Federal Courts and Nominations

7th Circuit Ruling Agrees With Sotomayor on Second Amendment

 

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit today ruled that the Second Amendment right to bear arms cannot be held to restrict state gun control laws until the Supreme Court rules that the right applies to the states.

As a result, the ruling in National Rifle Association v. Chicago will likely give Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor some much-needed political cover against criticism of a similar Second Amendment ruling she joined in on the 2nd Circuit earlier this year, Maloney v. Cuomo. In that case, using the same reasoning, the 2nd Circuit panel upheld a New York ban on numchucks, weapons made of two bars joined by a cord. Today’s ruling by 7th Circuit chief judge Frank Easterbrook specifically states, “We agree with Maloney.” Judge Richard Posner, like Easterbrook a leading conservative on the court, joined the ruling as did Judge William Bauer.

“It can’t be a big strike against her that she decided it was not in her authority to incorporate the Second Amendment against the states,” said Doug Kendall of the Constitutional Accountability Center, which argued in favor of incorporation in the Chicago case on the basis of the Constitution’s “privileges or immunities” clause.

The Easterbrook decision noted that the Supreme Court in last year’s D.C. v. Heller decision, which struck down a D.C. handgun ban, nonetheless left open whether the right to bear arms applies to state regulation. Since nineteenth century precedents that went against incorporation still stand, Easterbrook said appeals courts are not entitled to “strike off on their own.” As a result, the 7th Circuit panel declined to apply Heller to laws in Chicago and Oak Park Illinois that ban the possession of most handguns. How and whether to apply a right to states is “for the justices rather than a court of appeals,” Easterbrook wrote. The nine-page decision was issued a week after the case was argued.

The ruling today deepens a circuit split on the issue that will almost certainly draw the attention of the Supreme Court. While both the New York and Chicago rulings go against incorporation, the 9th Circuit’s decision April 20 in Nordyke v. King did apply the Second Amendment to the states. Nordyke is under consideration for en banc review. Petitioners in the New York case, now titled Maloney v. Rice, have until June 29 to file their appeal to the Supreme Court. If that is the case the Court agrees to review to resolve the split, and if Sotomayor is confirmed as a justice, custom would keep her from participating because she ruled on it below. But if another case becomes the vehicle for the next major Second Amendment ruling, she could join in.

 

More from Federal Courts and Nominations

Federal Courts and Nominations
January 17, 2024

The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights Sign-On Letter Prioritizing Diverse Judges

Dear Senator, On behalf of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights and the...
Federal Courts and Nominations
July 31, 2023

Liberal justices earn praise for ‘independence’ on Supreme Court, but Thomas truly stands alone, expert says

Fox News
Some democrats compare Justice Clarence Thomas to ‘Uncle Tom’ and house slave in ‘Django Unchained’
By: Elizabeth B. Wydra, By Brianna Herlihy
Federal Courts and Nominations
July 7, 2023

In Her First Term, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson ‘Came to Play’

The New York Times
From her first week on the Supreme Court bench in October to the final day...
By: Elizabeth B. Wydra, by Adam Liptak
Federal Courts and Nominations
July 8, 2023

The Supreme Court’s continuing march to the right

CNN
Major legal rulings that dismantled the use of race in college admissions, undermined protections for...
By: Elizabeth B. Wydra, by Tierney Sneed
Federal Courts and Nominations
June 25, 2023

Federal judge defends Clarence Thomas in new book, rejects ‘pot shots’ at Supreme Court

CNN
A federal appeals court judge previously on short lists for the Supreme Court is taking the rare...
By: Elizabeth B. Wydra
Federal Courts and Nominations
May 1, 2023

Supreme Court, done with arguments, turns to decisions

Roll Call
The justices have released opinions at a slow rate this term, and many of the...
By: Brianne J. Gorod, By Michael Macagnone