Kostas Moros Profile picture
Mar 20 64 tweets 21 min read Read on X
Alright, I think I'm the last one getting to it as I was driving when this released, but time for a thread on the en banc Duncan ruling.

For those not as informed, this loss was 100% expected. it's the same panel as the 2020 en banc, and the same exact result, 7-4. For the judges in the majority, Bruen clearly changed nothing because they decided this result before even thinking about the relevant law. We all know it, and it's important we be open about that, as dissenting judges have been in the past.

But in an important way, this is actually a win on timing. They could have held onto this for way more time. Instead, CRPA can seek cert, and maybe even be considered alongside Snope.

This thread is also a historic one because I have to figure out how to cover the first-ever video dissent!Image
Bruen was clear that judges are not supposed to engage in interest balancing, and yet every hostile ruling on magazines or "Assault weapons" begins by heartstring-tugging about mass shootings.

Besides being wrong on the law, it's also wrong on policy. California's laws have not stopped it from having a disproportionate share of mass shootings.Image
Heller was clear that an arm includes everything someone takes into their hands to cast at or strike another, citing founding-era dictionaries. Image
And how on earth does a magazine not fit this definition? Image
Ammo boxes still exist. No one is arguing those are arms. Magazines are distinct from them.

And this existed in the 19th century too; a Winchester rifle's fixed magazine was clearly part of the arm, but a puch with extra ammo carried by the wielder is not.

Magazines being removable today doesn't change that they are arms.Image
You can literally do this with every part of the gun. By itself, a trigger is harmless. By itself, a barrel is harmless. Hell, by itself even ammunition is harmless. It's a minor firecracker if not set off in a barrel. Image
The Ninth Circuit says that while a magazine may be necessary to use a firearm and therefore gets some protection, there is no need for a "large capacity" magazine.

And who gets to define what "large" is? The government, of course! Just like Bruen intended! 🤣Image
Ummm we have a suppressor case brief coming up next week....kinda seems like the en banc panel is giving Sanchez an L before our brief is even submitted.

We'll have to rely on SCOTUS nuking Duncan for any chance, I guess. Image
What a perversion of founding intent to pretend that the same people who recognized a right to resist tyranny would endorse a ruling like this. Image
Also, on that prior post, they say "a broad range of arms."

But they are totally going to uphold a ban, as they have before, on the most common rifle in the country!
Well, this is a minor win in an otherwise terrible ruling. Image
First of all, you can absolutely fire a levergun faster than "one round every three seconds."

But second, they gloss over the far bigger takeaway; gun technology went through a giant leap to go from single-shot muzzleloaders to repeating arms. Yet NOT ONE STATE BANNED THEM.

That's your historical tradition right there.Image
The first historical analogy is gunpowder storage rules, which:

1. Didn't block you from owning gun powder; and
2. Were not about dealing with intentional violence.

Totally different how, totally different why. They are not even remotely similar. This isn't like Rahimi where the historical laws cited at least were on the topic of disarming dangerous people. This is completely unconnected.Image
Trap gun laws restricted a way of setting up a gun such that it would fire if the trap was sprung. Not even close to the same as entirely banning a type of arm. Image
By this logic of course, you could ban handguns.

And I have no doubt that this en banc panel would uphold a handgun ban if they could. They will uphold just about everything except what the Supreme Court has specifically said is protected. Which is why SCOTUS needs to take more cases.Image
But they ignore that by the end of the 19th century, as @davekopel has written about, there were either no possession bans on bowie knives, or very few such bans (I forget which) Image
@davekopel Hmm. I'm noticing something legislatures did NOT do. Image
This is stupid. The gunpowder storage laws typically only applied to large amounts of gunpowder stored in particular locations. They were nothing like a magazine possession ban.

They were more like a zoning regulation, really. Image
This is hilarious coming from the court that has upheld (and will uphold) "assault weapon" bans.

But they do qualify it with "lawful."

I guess the right that shall not be infringed is buying guns the government says are approved. Image
This is abject nonsense. The Supreme Court was clear in Bruen that in addition to "how" and "why", the degree of burden imposed matters too.

