Via NRA-ILA Here
Dick Anthony Heller, the lead plaintiff in the historic 2008 Supreme
Court case that invalidated D.C.’s handgun ban, has once again
successfully challenged D.C.’s oppressive gun control regime. Today, the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit issued a ruling in the
NRA-supported case of Heller v. District of Columbia (Heller III),
bringing further relief to the beleaguered law-abiding gun owners of
the nation’s capital. While the court did not totally invalidate D.C.’s
onerous registration regime, today’s ruling is an important step in
bringing gun ownership within reach to more of D.C.’s upstanding
residents.
Following the Supreme Court’s rebuke in the original
Heller case, an unrepentant D.C. Council immediately set out to make
the lawful keeping and bearing of arms in the District as expensive,
time-consuming, and difficult as possible. Intrepid reporter Emily
Miller chronicled her own experience negotiating D.C.’s firearm
registration process between 2011 and 2012 in a series of reports for the Washington Times that later formed the basis for a book. At the time, registration involved a 17-step process, $465 in fees
(not including the price of the gun), five hours of mandatory training
that had to be completed outside the District, and multiple trips to
D.C. Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) headquarters during business
hours.
Thanks to a combination of political advocacy, media
exposé, and litigation, the hurdles and expense of D.C.’s firearm
registration process have been whittled down over the years.
Nevertheless, the District has consistently remained one of the most
difficult places in the U.S. to acquire a firearm lawfully. The
plaintiffs in Heller III challenged numerous aspects of the remaining
law, including its application to long guns; the requirement for
applicants to appear at police headquarters to be fingerprinted,
photographed, and to submit their registration paperwork; the
requirement that registrants bring their firearms into police
headquarters; the expiration of the registration after three years;
various fees; the mandatory training requirements; the requirement of
passing a test on D.C. law; and a prohibition on the same person
registering more than one handgun during any 30-day period.
District officials attempted to justify these requirements on the basis
of “protecting police officers” and “promoting public safety.”
Significantly, the court of appeals found that “the District has not
offered substantial evidence from which one could draw a reasonable
conclusion that the challenged requirements will protect police officers
….”
Citing the testimony the of one of the District’s own
witnesses, the court noted that police are trained to account for the
possible presence of dangerous weapons in any situation where they might
encounter a crime in progress, a domestic dispute, or any other
potentially violent environment. This is so, the expert acknowledged,
even when responding to calls at locations without registered weapons.
In any event, the evidence in the case revealed that MPD officers very
rarely even bother to check the firearm registry when responding to a
call, conducting an investigation, or executing a search warrant.
The court also determined that several of the challenged registration
requirements did not promote public safety, including the requirement
that applicants bring the firearms they wish to register to MPD
headquarters; the three-year expiration and re-registration requirement;
the required test of legal knowledge; and the limitation of registering
one handgun per person during any 30 day period.
Accordingly, it held that all of these requirements offended the Second Amendment and are unenforceable.
The court rejected the premise that limiting the number of firearms
lawfully present in a home is a valid argument for gun control, even if
it could reduce the harm that could be caused by firearms generally.
“Accepting that as true,” the court wrote, “it does not justify
restricting an individual’s undoubted constitutional right to keep arms
(plural) in his or her home, whether for self-defense or hunting or just
collecting, because, taken to its logical conclusion, that reasoning
would justify a total ban on firearms kept in the home.” This may be one
of the most significant aspects of the decision, as discouraging lawful
gun ownership has been the cornerstone of D.C.’s approach to gun
control.
While these developments will bring substantial
benefits to those who wish to lawfully own guns in D.C., the court still
upheld the balance of the registration procedure. If history is any
guide, moreover, the District may seek further review of the court’s
decision, or it may simply enact other impediments to firearm ownership,
which will require further court testing at taxpayer expense. Thus,
while pro-gun advocates should cheer the court’s ruling, it also merely
underscores the ongoing necessity of the D.C. Second Amendment Enforcement Act, which would comprehensively reform D.C.’s gun control laws and prohibit future abuses by the D.C. Council.
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