Tag Archives: Second Amendment

October Term 2020 — Supreme Court Preview (Part Two)

As we saw in Part One, COVID-19 has caused a rather unique set-up for the first two argument sessions of the upcoming term.  October are the cases that would have been argued last term but for COVID-19 requiring the postponement of arguments.  As such, as the more politically significant cases were heard in May, October features very few “political” cases.   On the other hand, highlighted by the on-going attempt of the Republicans to use the courts to undo the Affordable Care Act, November has several very significant cases.

There are two big cases on December’s docket.  First, there is the on-going disputes related to President Trump’s legal troubles.  In particular, Trump’s taxpayer-funded law firm (the Department of Justice) is trying to block the House Judiciary Committee from obtaining grand jury transcripts from the Mueller investigation that might be demonstrate that Trump committed impeachable offenses.  The technical issue is whether the House Judiciary Committee when doing a preliminary investigation into impeachment fits within the limited group authorized by the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure to access grand jury testimony.

Second, there is a case-involving the Federal Housing Finance Agency (one of the agencies created after the Bush financial market crash of 2008) and whether it is legally-structured.  We saw a similar case this past term involving the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau.  So, even if the Republicans do not manage to get another conservative judicial activist onto the Court before this argument, the odds of a ruling upholding the validity of the restrictions on removal are slim and none. Continue Reading...

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The Argument That Wasn’t — Will the Supreme Court Address Gun Rights This Term?

When I attended law school, the general consensus of legal scholars and the controlling cases held that the Second Amendment protected a “collective” right rather than an individual right.  However, around that time, a movement was starting among conservative interest groups (with some support from conservative scholars) to push the idea that there was an individual aspect to the Second Amendment.  The historical argument on this issue is murky due, in large part, to the way that cases were decided pre-1800.  About a decade ago, conservatives prevailed (by a 5-4 vote) in having the Supreme Court hold that individuals did have some rights under the Second Amendment and that those rights were “incorporated” against the states by the Fourteenth Amendment.  However, to get to five votes, the Supreme Court left unaddressed much of the details about the nature of the right protected by the Second Amendment.

Since the Supreme Court issued its two opinions, lower courts have been handling challenges to individual laws restricting the ability to purchase firearms — some involving the type of gun, some involving who can purchase firearms, and some involving other details.  The decisions in these cases have been somewhat narrower than pro-gun activists would like.  They have been hoping to get a case to the Supreme Court so that the Supreme Court could establish the legal test that will be applied in Second Amendment cases.  Earlier this year, conservatives thought that they had found the perfect test case.

Last January, the Supreme Court granted review in New York Rifle and Pistol Association vs. New York, NY.  The case involves a challenge to a New York city ordinance that is very restrictive on where gunowners can take their guns.  (Basically, New York State has two types of permits for gun ownership — one only covers general ownership — sometimes referred to as a target license and sometimes referred to as a premises license — and the other permits carrying a weapon — a carry license.  The New York City ordinance provided that people who only have the general permit can only take their gun out of their in-city home to go to an in-city gun range and could not take them to a second home outside the city or to an out-of-city gun range.)  Seeing the writing on the wall, New York State passed a new gun law that essentially invalidated the New York City ordinance and New York City repealed its ordinance and passed a new one that was significantly less restrictive. Continue Reading...

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Supreme Court Term Preview: October 2019 (Part III)

As noted in Part I and Part II of this series, there are some very big cases in the first two months of the upcoming Supreme Court term — the applicability of Title VII to sexual orientation and issues related to the board managing Puerto Rico’s debt in October and DACA in November.  Likewise, December has a big case — maybe.

That big case — New York State Rifle and Pistol Association vs. City of New York — is currently set on the first day of the December argument session.  At issue is a New York City ordinance which limits the transportation of firearms by gunowners.  The corporate gun lobby has pushed a Second Amendment challenge to this ordinance. Now, for the catch.  When the Supreme Court took this case, New York City and New York State saw the writing on the wall with this Court.  The original ordinance probably went too far even for those who want tighter restrictions on the sale of handguns.  So New York City repealed the original ordinance and passed a new less restrictive ordinance, and New York State passed legislation clarifying the powers of cities in this matter.  Because the ordinance being challenged no longer exists, the City wants the Supreme Court to dismiss the case as there is no longer a live “controversy” — and under the Constitution the Supreme Court can only hear “cases and controversies.”  There are exceptions which allow a court to review repealed statutes and, one of the issues at the October 1 term opening conference is whether to dismiss this case or keep it on the calendar for argument.

The second case on December 2 involves how copyright law applies to government documents.  Generally speaking, past decisions hold that governments are not allowed to copyright judicial opinions or statutes.  So, any person can go to the library (or an internet site) and copy a judicial opinion or a statute and then establish their own internet site (or publish and sell their own books) containing those opinions or statutes.  This limitation on government copyrights assure that the public has access to the decisions of their government.  One of the things that publishers do to enhance value is create “annotated” copies of statutes — a version in which each statute is followed by a series of notes setting forth the cases that have considered that statute and what those cases have held.  For the most part, these annotated versions are created by private companies.  Georgia, however, has an official copy of its annotated statutes.  The issue is — since a state can’t copyright its statutes or court cases — whether a state can copyright an annotated version of its statutes.  Many of the main legal publishing companies have filed briefs generally in support of Georgia (for fear that a holding in favor of the public interest groups in this case might eventually be used to attack their copyrights on their annotations as well). Continue Reading...

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Supreme Court — End of Term

The Supreme Court recessed for the summer after their last conference (the wrap-up conference) on Monday afternoon.  After the order from that conference was issued on Tuesday morning, the Supreme Court has filled twenty-nine of the thirty argument slots for the fall.  (A little below average as they normally have some carry-over for the January argument session. )

Monday featured three significant opinions — the Texas abortion case, Governor McDonnell’s corruption case, and an interesting case involving gun control and domestic violence.  These cases saw some interesting combinations of Justices as very different judicial philosophies combine to reach the same result.

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