A Closer Look at Heller v. D.C. II
As Dave Weigel noted yesterday, Dick Heller has filed a complaint in federal court that accuses the District of Columbia of failing to comply with the Supreme Court decision overturning D.C.'s handgun ban and firearm storage requirements. The complaint (PDF) focuses on two aspects of D.C.'s revised gun law that I discussed in my column last week: the ban on semiautomatic handguns and the requirement that any firearm in the home be kept unloaded and locked except "while it is being used to protect against a reasonably perceived threat of immediate harm to a person."
The former restriction, note Heller's attorneys, Stephen Halbrook and Richard Gardiner, is hard to reconcile with the Supreme Court's conclusion that banning the guns most commonly used for self-defense violates the Second Amendment. "The District's ban on semiautomatic handguns," they write, "amounts to a prohibition of an entire class of arms that is overwhelmingly chosen by American society for the lawful purpose of self-defense in the home." They are not asking the U.S. District Court to overturn D.C.'s absurdly broad "machine gun" ban, which covers semiautomatic guns if they can fire more than 12 rounds without reloading or "can be readily converted" to do so. Instead Halbrook and Gardiner want the court to reject the District's interpretation of the law, according to which any gun that can accept a magazine holding more than 12 rounds is forbidden, even if the owner does not possess such a magazine. It's this interpretation that prevents Heller from registering his seven-shot .45-caliber pistol and co-plaintiff Absalom Jordan from registering his 10-shot .22-caliber pistol.
The District's position seems to be that banning all handguns except revolvers fits with the Supreme Court's implicit approval of bans on "dangerous and unusual weapons." I've noted the circular logic of that exception, whereby banned weapons (such as actual machine guns) remain banned because the ban has made them unusual. The "dangerous" part is puzzling too, since all weapons are dangerous; that's what makes them weapons. But whatever the phrase means, it clearly does not apply to semiautomatic handguns, which are not "unusual" in this country by any stretch of the imagination.
Regarding the storage rule, Halbrook and Gardiner note that the new law, like the original one, includes a general exception for guns carried by law enforcement personnel and guns kept in places of business. "Such provision acknowledges the need to keep a firearm in useable condition for defense of self and others against an unlawful, sudden, and deadly attack," they note, which highlights the unreasonableness of demanding that guns in the home be kept unloaded and locked until the very moment they are being used to fend off an attack. They point out that the law even forbids D.C. residents to unlock their guns "for innocuous purposes such as cleaning."
Halbrook and Gardiner also object to the District's cumbersome registration process, especially the unlimited authority given to the chief of police to set the fee for ballistic testing. They argue that "predicating the right lawfully to possess a pistol as guaranteed by the Second Amendment on the payment of any fee, and moreso an undefined fee with no limit according to the arbitrary will of the Chief, infringes on the right of the people, including plaintiffs herein, to keep and bear arms."
Here is the Washington Post story about the lawsuit. Here (PDF) is a copy of the complaint.
Correction: As Gary Imhoff noted, my original post confused one of the plaintiffs with one of the lawyers. I've fixed the names.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
""infringes""
It will boil down to the definition of one word.
Way to pick your battles, D.C., you bunch of fucking idiots.
The funny thing is, unless you have training or a fair amount of firing time with the weapon, full auto is much less useful than semi-auto. Yet it's the "machine guns" that de-fecalates the 2nd Amendment scaredy cats.
HA! D.C. is playing right into my hands. Eventually I'll be able to register my mutated anthrax . . . for duck hunting.
Jacob-
Your stories on the Heller case have been very well done, and free of the general sort of technical ignorance shown by so many reporters when it comes to the gun issue.
Naga Sadow,
Damn straight! Today, the mad scientist can't get a doomsday device, tomorrow it's the mad grad student. Where will it end?
Absalom Jordan is a co-plaintiff in the Heller complaint, but he is not one of the lawyers. The lawyers are Stephen P. Halbrook and Richard E. Gardiner.
I wish someone would go into a City Council meeting and remove all their hands. After all, we can't be letting the royalty carry around weapons at the end of their arms now can we?
Those are definitely "dangerous" and "unusual" implements. I mean look at all the crappy laws those things sign. Not to mention, normal people work with their hands whereas politicians just pat themselves on the back. Very unusual.
The circularity of "unusual" reminds me of the semi-official criteria for whether a substance has "potential for abuse". One is whether a substantial number of persons are breaking laws to obtain it. Another defines "abuse" as use in contravention of societal norms.
No matter how many times the deceitful or the ignorant repeat a falsehood, it is still FALSE. No US court has EVER found the 2nd Amendment to be a "collective" right - the very IDEA is a joke. Collectives have POWERS, not rights. As a Jewess in the US, may I remind everyone that America wasn't won with a registered gun? And that criminals on EITHER side of the law are stopped by FIREARMS, not by talk? That is why all REAL Americans put our 2nd Amendment FIRST! And you may quote me on that.
For a busy business vertical like the Insurance sector, outsourcing their back office works will be a better option http://www.louisvuitton.be/lou.....-p-74.html