bruen is that--in the name of reducing judicial discretion--it expands that discretion immeasurably. Courts can now hide behind historical inquiry in making discretionary judgment calls, like arbitrarily setting the time period as here. Image
It also allows courts to assume that the list of laws that existed at some time in history exhausted the state's power over guns. And then you get orders like this one that just review isolated statutes by themselves. It's a nonsensical way to think about the scope of govt power. Image
Read 7 tweets
Nov 7, 2023
Arguments in Rahimi has begun.

The SG begins by focusing on the problems of combining guns and DV, the narrowness of 922(g)(8), and the history & tradition of disarming those whose access to guns poses danger.
Thomas with the first Q: what is law-abiding responsible?

Prelogar: two principles. the responsible part means "pose unusual danger beyond the ordinary citizen"
Thomas: what about risk by not storing guns properly?

Prelogar: yes that would not be responsible.
Read 95 tweets
Jul 23, 2023
Wow! Last week, Trump-appointed Judge Immergut upheld Oregon's new large capacity magazine (LCM) ban & permit-to-purchase law agnst 2nd Amendment challenge after a week-long bench trial in a 122-page(!) opinion.

It is incredibly thorough. Follow along 🧵

https://t.co/vyOSLYckxmstorage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.usco…
Image
One notable thing at the start is she makes *fact findings* abt the history & tradition, as opposed to mere legal conclusions. Generally a fact-finder's conclusions abt fact matters get lots of deference on appeal, but courts haven't typically treated historical facts like that. Image
After reciting some of the trial mechanics and procedural background, the court rejects the challengers attempt to rely on 13 other documents as evidence. She does so with a helpful footnote explaining the difference b/t legislative & adjudicative facts.
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Read 33 tweets

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