By Warren Richey
Christian Science Monitor
Source: Yahoo News
In a major victory for gun rights
activists, a federal appeals court ruled Thursday that concealed
firearms regulations in California violate a Second Amendment right to
bear arms in public for self-defense.
The opinion is
likely to spark renewed debate over gun control measures in a country
plagued by spontaneous shootings at schools and other public places. And
it sets the stage for a potential Second Amendment showdown at the US
Supreme Court.
The 2-to-1
decision came in a case challenging a San Diego County gun regulation
that required residents to prove they have a justifiable need to carry a
concealed weapon.
Unless the applicant could demonstrate a heightened risk to his or her safety, the permit would be denied.
The
majority judges said such a requirement cannot be imposed on a
constitutional right. Responsible, law-abiding citizens do not have to
justify whether they are under an imminent threat to their safety to
carry a gun for protection, the judges said.
The
Second Amendment guarantees to them the authority to decide for
themselves whether to carry a weapon for personal safety. At issue was
whether gun control regulations in California and San Diego prevented
citizens from exercising their Second Amendment rights.
“The question is not whether the California scheme (in light of San Diego County’s policy) allows some people to bear arms outside the home in some places at some
times; instead, the question is whether it allows the typical
responsible, law-abiding citizen to bear arms in public for the lawful
purpose of self-defense,” wrote Appeals Court Judge Diarmuid O’Scannlain
for the two-judge majority.
“To
be clear, we are not holding that the Second Amendment requires the
states to permit concealed carry,” Judge O’Scannlain said. “But the
Second Amendment does require that the states permit some form of carry for self-defense outside the home.”
California
law prohibits all gun owners from openly carrying firearms. So the only
means of exercising a right to bear arms for personal protection in
California would be to obtain a concealed carry permit.
Gun
owners challenged the San Diego permit process in federal court,
arguing that they should not have to prove they face an imminent threat
to their safety to qualify for a concealed carry permit.
County
officials defended the concealed carry permit regime, arguing that the
Supreme Court in its landmark gun rights decision in 2008 said concealed
carry restrictions were “presumptively lawful.”
The
high court observed that the majority of 19th-century courts that
examined the issue concluded that prohibitions on concealed weapons did
not violate the Second Amendment, lawyers for the county argued.
Judge
O’Scannlain brushed the point aside. He said the California/San Diego
regulations failed because they left gun owners with no choice between
open carry – which is illegal in California – and concealed carry, which
is subject to the discretion of government officials.
“California’s
favoring concealed carry over open carry does not offend the
Constitution, so long as it allows one of the two,” the judge wrote.
In
a dissent, Judge Sidney Thomas said the county’s policy was
constitutional and fully in line with the Supreme Court’s observation
that such regulations are “presumptively lawful.”
Judge
Thomas said the appeals court should have focused on that narrow
question. “There is no need to reach any other issue,” he said. “In
dealing a needless, sweeping judicial blow to the public safety
discretion invested in local law enforcement officers and to
California’s carefully constructed firearm regulatory scheme, the
majority opinion conflicts with Supreme Court authority, the decisions
of our sister circuits, and our own circuit precedent.”
To
date, four other appeals courts have examined the issue of whether the
Second Amendment protects a citizen’s right to bear arms outside the
home for self-defense.
Three
courts have upheld gun regulations, one found a broad constitutional
right. Thursday’s decision makes the split among the appeals courts 3 to
2, a substantive disagreement that increases the likelihood that the
Supreme Court will examine the issue.
“We are well aware that, in the judgment of many governments, the safest sort of firearm-carrying regime is one which restricts the privilege to law enforcement with only narrow exceptions,” he wrote.
The
judge then quoted from two recent Supreme Court decisions: “Undoubtedly
some think that the Second Amendment is outmoded in a society where our
standing army is the pride of the Nation, where well-trained police
forces provide personal security, and where gun violence is a serious
problem. That is perhaps debatable, but what is not debatable is that it
is not the role of this Court [or ours] to pronounce the Second
Amendment extinct.”
O’Scannlain
added: “Nor may we relegate the bearing of arms to a second-class
right, subject to an entirely different body of rules than other Bill of
Rights guarantees.”
The case is Peruta v. County of San Diego (10-56971).
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