If a historical law is vaguely similar, but imposed a dramatically lesser burden than the modern law, the comparison is not valid.

For example, in Boland, California pointed to a couple of outlier states that had barrel-proofing laws. They argued those were similar to the California handgun roster, because they too just make sure guns are "Safe". But the burdens they impose are way more than merely making sure a gun's barrel won't explode when you fire it.Image
Again, they say all this, but will totally uphold a ban on the most common rifles in the country next.

Totally shameless panel. Image
I love how they always grasp their pearls and say "Plaintiff's argument would mean the government can't do something, could you imagine?!?!"

Yes, I could imagine. It's a right that says it "shall not be infringed." Image
There are only 176,000 because the federal government effectively banned them in 1986.

But I agree that machine guns are arms and should be subject to the historical analysis. A real one; not the trash the Ninth Circuit did here. Image
They don't understand, or refuse to understand, that the Second Amendment is about empowering the people, It doesn't matter if it would be convenient or not for the government.

The founders intended an expansive right that the people could use to defend themselves, defeat foreign invaders, and topple tyrants who overthrew our constitutional government.Image
Judge Berzon wrote a separate opinion to complain about VanDyke making a video, becuase God forbid judges convey their message in an effective manner.

These people just hate that someone can point out how ignorant they are about firearms. Knowing anything about guns is haram. Image
Oh my God, Berzon's concurrence is like 14 pages long to complain about a video. Sorry guys, I just can't.

Skipping to the dissents. Image
We can now cite this line forever. Thank you Judge Nelson. Image
Great stuff from Bumatay on why the majoity erred by just accepting at face value the designation of "large capacity magazines." Image
Bumatay says the majority basically just revived interest-balancing by another name, and he's of course right. Image
Bumatay all but screams at the Supreme Court for help. Will they answer? We'll see soon! Image
Bumatay explains why magazines are not accoutrements by actually citing examples of accoutrements in historical context. The majority did not do this (for obvious reasons). Image
And if California made the limit 5 rounds, or 1 for that matter, the 9th would work even more magic. Image
Hackish analysis always crumbles under any scrutiny, as Bumatay demonstrates here. Image
Sorry for the delay, other commitments.

This is a great point from Bumatay too. He's just way more sharp than the majority. Image
Exactly. The broad problem with the majority is they still treat the Second Amendment as a very narrow exception to the government's presumed power to ban everything they want.

It's intended to be a broad right that can only be infringed on very narrow grounds. Image
It really is extraordinary how the majority's basic response to the "common use" language is basically "Well we don't like that, and SCOTUS can't possibly have meant what they said!" Image
Great point. All these years later, the Ninth Circuit is STILL relying on Breyer's Heller dissent and treating it like the majority opinion. Image
Exactly, these sorts of laws were not even enough to save New York in Bruen, which was about carry.

So how could they possibly justify possession bans? The majority did not bother to address this! Image
This is what's most telling. The clear historical tradition and principle is that arms were never categorically banned. Various regulations may have existed, particularly if you do tolerate 19th century analogues. But never full bans. Image
The powder storage laws are so poor a comparison that it's stunning the panel even used them. They are totally shameless. Even SCOTUS has rejected this comparison in the handgun ban context, so why would it be persuasive here? Image
Bumatay ends with a broader analytical criticism of the Ninth Circuit's approach, which of course, is a return to interest balancing by another name. Image
I've read the "nuanced approach" to be the analogical discussion. Whereas if there is no new technology or societal concern, you don't do analogues at all and you look for "distinctly similar" historical laws. Image
While he doesn't go as far as doing a video like VanDyke, Judge Bumatay does also get creative in his takedown of the hack majority opinion, using a table to compare what they said pre-Bruen to now, and how little it changed.Image
Image
Superb dissent by Bumatay. He can have the second SCOTUS vacancy.

But now it's time for the best circuit judge in the country....LET'S GO!

VanDyke begins by pointing out that SCOTUS already vacated the last Duncan ruling. What a crazy coincidence that under the new analysis, the 7 judges in the majority reached identical conclusions! Wow!Image
THANK YOU!

