September 23, 2003, 9:25 a.m.
The Silveira
Threat
How long will the Second
Amendment live?
Silveira v. Lockyer
is a Second Amendment lawsuit which has, according to Gun
Week (Sept. 1) "gained almost cult status among gun
owners." This status is mostly to the benefit of the
gun-prohibition lobby, for Silveira has already seriously
harmed Second Amendment rights, and the damage may not be
over.
The suit was filed in February 2000, to challenge the 1999
amendments to the 1989 California "assault-weapon"
control act (AWCA). The complaint blew its credibility on at
the very beginning, opening with a fabricated quote attributed
to Hitler. The quote has been circulating among gun activists
for years, but scholars who have examined German newspapers
which reported all of Der Fόhrer's speeches in great
detail have found no evidence that the quote was actually
uttered. Hitler was certainly a gun-control
enthusiast, but the quote is phony.
The Silveira complaint further damaged its
credibility by shoe-horning an overwhelming number of claims
into the suit, including a challenge to the California system
for discretionary issuance of concealed-weapons permits.
Courts often consider such scattershot complaints as the mark
of cranks, and not as persuasive legal argument.
Gary W. Gorski, the
attorney who filed the suit said he felt it was necessary
because the NRA was not doing anything to fight the
"assault-weapon" law. Aside from the fact that NRA
and California Rifle and Pistol Association unsuccessfully
sued against the ban in 1990-92 (Fresno Rifle & Pistol
Club v. Van de Kamp), a new NRA-CRPA-supported
lawsuit was being prepared when the Silveira lawsuit
was filed. Styled Hunt v. California and filed
in September 2001, after the California Department of Justice
(DOJ) promulgated regulations, this case is proceeding in
Fresno superior court. Fresno District Attorney Ed Hunt and
Mendocino District Attorney Norm Vroman are lead plaintiffs.
This prosecutor suit is unprecedented, pitting the chief
law-enforcement officers of two counties (the DAs) against the
chief law-enforcement officer in the state (the attorney
general). It has survived two attempts by the DOJ to have it
dismissed, and is now moving toward trial.
Quite clearly, a lawsuit which carefully attacks specific
administrative regulations, and which supported by district
attorneys who claim that the regulations are
unconstitutionally vague, has a much more realistic chance of
success than an direct attack on a statute enacted by the
legislature.
According to Chuck Michel, a former Los Angeles district
attorney who now specializes in firearms law, when he and
other attorneys experienced in Second Amendment litigation
learned of the Silveira case, they contacted Gorski.
They informed Gorski of the pending Fresno district-attorney
lawsuit to challenge the "assault-weapon" ban. They
also advised Gorski about the notorious institutional
hostility to the Second Amendment in the overwhelmingly
leftist Ninth Circuit. They explained that there was a
nationwide strategy by the pro-self-defense community to
advance the Second Amendment and fight repressive gun-control
laws. The expert attorneys urged Gorski to dismiss the Silveira
case, but he refused.
I interviewed Gorski by e-mail, and you can read the full
text of the interview here.
Gorski argues that the vagueness challenge is "like
challenging the banning of black people from public restrooms
because the law's unclear or poorly written." This is
precisely right. As I argued yesterday,
Second Amendment activists should follow the successful
strategy of the NAACP in destroying segregation laws. The
NAACP didn't bring cases which were bound to lose such as
challenging Mississippi's restroom segregation laws in 1935.
Rather, the NAACP carefully brought cases which could be won
under any theory even a theory which didn't challenge
segregation and used those cases as building blocks for
future, bigger victories in subsequent decades.
The defendants in the Silveira case were the
California Department of Justice and extremely antigun
California Attorney General Bill Lockyer. DOJ filed a motion
to dismiss, and in December 2000 the trial-court judge granted
the DOJ's motion, holding that the Second Amendment does not
protect any individual right.
Many of the Silveira plaintiffs mostly rugby
buddies of Gorski may not have had a legally sufficient
interest in the issues presented to have legitimate
"standing" to bring the case in the first place.
According to a San Francisco Chronicle interview (Dec.
23, 2002) with Gorski, not all of the plaintiffs even owned a
gun, and those who did own guns did not necessarily own guns
that the new law designated as "assault weapons."
