WASHINGTON
- The Supreme Court is being asked to overturn an
appeals court ruling that said the Constitution does not
guarantee people a personal right to own a gun.
The court's past rulings on Second Amendment gun rights -
many in the 1800s - are a mess that should be straightened out
when the justices return from their summer break, an appeal
being filed Thursday at the court said.
The appeal relates to one of two closely watched cases from
the liberal-leaning 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San
Francisco. The high court will also decide later this year
whether to review a 9th Circuit ruling that banned teacher-led
reciting of the Pledge of Allegiance in public schools because
of the phrase "under God."
The gun case includes an unlikely group of challengers - not
the National Rifle Association or other organized groups, but
some rugby teammates and friends. They include a police SWAT
officer, a Purple Heart recipient, a former Marine sniper, a
parole officer, a stockbroker and others with varied political
views. They had sued the state over laws banning high-powered
weapons.
"Citizens need the Second Amendment for protection of
their families, homes and businesses," their attorney and
rugby teammate, Gary Gorski of Fair Oaks, Calif., wrote in the
appeal of a ruling that upheld California's assault weapons ban.
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."
The 9th Circuit panel said the amendment's intent was to
protect gun rights of militias, not individuals. A more
conservative appeals court in New Orleans has ruled that
individuals have a constitutional right to guns.
Eugene Volokh, a constitutional law professor at the
University of California, Los Angeles, said the Supreme Court's
record on the Second Amendment is thin and odds are against the
justices taking the case.
"The court hasn't jumped into it since 1939," he
said. "At some point the Supreme Court will want to make
sure it is interpreted consistently throughout the nation."
The case brings a politically charged issue to the court just
before the presidential election. If justices agree to hear the
case, it will be scheduled for argument next year.
Last year, gun-control advocates were dismayed by the Bush
administration's endorsement of individual gun-ownership rights,
in a filing at the Supreme Court that effectively reversed
long-standing federal government policy on interpreting the
Second Amendment.
The administration could weigh in now in this case. Mathew
Nosanchuk, litigation director for the pro-gun control Violence
Policy Center, said it's better strategy for the White House to
steer clear of the issue. The California case involves a state
assault weapons ban, and there is controversy over whether
Congress should renew a federal assault weapons ban next year.
President Bush has said he supports extending the federal
ban, but sentiment is strong in the GOP-controlled Congress to
let the ban expire and Bush has not put much energy into efforts
to extend it.
Some advocates on both sides probably want the justices to
decline to review the 9th Circuit ruling, said gun rights
attorney Stephen Halbrook. "It's a wild card. You really
can't read where they'll go."
He also said the case is complicated because it involves
questions about state authority to undercut gun rights and
whether the challengers had standing to sue the state.
ON THE NET
9th Circuit: http://www.ce9.uscourts.gov
Volokh's archive on gun rulings: http://www.law.ucla.edu/faculty/volokh/2amteach/sources.htm