I feel like I am taking crazy pills with even many good judges going along with the supposed "two part test" of Bruen.

No, there is only one part. And if there is a two-part test, that first part is very simple to meet. Image
And here is the video that sparked so much controversy and rage.

I really don't see the problem, and I do think they are mad at him because visual representations make their absurd arguments all the more easy to expose.

Basically, this is similar to the rage at Thomas for citing those @gunpolicy drawings in Cargill.Image
Haha VanDyke making the point I made early in this thread about how no part of a firearm, in a vacuum, is an arm in and of itself. Image
💀 Image
Ya, that's pretty much the majority holding, stated more honestly. Image
VanDyke just brings out the flamethrower here. I love it. Image
Well, the answer is that they will uphold all gun laws...except what the Supreme Court has expressly struck down. Image
I argued exactly this in our amicus brief for the Nguyen matter. I also pointed out a list of cases in which California argued - surprise! - they always get to use the "more nuanced approach." Image
Like Bumatay, VanDyke points out how the majority is just repackaging its prior conclusions. Image
VanDyke explains the damage that will come from this ruling (if not reversed by SCOTUS). Image
Excellent point here about how the majority completely ignores how the law affects law-abiding people. Image
VanDyke points to an example of an incident when ten rounds was not enough.

BTW, congrats to Mr. Joyner on his off-roster Glock 43! LEO exemptions are nice 🤣 Image
VanDyke concludes by responding to Berzon's criticism of his video....hilariously. Image
VanDyke is running circles around his colleagues, jeeze. Image
💀💀 Image
Yep. This is what I noted earlier. Pictures and video really expose the ignorance of antigun judges. Which is why they hate them. Image
Incredible work by VanDyke here in concluding. Image
The video is fun - VanDyke jokes about how his production values will fall far short of what we are used to, but I think that just adds to the charm of it.

In sum, this ruling was exactly what we expected when the Ninth Circuit questionably took this as a "comeback" case to the exact same 11-judge panel (which they did to make sure there was no chance of a conservative panel roll).

The Supreme Court vacated and remanded their last ruling so they could redo it in light of Bruen. They kicked it all the way back down to the district court to waste two and a half years. And then, they reached the exact same ruling. Not one of the 7 judges in the majority changed their position even with Bruen shredding their prior interest-balancing method. They just repackaged their same logic into a Bruen/Rahimi costume, and issued it again.

So now the games are over.

This case has been pending since 2017. It has already been vacated and remanded by SCOTUS once. It is a final judgment case with a lengthy record. The Ninth Circuit has, as Judge Nelson put it, given the Supreme Court the middle finger and refused to budge from their prior result. If SCOTUS does not intervene, thousands of Californians with "freedom week" magazines will permanently be dispossessed of their property (or become criminals).

The stakes couldn't be higher, and there are NO EXCUSES for the Supreme Court to deny cert. If they deny even this, then the message is clear: they are hanging the Second Amendment out to dry and didn't really mean what they said in Bruen.

I hope they grant cert in this case, Snope, or both, and we finally put this issue of bans on common arms to bed.
Please donate to @CRPAnews and become a member. We could use your support, now and always.

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More from @MorosKostas

Jan 15
En banc denied in May v. Bonta, Carralero v. Bonta, and Wolford v. Lopez, our case and two others concerning overexpansive sensitive places laws in California and Hawaii. Not really surprising. Now we will either seek SCOTUS cert review, or, go back down to get a final judgment.

There were 8 dissenting judges from the denial of en banc review. A thread on the dissenting opinions.Image
Ok?

Not sure why they didn't just join the VanDyke dissent....maybe he said mean things about their colleagues lol Image
They aren't really all that creative, New York did the same thing. But the 2nd circuit struck their vampire rule, unlike Hawaii's. (California's was stricken for a very technical difference) Image
Read 15 tweets
Nov 26, 2024
The Snope reply brief is in. This concludes the briefing for the cert petition (aside from any amicus briefs coming in support of the state).

