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Home Hot Topic Clarence Thomas Created a Confusing New Rule That’s Gutting Gun Laws

Clarence Thomas Created a Confusing New Rule That’s Gutting Gun Laws

by Cecilia

Last year, the Supreme Court issued a landmark 6-3 decision in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, striking down a longstanding public carry law in New York and casting doubt on gun control laws around the country.

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Since then, Jacob Charles, a law professor at Pepperdine University in Malibu, Calif., has tracked every federal court case citing Bruen. His research demonstrates just how long a shadow the decision has cast over the courts.

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In a forthcoming Duke Law Journal article, Charles reveals that more than a dozen state and federal laws have been invalidated in whole or in part since the Bruen decision. Thirty percent of civil cases and nearly 4 percent of criminal cases that have cited Bruen have resulted in the invalidation of gun control provisions, among 284 total decisions addressing Second Amendment claims. This flurry of legal activity greatly outpaces the immediate aftermath of the 2008 decision in District of Columbia v. Heller, which endorsed an individual right to bear arms irrespective of service in a militia.

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Part of what makes Bruen so impactful on lower courts is its adoption of a new test for determining constitutionality. As laid out by Justice Clarence Thomas, writing for the conservative majority, for a firearm regulation to be justifiable, “the government must demonstrate that the regulation is consistent with the Nation’s historical tradition.” Lower courts have wrestled with this in different ways, with some determining historical precedent based on how many states adopted a law in the past, while others focus on the number of laws passed — or question how and whether those laws were enforced.

Beyond the issue of how, exactly, to determine what counts as an historic analogue, the new test also opens up broader inquiries: How do 18th century traditions apply to 21st century conundrums involving modern technology and sensibilities? What would James Madison’s generation have thought about “ghost guns,” a type of homemade, sometimes 3D-printed firearm?

Thomas anticipated concerns about how courts should nail down history, which can prove slippery. “Analogical reasoning requires only that the government identify a well-established and representative historical analogue, not a historical twin,” he wrote. “So even if a modern-day regulation is not a dead ringer for historical precursors, it still may be analogous enough to pass constitutional muster.” But Charles calls this deference to history unworkable. “The Bruen method is at its core anti-innovation,” he says. “So there can’t be innovative responses to challenges today that deal with gun violence.”

Now the Court has agreed to hear another Second Amendment case, United States v. Rahimi, which will determine whether people under domestic violence restraining orders can own guns — and test just how far the court is willing to go to expand Second Amendment rights.

As the nation wrestles with the new reality of the Bruen decision, and against a backdrop of near-record-high gun deaths and a sharp partisan divide over gun policy in Congress, I spoke to Charles about his research. He had some advice for legislators on writing laws that will survive constitutional challenges, suggested that courts appoint expert historians and explained how gun rights cases provide a glimpse into the future not just of the Second Amendment, but of the First Amendment as well.

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