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The Second Amendment Battleground: Victories in the Courts and Why They Matter
The Law Centers latest brochure, The Second Amendment Battleground: Victories in the Courts and Why They Matter, examines trends in Second Amendment litigation since the U.S. Supreme Courts landmark District of Columbia v. Heller decision in 2008. Although the Heller Court held that the Second Amendment protects a responsible, law-abiding citizens right to possess an operable handgun in the home for self-defense, the vast majority of courts that have heard Second Amendment challenges since that case have rejected them, upholding a wide variety of gun laws as constitutional.
http://smartgunlaws.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/web-victories-in-the-courts.pdf
- Snip -
Since the U.S. Supreme Courts 2008 decision in District of Columbia v. Heller, courts across the country have been confronted with an onslaught of costly, time-consuming Second Amendment litigation. In addition to the hundreds of legal challenges raised by indicted and convicted criminals, the gun lobby has also initiated dozens of lawsuits against federal, state, and local governments.
- Snip -
Despite the gun lobbys rhetoric about individual rights, the breadth and scale of Second Amendment lawsuits filed over the past four years reveal the lobbys true intent: to overturn all reasonable laws intended to prevent gun violence. So far, thankfully, most of the courts confronted with these important challenges since Heller have affirmed the continued vitality of smart gun laws. Still, the courts remain an active battleground over the meaning of the Second Amendment and the future of sensible gun laws in America.
- Snip -
Given the inherent dangers posed by guns in public, ten states, including New Jersey, grant law enforcement discretion in issuing permits to carry concealed handguns in public places. In Piszczatoski v. Filko, five plaintiffs who had been denied permits argued that the New Jersey law requiring an applicant to show a justifiable need to get a permit violated the Second Amendment.
Like several other courts across the country, the federal district court upheld the New Jersey law, citing the state legislatures reasonable inference that given the obviously dangerous and deadly nature of handguns, requiring a showing of particularized need for a permit to carry one publicly serves the States interests in public safety.
http://smartgunlaws.org/the-second-amendment-battleground-victories-in-the-courts/
http://smartgunlaws.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/web-victories-in-the-courts.pdf
- Snip -
Since the U.S. Supreme Courts 2008 decision in District of Columbia v. Heller, courts across the country have been confronted with an onslaught of costly, time-consuming Second Amendment litigation. In addition to the hundreds of legal challenges raised by indicted and convicted criminals, the gun lobby has also initiated dozens of lawsuits against federal, state, and local governments.
- Snip -
Despite the gun lobbys rhetoric about individual rights, the breadth and scale of Second Amendment lawsuits filed over the past four years reveal the lobbys true intent: to overturn all reasonable laws intended to prevent gun violence. So far, thankfully, most of the courts confronted with these important challenges since Heller have affirmed the continued vitality of smart gun laws. Still, the courts remain an active battleground over the meaning of the Second Amendment and the future of sensible gun laws in America.
- Snip -
Given the inherent dangers posed by guns in public, ten states, including New Jersey, grant law enforcement discretion in issuing permits to carry concealed handguns in public places. In Piszczatoski v. Filko, five plaintiffs who had been denied permits argued that the New Jersey law requiring an applicant to show a justifiable need to get a permit violated the Second Amendment.
Like several other courts across the country, the federal district court upheld the New Jersey law, citing the state legislatures reasonable inference that given the obviously dangerous and deadly nature of handguns, requiring a showing of particularized need for a permit to carry one publicly serves the States interests in public safety.
http://smartgunlaws.org/the-second-amendment-battleground-victories-in-the-courts/
The right-wing gun lobby (funded by NRA/ALEC/Koch Brothers) is filing frivolous lawsuits all across the nation in the hopes that their bought-and-paid-for corrupt judges will rule against reason and sanity. The fact is that these lawsuits are establishing precedents which are the opposite of what the NRA and friends had hoped for. As in the New Jersey case above, sensible gun control is being upheld while remaining within the scope of the Second Amendment.
Significant issues before the courts at present include: domestic abusers and gun ownership, availability of military-style assault weapons and large capacity magazines, and carrying a concealed, loaded weapon in public for no compelling reason.
Like all other enumerated civil rights, the Second Amendment can, and should, be regulated in the interest of public health and safety. As Justice Stevens wrote in Heller, "the Second Amendment does not protect a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose."
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The Second Amendment Battleground: Victories in the Courts and Why They Matter (Original Post)
billh58
Mar 2014
OP
Loudly
(2,436 posts)1. It was only included in order to reserve a "right" of armed rebellion against the government.
Now utterly obsolete.
Moot since Appomattox.
Cut the crap NRA.
flamin lib
(14,559 posts)3. Actually no.
Although it is wet dream for some people Article III Section 3 defines treason as taking arms against the government.
There is evidence that the militia mentioned in the 2nd was to protect slave owners from their 'property'. Can't remember the book but a good argument for it.
Hoyt
(54,770 posts)2. Excellent and hopeful post.