The effect of the standing problem was that the case could
have been thrown out of court on procedural grounds, as the
DOJ urged in its motion to dismiss the case.
Instead, the antigun trial judge took the marvelous
opportunity created by the Silveira case to render an
opinion that would harm the Second Amendment.
On January 11, 2001, the plaintiffs filed their appeal to
the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, by far the most leftist
federal appellate court in the country. At that point that
Ninth Circuit had already rejected the Second Amendment at
least four times, holding that it does not create a
fundamental individual right, and also that it is not a
restriction on state laws because the Second Amendment only
applies to the federal government. Fresno Rifle &
Pistol Club v. Van de Kamp, 965 F. 2d 723 (9th Cir.
1992); Hickman v. Block, 81 F. 3d 998 (9th Cir.
1996), cert denied, 519 U. S. 912 (1996); San Diego
County Gun Rights Committee v. Reno, 98 F. 3d 11121
(9th Cir. 1996); United States v. Mack, 164 F.3d
467, 474 (9th Cir. 1999).
These four cases from the past decade plainly revealed the
Ninth Circuit's hostility to the Second Amendment, and
demonstrated that it would be impossible to get a favorable
ruling on the Second Amendment in this forum. Though the
previous decisions were brief, they were final. The issue was
settled. Only an en banc review of a three member panel
could change the Ninth Circuit's position; no three-judge
panel can overrule a decision by a previous three-judge panel.
Experienced Second Amendment attorneys have long ago decided
to avoid the Second Amendment issues in the Ninth Circuit.
(The Fresno district attorney case is about vagueness, not the
Second Amendment).
The three-judge appellate panel randomly selected to hear
the Silveira case had two Democratic appointees,
including Judge Stephen Reinhardt, the most prominent leftist
judge in the country. The adverse outcome in Silveira
was a foregone conclusion. The appeal could have, and should
have, been withdrawn at that point.
But Gorski did not withdraw the appeal. Portions of his
appellate brief are well-written, and provide a good summary
of caselaw and scholarship on the Second Amendment. Other
portions are fanciful, at best, such as Gorski's argument that
because the California constitution explicitly recognizes the
United States Constitution as "the supreme law of the
land," California "thereby incorporated the Second
Amendment into its own Constitution."
Factual arguments about the non-dangerousness of
"assault weapons" often appeared without supporting
citation even though there are many books and law-journal
articles which could have cited.
Not all of the Silveira appellate brief was written
in standard English: "...whether the state of California
can ban all firearms, and confiscate those in possession of
its citizens, such as what just happened in Australia."
Understandably, there is no citation for "such as what
just happened in Australia," because Australia has banned
and confiscated only some firearms, not all firearms. The
phrasing might be acceptable in a letter to the editor of a
gun magazine, but is not appropriate in a federal appellate
court brief which expects to be taken seriously.
It is less likely that a judge will take a brief seriously
if the attorney writes "Defendants fair no better under a
rationale basis test." The properly spelled sentence
would be "Defendants fare no better under a rational
basis test."
The California Department of Justice filed its opposition
brief. Then, Gorski did not file a reply brief in response to
the DOJ's brief, although he was entitled to do so.
The DOJ made important arguments in its opposition brief,
many of them incorrect. Because of Gorski's failure to file a
reply brief, those errors went unchallenged. For instance, DOJ
asserted that under the individual rights view of the Second
Amendment, no limits could be placed on the type of arms one
may possess under the individual-rights view. Actually, as a
reply brief could have explained, numerous state-court
decisions which could have been cited in a reply brief
uphold an individual right to arms, while allowing
restrictions on particularly dangerous arms.
The Silveira panel could have written a terse
decision citing the four recent Ninth Circuit cases, and
dismissing the appeal. Instead, Judge Reinhardt seized the
opportunity to write a very lengthy opinion holding that the
Second Amendment does not guarantee an individual right. Silveira
v. Lockyer, 312 F.3d 1052, as amended, 328 F.3d
567, reh. denied, 2003 WL 21004622 (9th Cir. 2003).
Why did Judge Reinhardt take the Silveira case
seriously enough to write a major new opinion denigrating the
Second Amendment, the most comprehensive such opinion ever
published in any American court? The answer lies in the Emerson
case, in which a long opinion from the Fifth Circuit
vindicated the Second Amendment individual right, while
upholding a particular gun control as applied to a particular
individual.
