Within the ongoing battle over Washington, D.C.’s arguably unconstitutional ban on firearms magazines that maintain greater than 10 rounds, D.C. attorneys in February filed a movement to dismiss the lawsuit on the grounds that plaintiffs don’t have standing.
That transfer, within the case Wehr-Darroka v. D.C., prompted the Firearms Coverage Coalition (FPC) to file an opposition to D.C.’s movement to dismiss arguing that the D.C. Circuit’s precedents concerning standing in Second Modification challenges are inconsistent with the Supreme Court docket’s selections in addition to each different circuit court docket within the nation.
In its movement to dismiss, the D.C. authorities acknowledged: “Underneath binding circuit precedent, a plaintiff solely has standing to problem a regulation of ‘Arms’ allegedly protected by the Second Modification if he was threatened with prosecution for violating the regulation, or if he was actually denied a weapon; and his standing is restricted to difficult the regulation’s utility to that weapon particularly. The 2 particular person Plaintiffs right here haven’t confronted prosecution or been denied an LCM.”
FPC in its opposition submitting explains how the D.C. Circuit is holding on to an outdated precedent contemplating standing.
“For too lengthy, these outdated precedents have barred pre-enforcement Second Modification challenges on this Circuit, solely permitting circumstances to maneuver ahead if a litigant has been arrested, prosecuted, or singled out with particular threats or denials,” the transient argues. “This precedent has successfully closed the courthouse doorways to law-abiding D.C. residents in search of to vindicate their elementary proper to maintain and bear arms.”
The FPC transient additional argues that the court docket doesn’t essentially must comply with what it referred to as the circuit court docket’s “flawed standings.”
“Underneath the flawed standing precedent created by the D.C. Circuit in Navegar, Seegars, and Parker, the Court docket should grant the District’s movement,” the transient argues. “Plaintiffs, nevertheless, be aware the deep flaws with that precedent and can urge the D.C. Circuit to rethink and abandon these flawed circumstances. In doing so, Plaintiffs ask for nothing greater than their day in court docket.”
Brandon Combs, FPC president, stated in a information launch saying the motion that the D.C. Circuit has finished precisely what Justice Clarence Thomas warned about—turning the Second Modification right into a “second-class proper.”
“The D.C. Circuit’s case regulation on standing has turned the Second Modification right into a second-class proper in our nation’s capital,” Combs stated. “The federal government shouldn’t be allowed to keep away from constitutional compliance by forcing peaceful folks to interrupt the regulation and topic themselves to critical felony legal responsibility earlier than they will problem unconstitutional legal guidelines. The Supreme Court docket’s precedents acknowledge this and each different circuit court docket within the nation has held as a lot. It’s time for the D.C Circuit to repair this critical doctrinal downside.”
In the end, the FPC transient argues that the group doesn’t intend to surrender on combating to get plaintiffs’ standing acknowledged by the court docket.
“For these causes, whereas Plaintiffs have standing to pursue their claims, this Court docket should grant the District’s movement,” the transient states. “Regardless, Plaintiffs preserve that this Circuit’s Second Modification standing precedent is deeply flawed and intend to return to this Court docket to advance their claims after america Court docket of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit abandons Navegar, Seegars, and Parker.