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Monday, April 27, 2020

Supreme Court Rules That Challenge to New York City Gun Restriction is Moot

Amy Howe at SCOTUSblog writes:

The Supreme Court sent a major Second Amendment case back to the lower courts today, ruling that the challenge to a New York City restriction on the transport of guns is “moot” – that is, no longer a live controversy – because the city changed the rule last year. But some of the court’s more conservative justices signaled that it might not be long before the court takes up another gun rights case.
The case is New York State Rifle & Pistol Assn., Inc. v. City of New York.  I wrote about this case back in January 2019 when the Court granted cert, noting that this was the first major Second Amendment case that the Court had agreed to hear in over a decade. Details on the ordinance at issue and the petitioners' challenge can be found there.

As I noted then, the Court was likely to overturn New York City's restriction in light of Kavanaugh's appointment. But after the Court agreed to review the law, New York City amended its rule so that people could transport firearms to second homes or to shooting ranges outside of the city. In its opinion today, the Court notes that this was the relief that the petitioners had sought.

While the Court's mootness determination avoids engagement with the substance of the Second Amendment challenge, several Justices either disagreed with the decision, or explicitly stated that the Court should take up a Second Amendment case.

Justices Alito, joined by Gorsuch and (for the most part) by Thomas, dissented. The dissent concluded that the case was not moot, and determined that New York City's ordinance violated the Second Amendment.  To quickly summarize the Second Amendment analysis: the dissent found that the New York City ordinance infringed on the right to keep a handgun in the home for self-defense because it restricted people from taking guns out of the home for certain purposes necessary to exercise that right, such as repairing the gun or taking the gun to a range for practice. The dissent found that the ordinance's restriction on taking firearms outside of the city to practice at ranges was impermissible, since gun ranges may not have the same models of firearms available, and because the City could not identify restrictions on taking firearms outside of municipal limits during the founding era. The dissent also took issue with the City's claims that the restriction served a purpose of promoting public safety.

This case originally looked like it would be the next major Supreme Court case to interpret the Second Amendment. With its mootness determination, the Court sidestepped this outcome. But the layout of the opinions gives a preview of the Court's next steps on the Second Amendment. Kavanaugh's concurrence all but confirms that he will join Alito, Gorsuch, and Thomas in voting to grant certiorari to a Second Amendment challenge in the near future, and once that happens this process will begin again.

[Updated 4/28/2020]

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