Emerson impelled Judge Reinhardt to issue a massive
opinion that purports to rebut the holding by the Emerson
court. This, in turn, provided anti-Second Amendment forces
the precedential case authority they desperately needed to
rebut Emerson in every forum where it might be cited,
from legal briefs to media discussions.
Before Emerson, there were a significant number of
cases from federal district courts and federal courts of
appeal which said that the Second Amendment does not guarantee
an individual right. These opinions were superficial and
conclusory. They provided almost no legal reasoning which
would persuade a neutral reader. That is one reason the Fifth
Circuit Court of Appeals, upholding the individual right in
the Emerson case, had little trouble splitting from
other circuits.
The Ninth Circuit's Silveira opinion, however,
changes everything. Silveira is
a deeply flawed opinion, but it is not a superficial one.
A conscientious federal judge in another circuit, hearing a
Second Amendment case, might reasonably dismiss all the other
the anti-rights federal court opinions from district and
appellate courts as proving nothing. The Silveira
opinion, however, cannot be so dismissed; it is wrong, but
understanding why it is wrong requires a judge to delve deeply
into the legal scholarship and history of the Second
Amendment. Not all federal judges will be interested in doing
so.
In short, the Silveira attorney led with his (and
our) chins. He brought a foolish case, and persisted even when
it was clear that he had no reasonable chance of success on
appeal. His failure to file a reply brief was terrible. The
fruit of his labor is a horrendous Ninth Circuit opinion which
will harm the Second Amendment for years to come.
Gorski did win one point in the Ninth Circuit opinion; the
California law exempted retired police officers from the gun
prohibition. The court ruled that this exemption was an
irrational violation of the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal
Protection guarantee, and removed the exemption from the
statute. This ruling is helpful to gun rights, because it
means that, in the Ninth Circuit at least, future gun bans
which are enacted will also apply to retired police;
accordingly, gun bans will be harder to enact. (Such bans will
not be impossible however; they will simply need to invent
some connection between the retired officer and the gun he
wishes to posses; for example, the officer has received police
training in use of roughly similar types of guns.)
But even this one-issue victory was squandered. Gorski did
not brief the issue of severability; if he had, the court
would have been shown precedent showing that if the police
exemption clause was unconstitutional, the rest of the statute
could not be "severed" and remain law. Moreover, the
Ninth Circuit's criminalization of "assault-weapon"
possession by police officers is itself plainly
unconstitutional. A court has no authority to expand the scope
of a criminal law, and make the law apply to people whom the
legislature explicitly intended not to criminalize.
The plaintiffs in Silveira petitioned the Ninth
Circuit for an en banc review of the case. The
petition, not unexpectedly, was denied. Silveira v. Lockyer,
2003 WL 21004622 (9th Cir. 2003). That was silver lining on
the cloud, in that an en banc opinion against the
Second Amendment would be worse than the current panel
decision by Judge Reinhardt.
Six judges joined in four dissents from the denial of
rehearing. The dissenting opinions of Judges Kozinski,
Kleinfeld, and Gould supported the individual-rights
interpretation of the Second Amendment. The dissent of liberal
Judge Pregerson also did so, while stating that the right to
keep and bear arms "is subject to reasonable restrictions
such as those embedded in the statute the California
legislature enacted."
The Ninth Circuit is not the proper circuit to litigate the
Second Amendment. It is like bringing a 1946 test case on
racial segregation in a Mississippi court. The Second
Amendment to the Bill of Rights does have friends on federal
courts in other parts of the country. The case law should be
developed there.
Gorski has filed a petition for a writ of certiorari in the
U.S. Supreme Court. Should the Court grant cert.,
lawyers for the gun-prohibition groups should jump for joy.
Not because they are certain of winning on the Second
Amendment issue, because they might well lose. But because
they are much better off with Silveira being the Second
Amendment showdown case, than in almost any other possible
case.
First, future Courts are going to get worse, not better,
for the gun prohibitionists. Retirement of Justice O'Connor
could remove a potential swing vote the prohibitionists very
much need. (Rehnquist, Scalia, and Thomas are near-certain
votes for an individual right.)
