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The Second Amendment: The Gun Controversy

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Title: The Second Amendment: The Gun Controversy


1
Chapter 7
  • The Second Amendment The Gun Controversy

2
Historical Background
  • The Second Amendment was drafted in a time when
    fear of tyranny from a strong central government
    was very strong.
  • The militia was considered to be the entire adult
    male populace. They were not simply allowed to
    keep arms, but were required to do so by law.

3
Historical Background
  • Most states mandated that all males between
    certain ages be
  • members of the militia
  • Be armed and taught military duty.
  • James Madison emphasized to citizens they had
    the advantage of being armed, which the
    Americans possess over the people of almost every
    other nation.

4
Who is the militia?
  • The militia is generally considered to consist of
    National Guard units in every state armed with
    government-supplied and owned sophisticated
    modern weaponry.

5
The controversy
  • The central controversy over the Second Amendment
    is whether people have a right to bear arms as
    individuals rather than only as part of a militia.

6
Individual Rights v. States Rights
  • Two opposing interpretations of the Second
    Amendment involve whether
  • the amendment guarantees the right of individuals
    to keep and bear arms or
  • whether it guarantees the states freedom from
    federal government infringement on this right.

7
Individual Rights Advocates
  • Individual rights proponents see the amendment as
    primarily guaranteeing the right of the people,
    not the states.
  • This right is a product of the more central
    individual right.
  • The collective right that preserves the states
    militia is guaranteed only if the individual
    right is first maintained.

8
Individual Rights Advocates
  • Madisons notes state the amendments were to
    relate first to private rights.
  • Support for this view may be found in the Los
    Angeles riots that followed the not-guilty jury
    verdict in the Rodney King case.
  • A lesson of the Los Angeles uprising for many
    people was that the police cannot protect
    everyone during a citywide emergency.

9
States Rights
  • Those favoring a states rights interpretation
    see the Second Amendment as protecting and
    modifying Article 1, Section 8 of the
    Constitution, which grants Congress the power to
    provide for the calling forth of the militia to
    execute the laws of the Union.
  • The Second Amendment contains a sort of
    mini-preamble, clearly proclaiming as its purpose
    the fostering of a well-regulated Militia, a
    purpose extraneous to one allowing individual
    possession of weapons for use against fellow
    citizens.

10
Non-incorporation of the Second Amendment
  • This is one of the few amendments contained
    within the Bill of Rights that has not been
    incorporated under the Fourteenth Amendment to
    apply to both federal and state government
    because to date it has not been considered
    essential to a scheme of ordered liberty by the
    Supreme Court.
  • Presser v. Illinois (1886), the Court refused to
    incorporate the Second Amendment into the
    Fourteenth Amendment. The Second Amendment does
    not apply to state government.

11
Case Law and the Second Amendment
  • United States v. Cruikshank (1875), the U.S.
    Supreme Court, responding to a claim that there
    was a right to bear arms for a lawful purpose
    ruled This is not a right granted by the
    Constitution.The Second Amendment declares that
    it shall not be infringed but this, as has been
    seen, means no more than it shall not be
    infringed by Congress.

12
Case Law and the Second Amendment
  • The National Firearms Act of 1934 was the first
    such effort at federal regulation. Section 11 of
    the act made it illegal for a person who has not
    in his possession a stamp-affixed order to ship,
    carry, or deliver any firearm in interstate
    commerce.

13
Case Law and the Second Amendment
  • United States v. Miller (1939), the district
    court granted the defense a demurrer, which is a
    request that a suit be dismissed because facts do
    not sustain the claim.
  • The Supreme Court interpreted the Second
    Amendment as providing for maintaining a militia
    With the obvious purpose to assure the
    continuation and render possible the
    effectiveness of such forces the declaration and
    guarantee of the Second Amendment were made. It
    must be interpreted and applied with that view in
    mind.

14
Case Law and the Second Amendment
  • This amendment protects only arms that bear some
    relation to the preservation of the militia.
  • Having a barrel of less than 18 inches in length
    at this time has some reasonable relationship to
    the preservation of a well-regulated militia.
  • A law prohibiting transportation of unregistered
    shotguns in interstate commerce is not
    unconstitutional.

15
Case Law and the Second Amendment
  • Cases v. United States (1942), the right to keep
    and bear arms is not a right conferred upon the
    people by the federal constitution. Whatever
    rights in this respect the people may have depend
    upon local legislation the only function of the
    Second Amendment being to prevent the federal
    government and the federal government only from
    infringing on that right.

16
Case Law and the Second Amendment
  • Stevens v. United States (1971), the Second
    Amendment applies only to the right of the state
    to maintain a militia and not to the individuals
    right to bear arms, there can be no serious claim
    to any express constitutional right of an
    individual to possess a firearm.

17
Case Law and the Second Amendment
  • The aberrant decision came in United States v.
    Emerson (1999), when U.S. District Judge Sam R.
    Cummings went against all federal court precedent
    and restored a domestic abusers firearms citing
    the Second Amendment as guaranteeing the
    individuals right to keep and bear arms.

18
States and the Second Amendment
  • Most federal courts have ruled that a complete
    ban on certain types of guns is acceptable.
  • The states power to regulate firearms appears to
    be nearly absolute.

19
States and the Second Amendment
  • Quilici v. Village of Morton Grove (1982), it
    seems clear that the right to bear arms is
    inextricably connected to the preservation of a
    militia.
  • United States v. Lopez (1995), found a federal
    law banning guns near schools to be
    unconstitutional. This Supreme Court 5-4 decision
    struck down the Gun-Free School Zones Act. Chief
    Justice Rehnquist found that the law has nothing
    to do with commerce or any sort of enterprise.