Let's take a look at what they argued in response to Maryland's opposition.Image
A strong opening here, basically telling the Court that if they don't put a stop to this, it will have only itself to blame when the abuse continues. I would only add that the reason the lower courts have all gone the same way is because the more pro-gun circuits never see such cases, being generally made up of more pro-gun states.Image
Agreed. "Percolation" is valuable only if you assume good faith. And we have no reason to in this context. Image
Read 8 tweets
Nov 13, 2024
Let's take a look at Maryland's opposition brief to the cert petition in Snope v. Brown, the case we are all hoping the Supreme Court decides to take so it can settle the "assault weapon" issue (and hopefully some other issues).

Props to the Maryland attorneys for getting this done despite having to type through the tears of Kamala's loss.Image
They always focus on this language from Heller, but ignore four things:

1. It was dicta inserted mainly to keep Justice Kennedy on board.

2. It was clearly referring to machine guns, not semiautomatic rifles.

3. Heller's author and Bruen's author dissented in Friedman from the denial of cert, and were very clear that semiautomatic rifles like the AR-15 may not be banned.

4. SCOTUS GVR'd this very case after Bruen. If they thought this was a settled question, no reason to do that (and it's why I'll be very mad if they deny cert now!)Image
If SCOTUS dodges, this may be why. But it would be a very bad excuse to do so.

No "percolation" is likely to happen in any pro-2A circuits, because the states within those circuits do not pass bans on firearms. So only hostile circuits like the 4th, 7th, 9th, etc. will hear these cases. Not the progun 5th, 11th, or 8th. |

And while SCOTUS lets them "percolate", the anti-2A courts will continue to bastardize Bruen beyond recognition, just as they did Heller.Image
Read 20 tweets
Nov 8, 2024
A thread on our final judgment from Judge McGlynn in our case of FFL-IL v. Pritzker. We represented Federal Firearms Licensees of Illinois, Guns Save Life, Gun Owners of America, Gun Owners Foundation, Piasa Armory, and individual plaintiffs in this challenge to the euphemistically named "Protect Illinois Communities Act" (an "assault weapon" and magazine ban).Image
The "Rorschach test of America's gun debate." I like that. Image
I am going to skip through the background section as I am sure everyone following this case is well aware.

Tl;Dr - challenge to Illinois's "assault weapon" ban, magazine capacity limit, and registration requirement. Image
Read 45 tweets
Oct 8, 2024
Note that California law classifies ALL Glocks as "unsafe handguns" because they do not have a compliant chamber load indicator, lack a magazine disconnect mechanism, and until our lawsuit caused California to repeal the requirement, of course lacked microstamping.

The only reason we can still buy Gen 3s is because they are grandfathered in, but they are still "unsafe handguns". We can't buy more modern Glocks new in gun stores (just secondhand from exempt cops, or from those who moved here with them from other states).

She supported the Unsafe Handgun Act and expanded it such that microstamping began to be enforced in 2013. So why does she own an "unsafe handgun"?
If a Glock is "safe" enough for Kamala Harris, she should call for the repeal of the handgun roster so Californians can buy more modern Glocks.

The lives of millions of regular people aren't worth less than hers.
Thanks to our lawsuit on behalf of CRPA and others in Boland v. Bonta, new semiauto pistol models have been able to enter the California roster for the first time in a decade after microstamping enforcement stopped.

But the guns added are still just a small fraction of the whole market, as it's not possible (or sometimes not financially feasible) to redesign guns to have the unwanted magazine disconnects and chamber load indicators.
Read 4 tweets
Sep 3, 2024
This 1890 congressional debate on a bill banning the carrying of weapons in Washington DC is interesting in how much it repeats so many things we are still arguing about to this day.

First, the text of the bill: Image
Congressman Blount knew how this could be abused, even with the apparent allowance for open carry. Image
Congressman Grout (from Vermont), in response, seems annoyed Blount (from Georgia) is even debating this.

Grout quickly reveals the impetus for the bill, this was yet another example of gun control racism.

And apparently, "minors" was code for "black minors." Image
Read 17 tweets

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