Second, if cert is granted in Silveira, the
lead attorney would not be Stephen Halbrook, who has a 3-0
record on gun cases in the Supreme Court. Nor would the lawyer
be Charles Cooper, the former Department of Justice official
who helped win the Emerson case.
The Silveira petition for certiorari does not
generate confidence that a winning case would be presented to
the Court. The petition unnecessarily suggests that one of the
Court's major gun cases from the 19th century, Cruikshank,
needs to be overruled, although the case is not a barrier to
application of the Second Amendment to the states via the Due
Process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Likewise, the
petition argues that the 1939 Miller case should be
limited or overruled, although this case is not inconsistent
with an individual Second Amendment right.
The five most-likely votes for Second Amendment rights on
the Supreme Court are all supporters of state's rights
making a challenge to a state statute an especially bad
context for a Second Amendment case. Moreover, the Court has
never decisively ruled that the Second Amendment is a limit on
state power (as opposed to being a limit on federal power),
and it seems unwise to litigate in a situation requiring two
major favorable decisions by the Court (on the meaning Second
Amendment itself, plus its incorporation against the states).
Moreover, "assault weapons" are an awful test
case to bring to the Court. Gun experts understand that
so-called "assault weapons" are merely ordinary guns
with politically incorrect cosmetics. The justices, however,
live in the Beltway, where the media have provided them with
an almost unrelieved stream of vitriol about "assault
weapons" and the kind of people who own them. It would
surely be better for a major Second Amendment test case to
involve more "ordinary" guns, which would not
require the plaintiffs to spend an extensive section of their
finite briefing pages in explaining the technicalities of the
particular guns.
Given the media climate over "assault weapons,"
it is inconceivable that the Court would rule in Silveira's
favor. At best, the Court's opinion might uphold the Second
Amendment as an individual right, while affirming California's
ban 9-0 or 8-1. This kind of loss would seriously harm efforts
to prevent renewal of the federal "assault-weapons"
ban, which is scheduled to sunset in September 2004. Such a
loss would also make it easier for gun-prohibition lobbies to
pass "assault-weapons" bans in various state
legislatures.
At worst, a 5-4 or 6-3 Supreme Court majority might declare
the Second Amendment to protect no individual right at all.
The odds of such a ruling are increased if the case arises in
a context likely to offend Justice O'Connor's affection for
state's rights, and involving guns which she is likely to know
almost nothing about since she grew up on an Arizona ranch
long before "assault weapons" became popular among
competitive target shooters.
Gorski claims that if cert. is granted, he will in win the
case invalidating the "assault-weapon" ban 7-2 or
9-0. He told me that the reason he is so confident is that he
is right on the merits, and will therefore win, "unless
you believe that the Supreme Court cannot be trusted."
Well, he is right on the merits, and of course the Supreme
Court can't be trusted. The number of cases in which the
current Court has upheld bogus constitutional theories, or has
been willingly duped by lawyers for politically correct causes
is rather large. Just this summer, a majority of the Court
ignored the explicit and unmistakable ban on racial
discrimination in the Civil Rights Act of 1964, in order to
permit state-based racial discrimination. If the Court can
ignore a statute which is exactly on point and has no
ambiguity, the Court can surely find reasons to evade the
original intent of the Second Amendment, and also to ignore
the Court's precedents on the Second Amendment.
The fundamental error of prohibition is trying to alleviate
the problem of gun misuse but ignoring the ancient medical
admonition which should be the first rule of public policy as
well as medicine: in trying to cure problems first make
sure that you do no harm. The Silveira decision is
the disastrous result of ignoring that admonition. The Ninth
Circuit loss was as predictable as it was avoidable.
Silveira and cases like it are worse than playing
Russian Roulette with our freedoms, and the freedoms of our
heirs. With Russian roulette, the odds of not getting harmed
are 5/6. The odds are much worse in Silveira, with the only
question being the type of self-inflicted damage.
In the coming decades and centuries, our children and our
children's children will not care if the Supreme Court
decisively vindicates the Second Amendment in 2004 or 2008.
They will care only if we win, whenever it happens. But if the
wrong case results in a devastating Supreme Court decision,
future generations will live with the consequences, and they
will justifiably blame the men who ended up helping the
gun-prohibition lobby.
Dave
Kopel is co-author of Supreme
Court Gun Cases.