第九巡回上诉法院推翻加州“30比1”限购枪支法
Ninth Circuit Strikes Down California's "1-In-30" Gun-Rationing Law

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/ninth-circuit-strikes-down-californias-1-30-gun-rationing-law

第九巡回上诉法院由三位法官组成的全体一致的法官小组推翻了加州的“30天限购一支枪支”法,认为该法违反了第二修正案。该法律限制个人每30天只能购买一支枪支。法官丹妮尔·乔·福雷斯特(Danielle Jo Forrest)代表法院撰写判决书,驳斥了加州的论点,即第二修正案只保证拥有单支枪支的权利,并强调该修正案保护的是拥有“武器”(复数)的权利。法院认为该州的理由毫无根据。此外,该小组认为该法律缺乏历史依据,正如最高法院的布鲁恩(Bruen)判决所要求的那样,指出历史记录甚至没有确立加州这项“每月限购一支枪”法律的历史先例。

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原文

Authored by Jonathan Turley,

A unanimous panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has struck down California’s “1-in-30” gun rationing law as unconstitutional under the Second Amendment.

The law restricted citizens to one gun purchase every 30 days and was based on a ridiculous rationale that was shredded by the three-judge panel.

California Penal Code § 27535(a) states that individuals may not apply “to purchase more than one firearm within any 30-day period,” and § 27540(f) prohibits a firearms dealer from delivering any firearm if the dealer is notified that “the purchaser has made another application to purchase a handgun, semiautomatic centerfire rifle, completed frame or receiver, or firearm precursor part” within the preceding 30-day period.

Writing for the court, Judge Danielle Jo Forrest found the California law facially unconstitutional. She wrote:

California suggests that the Second Amendment only guarantees a right to possess a single firearm, and that Plaintiffs’ rights have not been infringed because they already possess at least one firearm.

California is wrong.

The Second Amendment protects the right of the people to “keep and bear Arms,” plural. U.S. Const. amend. II (emphasis added).

This “guarantee[s] the individual right to possess and carry weapons.” Heller, 554 U.S. at 592 (emphasis added).

And not only is “Arms” stated in the plural, but this term refers to more than just guns. It includes other weapons and instruments used for defense. See id. at 581. California’s interpretation would mean that the Second Amendment only protects possession of a single weapon of any kind. There is no basis for interpreting the constitutional text in that way.

The court rightfully dismisses the state’s forced and frankly frivolous argument.

It then delivers a particularly lethal line on the historical prong of the analysis.

Next, the panel held that California’s law is not supported by this nation’s tradition of firearms regulation. Bruen requires a “historical analogue,” not a “historical twin,” for a modern firearm regulation to pass muster. Here, the historical record does not even establish a historical cousin for California’s one-gun-a-month law.

Here is the opinion: Nguyen v. Bontan

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