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| Supreme Court to Rule in Second Amendment Case | | Print | |
| Written by James Heiser | ||||||||
| Monday, 05 October 2009 08:00 | ||||||||
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(However, the Supreme Court did permit onerous legal restrictions on the storage and use of such firearms as dictated by the laws of the district as to essentially enervate the functional significance of Heller.) Now the court will consider McDonald v. Chicago, and the ruling will potentially affect gun laws throughout the states of the union. According to an article in the Los Angeles Times, At issue is whether state and local gun-control ordinances can be struck down as violating the "right to keep and bear arms" in the 2nd Amendment. A ruling on the issue, due by next summer, could open the door to legal challenges to various gun control measures in cities and states across the nation. The case also will decide whether the 2nd Amendment protects a broad constitutional right, similar to the 1st Amendment's right to free speech or the 4th Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches and seizures. The challenge in McDonald v. Chicago centers on the 14th Amendment. Again, according to the Los Angeles Times: Lawyers for the gun owners argued that "the right of the people to keep and bear arms" set out in the 2nd Amendment is "incorporated" into the 14th Amendment and thereby applies to states and localities.... After the Civil War, the 14th Amendment was added to the Constitution, and it says a state may not "abridge the privileges and immunities" of citizens nor deprive any person of "liberty ... without due process of law." In the mid-20th century, the Supreme Court decided, in a step-by-process, that such fundamental rights as the freedom of speech, the free exercise of religion and the freedom from "unreasonable searches" are part of the "liberty" protected by 14th Amendment. These rulings permit constitutional challenges to state and local laws. The appeal to the Supreme Court in McDonald v. Chicago relies on the so-called “Equal Protection Class” in Section 1 of the 14th Amendment: “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” But the Supreme Court has thus far not ruled that the "right to keep and bear arms" is part of the liberty the 14th Amendment protects. The lawyers for the gun owners hope to win such a ruling, thereby prohibiting not only federal violations of the Second Amendment but violations by state and local governments as well. Trackback(0)
Comments (4)
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Flu-Bird
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Second Amendment We shouldnt need a court ruling its in the US constitution no matter what stupid blabbering liberals say |
still free
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"An armed society is a polite society." Even though Sotomayor is on the bench, will she be able to actually cast a vote on this issue? I thought she had some sort of interim period of being akin to a law clerk. Or is that internship, for lack of a better word, over now? Regardless of the decision, the crooks have no need to concern themselves ... the illegal weapons will continue to flow freely. |
ron2112
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Were not in AMERICA any-more Do you realy believe these PUBeLICken SERVENTS care about the constitution, The only thing these people care about is $$$$$. Pure and simple, MONEY and POWER. We haven't been in America, at least not the America the founding fathers left us, for a long time now. Wev'e lost more rights than we ever had. Just look back over the last one hundred years the restrictions that have been put on us look at the tax's wev'e endured, the freedoms wev'e lost and how many politicions get away with things you or I would be rotting in jail for. nope we aint in the america I remember. how about you! |
bigfoot62
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I hope Mcdonald wins, but This is a tricky case and at the wrong time with the current administration and the newest liberal justice in place. The court may well rule that the 2nd amendment stands on its own without need for protection under the 14th amendment. The Heller case hasn't had much impact in DC as the restrictions are still in place despite the supposedly uplifted outright ban. If Chicago loses they will just change the language of the handgun ban to one of numerous restrictions effectively doing much of the same thing without actually saying it. The local papers will ignore it until a defense can be implemented The whole political system in Chicago/Cook County is rabidly anti gun and will throw numerous monkey wrenches into any repeal of the Jane Byrne handgun ban. Jeep used to advertise that "we wrote the book on 4 wheel drive" and Chicago wrote the yet unpublished book on 100+ years of corruption. |





The Supreme Court will soon face its first post-Sotomayor test concern Second Amendment liberties. The landmark District of Columbia v. Heller case last year overturned the D.C. ban on gun ownership, maintaining that Second Amendment liberties could not be abridged in the federal district.

