Wayward court
rules for backdoor gun control
Author: Paul Jenkins Updated: 2 days ago Published 3 days
ago
A ‘full-dress” AR-15 customized for action shooting.
(Photo by Steve Meyer)
If ever there were justification to drug test the
nation's judges, it would be the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals' decision
upholding the People's Republic of Maryland's ban on most magazine-fed rifles,
including the AR-15, calling them "exceptionally lethal weapons of
war."
Further, the court ruled, "assault weapons and
large-capacity magazines are not protected by the Second Amendment." They
are, the judges said, dangerous.
Judge William B. Traxler Jr., in a blistering dissent,
said the court majority went "to greater lengths than any other court to
eviscerate the constitutionally guaranteed right to keep and bear arms."
In the court's incredible stretch to gut the Second
Amendment, 10 of the 14-member bench based in Richmond, Virginia, ignored U.S.
Supreme Court decisions, past and recent, including the landmark Heller case.
They also tossed common sense to the wind and joined other appellate courts
across the nation in crafting their own rules when it comes to the Constitution
and furthering backdoor gun control.
The Supreme Court decision in District of Columbia v.
Heller dealt with handguns, even more hated by the left than the evil AR-15.
The court in 2008 decided the case brought by Dick Heller, a District special
police officer who applied for a one-year license for a handgun he wanted to
keep in his home. His application was denied.
In that decision, the high court ruled, 5-4, the Second
Amendment protects an individual right to possess a firearm "unconnected
with service in a militia, and to use that arm for traditionally lawful
purposes, such as self-defense within the home." It was the high court's
first decision affirming that individual right.
"We are aware of the problem of handgun violence in
this country, and we take seriously the concerns raised by the many amici who
believe that prohibition of handgun ownership is a solution," the majority
opinion's author, the late Justice Antonin Scalia, wrote. "But the enshrinement
of constitutional rights necessarily takes certain policy choices off the
table. These include the absolute prohibition of handguns held and used for
self-defense in the home."
In Kolbe v. Hogan, the Fourth Circuit apparently believed
those choices were very much still on the table when it upheld the state's ban
on 45 kinds of "assault weapons" and magazines holding more than 10
cartridges.
Worse, its woeful ignorance about the firearms involved
was staggering. It compared semiautomatic firearms to the fully automatic M16,
saying the difference between the two is "slight."
No, the difference is night and day.
Semiautomatic firearms are designed to fire one shot with
each trigger pull. Millions of them are stuffed into closets and gun cabinets across
the land. They include AR-15s, .22-caliber rifles and pistols, and
larger-caliber, centerfire hunting or target-shooting firearms. Automatic
firearms are designed to fire shot after shot as the trigger is held down, like
a machine gun. They generally are used by the military and some law enforcement
units. Strictly regulated, they must be registered with the federal government.
They are prevalent in movies but rarely used in real crimes.
The semiautomatic AR-15 and its clones are the most
popular rifles in the country. There are perhaps 10 million of them in
circulation. They are modular, accurate and light. They are easy to customize
and accessorize for target shooting, hunting or defense. The Congressional
Research Service says they are involved in less than 2 percent of all crimes
involving guns. All that apparently accounted for nothing with the court.
In 2016, a Fourth Circuit three-judge panel overturned
Maryland's ban, using what is known as heightened scrutiny, the most rigorous
evaluation of a law's constitutionality. The court's en banc decision,
however, reversed that and upheld Maryland's law. That decision, though, was
based on a less rigorous evaluation, something called intermediate scrutiny.
Appeals Judge Robert King said Maryland "has shown
all that is required: a reasonable, if not perfect, fit between the (law) and
Maryland's interest in protecting public safety."
Six other states and the District of Columbia have bans
similar to Maryland's. Second Amendment challenges to bans on assault-style
weapons and high-capacity magazines have been rejected by four appeals courts.
Decision's such as the Fourth Circuit's allow officials
and courts, on a case-by-case basis, to pick and choose among various firearms
in deciding which are safe enough. This one good. That one evil. Oops, it turns
out they all are evil. Allowing such an abridgment of the Constitution, such a
bow to bureaucratic subjectivity, is a very long step in the wrong direction.
It is yet another example of activist courts engaging in
irrational, under-the-radar gun control that ignores the law of the land and
congressional intent to promulgate a political agenda.
Talk about dangerous …
4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
Michael F. Bennet
was a clerk for the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the 4th Circuit, and is married to Susan D. Daggett.
Note: Susan D. Daggett
is married to Michael F. Bennet, and
was an attorney for the Natural
Resources Defense Council.
Open
Society Foundations was a funder for the Natural Resources Defense Council.
George
Soros is the founder & chairman for the Open Society Foundations, and was the chairman for the Foundation to Promote Open Society.
Foundation
to Promote Open Society was
a funder for the Natural Resources
Defense Council, the Sundance
Institute, and the People for the
American Way.
Robert Redford
is a trustee at the Natural Resources
Defense Council, the founder & president for the Sundance Institute, and made the National Rifle Association enemies list listed in 2013.
Kenneth D. Cole
is a trustee at the Sundance Institute,
and married to Maria Cuomo Cole.
Maria Cuomo Cole
is married to Kenneth D. Cole, and a
trustee at the Brady Center to Prevent
Gun Violence.
Brady
Center to Prevent Gun Violence is a “Gun
Safety, Gun Control” group for guns.
Lyn Davis Lear is
a trustee at the Sundance Institute,
married to Norman Lear, and a
trustee at the Los Angeles County Museum
of Art.
Norman
Lear is married to Lyn Davis Lear,
a director at the People for the
American Way, and made the National
Rifle Association enemies list listed in 2013.
Margery Tabankin
is a director at the People for the
American Way, and the treasurer for the Barbra Streisand Foundation.
Barbra Streisand
was a trustee at the Los Angeles County
Museum of Art, made the National Rifle
Association enemies list listed in 2013, and is the founder of the Barbra Streisand Foundation.
Barbra
Streisand Foundation was a funder for the Natural Resources Defense Council.
Susan D. Daggett
was an attorney for the Natural
Resources Defense Council, and is married to Michael F. Bennet.
Michael F. Bennet
is married to Susan D. Daggett, and was
a clerk for the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the 4th Circuit.
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