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| San Diego Union-Tribune |
May 19, 2002
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Debating the Second Amendment:
The Constitution protects each American's right to own a firearm
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By Stephen P. Halbrook*
The Constitution protects each American's right to own a firearm.
Pending before the U.S. Supreme Court is United States vs. Emerson,
a case which involves the right to keep and bear arms guaranteed by the
Second Amendment to the Constitution. Attorney General John Ashcroft
believes that this is a fundamental right of law-abiding citizens, but
argues that the federal law at issue in the case is valid. The law
prohibits firearm possession by a person against whom an order has been
entered restraining the person from domestic violence. Ashcroft's
pro-Second Amendment views have provoked a firestorm among gun
prohibitionists.
When she was attorney general, Janet Reno never said anything good about
that part of the Bill of Rights known as the Second Amendment.
She was the chief prosecutor for Clinton's gun control measures, and the
only arms bearing she took "full responsibility for" was by
submachine-gun toting federal agents at Waco and in Miami's Little
Havana.
When Dr. Timothy Emerson argued that the federal ban on possession of a
firearm by the subject of a domestic restraining order violated the
Second Amendment, the prosecuting U.S. attorney in Lubbock, Texas,
echoed Reno's line that the people have no right to keep and bear arms.
But U.S. District Judge Sam Cummings had read up on his constitutional
history, and threw out the prosecution. His 1999 decision, considered by
some the most thoroughly researched judicial opinion ever published on
the Second Amendment, held that the gun ban was an infringement on the
right to keep arms, and that the restraining order in that case was just
a boilerplate form issued in every Texas divorce case. He quoted the
Founding Fathers and the latest scholarship to show that the Second
Amendment protects an individual's right to have a firearm.
The Second Amendment states: "A well regulated militia, being
necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to
keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed." To the framers, it was
simple enough: Recognition of the right of all law-abiding persons to
have firearms would promote a militia, which is superior to a standing
army for protection of liberty. Promotion of the militia was a serious
federal purpose, but the right was not limited to militia use.
By the 1960s, the Second Amendment had become politically incorrect, and
some judges and prosecutors concocted the theory that "the right of
the people" to have arms really means "the power of the
state" to have a militia. If the amendment protects only the
collective and gun owners have no rights, then all gun control laws are
constitutional.
But that mentality is hardly universal. In September 1998, then-Sen.
John Ashcroft, chairman of the subcommittee on the constitution, held
hearings on the Second Amendment. He quoted James Madison as praising
"the advantage of being armed, which the Americans possess over the
people of almost every other nation." Democrat Russ Feingold
declared, "I agree with every single word Sen. Ashcroft said about
the amendment." That view would be buttressed the following year
with the decision by Judge Cummings.
The appeal of that decision was heard at the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Fifth Circuit in New Orleans. A Justice Department lawyer told the
three-judge panel that a government ban on all civilian gun possession
would not violate the Second Amendment. That comment was widely
published, prompting an uproar in the gun-owning community.
When one citizen asked whether they really meant it, then-Solicitor
General Seth Waxman wrote a detailed letter explaining that, yes, there
is no Santa Claus, and the Second Amendment is kaput. The letter was
dated August 2000, when the Gore-Bush race was in full swing. The
National Rifle Association posted blowups of the letter on billboards,
and it is now history how key hunting states swung the election for
Bush.
Sticking to his guns
Ashcroft survived the bashing at his conformation hearing and became
attorney general despite the fears of many that he would be a staunch
defender of the Second Amendment. Their nightmare came true in May 2001
when Jim Baker, political chief of the National Rifle Association (NRA),
read a letter from Ashcroft to the group's annual convention. It
pledged: "Let me state unequivocally my view that the text and the
original intent of the Second Amendment clearly protects the right of
individuals to keep and bear firearms."
Ashcroft quoted Jefferson's proposal for Virginia that "no free man
shall ever be debarred the use of arms," and George Mason's protest
of a Constitution with no bill of rights, including his remark that
"to disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave
them."
But Congress could restrict firearms "for compelling state
interests," such as disarming felons. Ashcroft recalled Samuel
Adams' admonition in 1788 that the Constitution should "never (be)
construed to prevent the people of the United States who are peaceable
citizens from keeping their own arms."