20
Concealed Carry Laws
  • The law regulating carrying a concealed weapon
    vary from state to state.
  • Cannot have a criminal record
  • No mental illness
  • Some require completion of classroom and range
    training courses
  • Other states limit permits to carry a concealed
    weapon
  • A few states issue no permits

21
Concealed Carry Laws
  • A public policy research group found that the
    states concealed carry law made Texas a safer
    place by giving law-abiding residents a means of
    protecting themselves.
  • In Washington, DC, came to a contrary conclusion,
    people who obtain the permits to carry concealed
    handguns, instead of using guns to prevent
    crimes, are often committing crimes, with more
    than two arrests of permit holders per day on
    average.

22
Concealed Carry Laws
  • Courts have been reluctant to relax
    search-and-seizure restrictions on law
    enforcement officers in cases involving anonymous
    tips of concealed-carry violations.

23
Federal Regulation and the Second Amendment
  • Congress, using its broad authority to regulate
    interstate commerce, has enacted federal gun
    control legislation.
  • In 1938, the Federal Firearms Act was passed,
    requiring dealers shipping firearms across state
    lines and importers to be licensed by the federal
    government.

24
Federal Regulation and the Second Amendment
  • In 1967, Congress passed the Omnibus Crime
    Control and Safe Streets Act. A portion of that
    act made it unlawful for convicted felons to
    possess a firearm.
  • Stevens, a felon, was convicted under the act and
    appealed on the grounds that his right to bear
    arms had been infringed and that Congress did not
    have the constitutional authority to regulate
    possession of firearms.

25
Stevens v. U.S.
  • On the question of constitutional authority, the
    Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals held that the
    power to regulate interstate commerce gave
    congress the power to regulate firearms There
    can be no serious doubt that the possession of
    firearms by convicted felons is a threat to
    interstate commerce.

26
Federal Regulation and the Second Amendment
  • The Gun Control Act was passed prohibiting
    federal licensees from selling firearms to
    prohibited people, anyone they knew or had
    reasonable cause to believe was or had been
  • Under indictment
  • A fugitive
  • A drug user
  • Adjudicated a mental defective or committed to a
    mental institution
  • Who fit into other limited categories

27
The National Firearms act
  • Do I have a right to keep an automatic weapon
    such as a submachine gun?

28
United States v. Warin (1976),
  • Warin was convicted of possessing an unregistered
    submachine gun. He appealed.
  • First, he argued that because he was subject to
    enrollment in the state militia, the amendment
    granted him the right to bear arms.
  • Second, the National Firearms Act taxed the right
    to keep and bear arms.
  • Finally, he argued that as a member of the
    sedentary militia the right to bear and keep arms
    was a fundamental right under the Ninth Amendment.

29
United States v. Warin
  • The court held
  • Being subject to enrollment in the state militia
    is not a valid argument the military provides
    arms.
  • The tax imposed by the Act relates to commerce
    not the the right to keep and bear arms.
  • that the Ninth Amendment confers no additional
    fundamental right to an unregistered submachine
    gun.

30
The Brady Law
  • Passed in 1993, contained the interim provision
    of a mandatory five-day waiting period on all
    handgun purchases, to be phased out and replaced
    in 1998 with the permanent provision of an
    instant computerized criminal background check of
    all handgun purchasers. Some states still impose
    a waiting period on firearms purchases.

31
The Brady Law
  • In 1997 the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 in Printz v.
    United States that the federal government was not
    empowered to require state or local law
    enforcement agencies to run background checks on
    prospective gun buyers.
  • As of November 1, 1998, the Brady Law was
    modified so applicants can receive immediate
    clearance to purchase a gun.

32
The Brady Law
  • The Brady Law does not prohibit states from
    enacting their own, longer waiting periods.
  • Journal of the American Medical Association 2000
    analyzed national homicide and suicide data
    between 1985 and 1997. It concluded Our
    analyses provide no evidence that implementation
    of the Brady Act was associated with a reduction
    in homicide rates. Other researchers assert the
    opposite.

33
The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act
of 1994
  • Places a ban on the manufacturing of 19 different
    semiautomatic guns.
  • Prohibits transferring to or possession of
    handguns and ammunition by juveniles, prohibits
    possessing firearms by people who have committed
    domestic abuse and provides stiffer penalties for
    criminals who use firearms in committing federal
    crimes.

34
In Opposition to Gun Control
  • A common argument among gun control opponents is
    the claim that such laws will only put guns where
    they do not belong in the hands of criminals.

35
In Opposition to Gun Control
  • Based on the assumption that the greatest
    reductions in fatal violence would be within
    states that were required to institute waiting
    periods and background checks, implementation of
    the Brady Act appears to have been associated
    with reductions in the firearm suicide rate for
    people aged 55 years or older but not with
    reductions in homicide rates or overall suicide
    rates.

36
In Opposition to Gun Control
  • Gun control opponents assert the decrease in gun
    violence may be attributable to many factors
    other than legislation, including a stronger
    economy and lower unemployment rates increased
    numbers of police in the community
    implementation of new, more aggressive and more
    effective police tactics and the crackdown on
    illegal drug trafficking.

37
Finding Common Ground-Is a Compromise Possible?
  • Gun control by the states is not constitutionally
    prohibited. Neither is legislation by the federal
    government.
  • United States v. Miller (1939) remains the only
    Supreme Court case that specifically addresses
    that amendments scope.
  • The Supreme Court has repeatedly denied
    certiorari (refused to review) in cases in which
    the individual right to bear arms is at issue.
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