Today SCOTUS denied cert to the Hawaii "spirit of Aloha" case due to its interlocutory posture. BUT we got a Thomas/Alito statement with some pretty interesting things - including that "Americans need not engage in empty formalities before they can invoke their constitutional rights." 🧵
The Hawaii Supreme Court had ruled that Wilson couldn't claim the unconstitutionality of the HI licensing scheme as a defense for not having a permit, because he didn't even apply for one. Trouble is...
The Supreme Court had already pointed out in Bruen that the Hawaii scheme was more or less the same as the New York scheme - meaning that it was a de facto ban.
From today's statement: "[Hawaii's] conclusion contravenes the settled principle that Americans need not engage in empty formalities before they can invoke their constitutional rights, and it wrongly reduces the Second Amendment to a 'second-class right.'"
Continued: "Although the interlocutory posture of the petition weighs against correcting this error now, I would grant certiorari in an appropriate case to reaffirm that the Second Amendment warrants the same respect as any other constitutional right."
The HI Supreme Court's barely veiled criticism of Bruen was NOT lost on Justice Thomas, who specifically called out the "spirit of Aloha" part.
I think it's safe to say Thomas was not impressed by Hawaii's tossing these anti-SCOTUS hand grenades, then ducking behind a lame state-law standing analysis to duck the issue.
This is significant. Here we have Justice Thomas applying 5th Amendment case law to the 2nd Amendment. (If only it were a full ruling and not a non-binding statement from Thomas!)
Thomas clinches the analysis by calling out the Hawaii Supreme Court's "blatant defiance” for "resisting our decisions."
He reiterates that the interlocutory posture of the case means it's inappropriate for the Supreme Court to correct this error, but states "In an appropriate case, however, we should make clear that Americans are always free to invoke the Second Amendment as a defense against unconstitutional firearms-licensing schemes."
And then we have this closing sentence, which is clearly a message to ALL the lower courts on the 2A issue, not just Hawaii: "And, this Court’s intervention clearly remains imperative, given lower courts’ continued insistence on treating the Second Amendment 'right so cavalierly.'"
Here's hoping this is a signal that the Court is planning to take Snope. Your honors, you can't keep saying it's not a second-class right and yet not intervening to enforce it. We need action!
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The 2nd Circuit just presumed to overturn Heller in ruling against our challenge to Connecticut's AR-15/mag ban. This one's gonna be lit - which we expected after oral arguments felt like watching Barry go up against the legal version of The View.
This is a preliminary injunction ruling, which we asked for before the Supreme Court began refusing to hear interlocutory appeals. So after this, we'll take it back down to the district court to go through the merits process.
The fact that they start the ruling like this tells you everything you need to know about what you're fixing to read.
We just filed an amended complaint in our Colorado AWB/mag ban case. This wraps up a weird turn of events in this lawsuit where we survived an unexpected broadside over standing from the judge. Strap in, this one's a bit wild.
This lawsuit challenges gun and mag ban ordinances enacted by four Colorado local governments. These started as individual lawsuits where we won two back-to-back temporary restraining orders immediately after Bruen.
When we combined the four cases into one, we also negotiated a voluntary stay of enforcement. That let us skip the interlocutory path and go straight to the merits process. We finished, filed summary judgment motions - and then things got interesting.
OK, so I like this, but why the word “many”? All of them are arms.
Here’s the explanation. And I have to note here that Justice Kagan didn’t hesitate to state that .50 cals are in common use. But even the common use question isn’t the point here. The point is that all bearable arms are “arms.”
A federal judge in Mississippi (5th Circuit) just ruled that the federal machine gun ban is inconsistent with the text, history, and tradition of the Second Amendment - while making it clear he disagrees with Heller and Bruen. 🧵
This is an as-applied challenge. The ruling dismisses a criminal charge of possession of a machine gun under the federal statute, because the government didn't meet its burden under the Bruen test.
This is a fascinating 12-page ruling. The judge here very much disagrees with the history, and tradition approach, but he faithfully applies every single aspect of the Bruen test and reaches the correct conclusion - one, ironically, the Supreme Court would NOT endorse.
Y'all. The Supreme Court just granted cert to Smith & Wesson v. Mexico, Mexico's attempt to shut down gun manufacturers by blaming them for their own cartel problem. This is HUGE.
Just by way of background, Mexico sued the entire gun industry in an attempt to destroy our Second Amendment. The district court judge threw out the case saying "PLCAA literally said you can't do this" - which was absolutely true.
That judge called our interpretation of the Second Amendment a "suicide pact" in oral arguments on our AWB lawsuit, so he's no friend to gun rights. That's how outrageous and frankly illegal Mexico's lawsuit is.
4th Circuit rules that ARs "fall outside the ambit of protection offered by the Second Amendment" because they're "military-style" and not suitable for self-defense. Outrageous - but this is on the merits and this means the SCOTUS cert appeal is next!!
To all you 2A supporters who think "shall not be infringed" is self-explanatory, the 4th Circuit says THIS about the Second Amendment: "This single sentence provides us with a lofty command, but little concrete guidance." OUTRAGEOUS.
Many congrats to @gunpolicy - if this is the case that delivers a slam-dunk SCOTUS opinion striking down AWBs, that's going to help all of our cases fighting this insidious policy. It can't come soon enough!