The gun prohibitionist lobby went ballistic. The Violence Policy Center
ignored the above words and charged that, under Ashcroft's views,
violent felons would assert their Second Amendment rights. Actually, the
Violence Policy Center couldn't care less what felons assert - it found
intolerable the concession that peaceable citizens could keep their own
arms. VPC litigation director Mathew Nosanchuk, Reno's former top
firearms counsel, wrote a blistering attack unmasking Ashcroft's heresy.
9/11 changed things
Then came Sept. 11. The heroic resistance of the passengers on United
Airlines Flight 93 against the hijackers seemed to consign the doctrine
of nonresistance (typical of anti-gun pacifists) to the dustbin of
history.
The U.S. Court of Appeals in the Emerson case was not cowed. Its
opinion, issued in October, held: "The Second Amendment protects
the right of individuals to privately keep and bear their own firearms
that are suitable as individual, personal weapons regardless of whether
the particular individual is then actually a member of a militia."
Published as U.S. vs. Emerson, the 70-page opinion leaves other
appellate court decisions in the dust. Filled with a sophisticated
textual analysis and extensive quotes from the Founding Fathers, the
opinion demolishes the "collective rights" decisions of
several other courts, which typically rely on a paragraph or two of
assertion. The court held that the law at issue barely passed muster
under the Second Amendment, in that domestic restraining orders in Texas
are required to be backed by judicial fact-finding.
Emerson's attorneys filed a petition for review in the Supreme Court.
Would the Ashcroft Justice Department respond with the typical
Clinton-era refrain, or would it honestly concede that "the right
of the people" is for real? A bitter internal fight broke out in
the Justice Department between Ashcroft loyalists and career
bureaucrats.
The contents of briefs for the United States in the drafting stage are
not normally available for eavesdropping by interest groups. However, a
draft of the U.S. brief in the Emerson case may have been leaked
to the Violence Policy Center. Forewarned that the brief would endorse
Emerson's individual rights-interpretation of the Second Amendment, VPC
sent a missive signed by Andrew Frey, ex-deputy solicitor general, to
Solicitor General Ted Olson, lecturing Olson on why the brief must not
commit this "politically motivated" apostasy.
The department, Frey insisted, must never relax its iron denial of any
Second Amendment right. It had argued in a 1939 brief that the
amendment's right extended only to "the people collectively"
as a militia. However, the Supreme Court's decision, United States
vs. Miller (1939), was silent on that argument, holding instead that
the Second Amendment protects a firearm if it "is any part of the
ordinary military equipment, or that its use could contribute to the
common defense." The court never suggested that the possessor had
to be in the militia. Miller has been widely mis-cited as supportive of
the collective rights theory, but it contains no such language.
Legislative justification
Frey argued that the Justice Department's briefs represent "the
position of the United States," but a more reliable statement of
that position has been expressed in acts of Congress. Just two years
after the brief in Miller was filed, the Property Requisition Act
of 1941 prohibited any construction of the law that would "impair
or infringe in any manner the right of any individual to keep and bear
arms." Congress passed that law and President Franklin D. Roosevelt
signed it.
Similarly, in the Firearms Owners' Protection Act of 1986, Congress
recognized "the rights of citizens to keep and bear arms under the
Second Amendment to the United States Constitution."
As the coup de grace, Frey appealed to the Machiavellian impulse: The
Second Amendment's validity must not be admitted because it would make
it harder to win cases. The same could be said about any constitutional
right.
On May 6, the VPC's "Nightmare on Elm Street" came true with
the filing of the U.S. brief in Emerson. It states that the
Second Amendment "broadly protects the rights of individuals,
including persons who are not members of any militia to possess and bear
their own firearms," excluding "possession by unfit
persons" and firearm types "particularly suited to criminal
misuse." Although the latter is fuzzy, the brief makes clear that
handguns, rifles and shotguns are protected.
Attached to the brief was a November 2001 memo from Ashcroft to all U.S.
attorneys with the words: "The department has a solemn obligation
both to enforce federal law and to respect the constitutional rights
guaranteed to Americans."
It's his respect for the Constitution that drives Ashcroft's critics
bananas, and it's that same respect that gives assurance that the office
of attorney general is held by a man of integrity.
*Stephen Halbrook, a research fellow at
the Independent Institute and
attorney in Fairfax, VA, is author of
That Every Man Be Armed and other books on the Second Amendment.
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