A Federal Judge Blocks New Jersey's Sweeping Restrictions on Public Gun Possession
By banning firearms from a wide range of "sensitive places," the state effectively nullified the right to bear arms.

Last June in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, the Supreme Court held that states may not require gun owners to "demonstrate a special need for self-protection distinguishable from that of the general community" before they can exercise the constitutional right to bear arms. New York legislators responded by eliminating the state's "proper cause" requirement for carry permits but simultaneously making those permits much less useful by declaring them inoperative in a long list of "sensitive locations."
That attempted end run around Bruen soon ran into legal trouble, including a temporary restraining order that U.S. District Judge Glenn T. Suddaby issued in October, which was followed by a preliminary injunction in November. Unfazed by those warnings, New Jersey legislators emulated New York's approach with a bill that Gov. Phil Murphy signed into law last month. The law abolished the state's "justifiable need" requirement for a carry permit but made it very difficult for permit holders to legally carry handguns outside their homes. Last week that trick predictably provoked a temporary restraining order.
"The State may regulate conduct squarely protected by the Second Amendment only if supported by a historical tradition of firearm regulation," U.S. District Judge Renée Marie Bumb writes in her January 9 opinion. "Plaintiffs have shown that Defendants will not be able to demonstrate a history of firearm regulation to support any of the challenged provisions."
New Jersey decreed that permit holders may not carry handguns in 25 categories of "sensitive places." Violating those rules is a third-degree crime punishable by up to five years in prison.
Three permit holders, joined by the Firearms Policy Coalition and other gun rights groups, challenged the state's new restrictions in Koons v. Reynolds. Bumb's opinion deals with four of New Jersey's gun-free zones: libraries and museums, entertainment facilities, businesses that serve alcohol, and "private property" generally unless the owner has given his express consent or posted a sign indicating that guns are allowed. Bumb also addresses New Jersey's ban on the transportation of loaded or accessible firearms in private vehicles. She concludes that the state so far has failed to show that any of those rules is "consistent with this Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation," the test established by Bruen.
That tradition, the Supreme Court has said, includes "laws forbidding the carrying of firearms in sensitive places such as schools and government buildings." But in Bruen, the Court warned against defining "sensitive places" so broadly that they encompass nearly every location where a permit holder might want to carry a handgun for self-defense.
"The historical record yields relatively few 18th- and 19th-century 'sensitive places' where weapons were altogether prohibited," the Court noted, mentioning "legislative assemblies, polling places, and courthouses." The majority rejected New York's attempt to cast its "proper cause" requirement as a kind of "sensitive place" regulation. New York argued that the right to bear arms does not apply in "places where people typically congregate and where law-enforcement and other public-safety professionals are presumptively available."
That rationale, the Court noted, "would in effect exempt cities from the Second Amendment and would eviscerate the general right to publicly carry arms for self-defense." It said "there is no historical basis for New York to effectively declare the island of Manhattan a 'sensitive place' simply because it is crowded and
protected generally by the New York City Police Department."
New Jersey's law attempts to achieve a similar result. The legislature averred that "sensitive-place prohibitions on dangerous weapons set forth in this act are rooted in history and tradition" because they are "analogous to historical laws that can
be found from the Founding era to Reconstruction." Yet when required to present that evidence in Koons v. Reynolds, the state came up short, saying it has not had enough time to identify relevant historical analogs.
"At this juncture," Bumb says, "there is no bona fide basis for this Court to withhold its ruling because the State says it needs more time to come forward with historical evidence that the Legislature represented it had at the time of the law's passage." The evidence at this point, she concludes, is meager, inapposite, or both.
A few examples should suffice to show how ill-prepared the state was to defend its understanding of "sensitive places."
New Jersey's law prohibits guns in any "privately or publicly owned and operated entertainment facility," "including but not limited to a theater, stadium, museum, arena, racetrack or other place where performances, concerts, exhibits, games or contests are held." The state compared that ban to a 1786 Virginia law that prohibited carrying arms in "fairs or markets, in terror of the county." As Bumb notes, "it is the conduct of terrorizing the county, not the possession of a firearm in fairs or markets, that the statute prohibited."
The state defended its ban on guns in bars and restaurants by citing an 1867 Kansas law that "prohibited the possession of firearms by intoxicated persons." That law "has no relevance here," Bumb notes, "as the restriction at issue clearly does not address possession of firearms by intoxicated persons."
The broadest location restriction, covering most places in the state, established a default rule that guns are prohibited on "private property," the same rule that federal judges rejected in New York. Like New York, New Jersey claimed it was merely protecting the prerogatives of private property owners, who have always had a right to exclude guns. But the law changed a presumption that people have a right to carry guns in businesses open to the public unless the owner objects to a presumption that they have no such right unless the owner explicitly says guns are allowed by posting "clear and conspicuous signage" or otherwise giving "express consent."
Bumb says the historical evidence indicates that the first presumption has long prevailed in the United States. "Defendants' insistence that no such presumption exists because a private property owner has the right to exclude firearms from his property misses the point," she writes. "Here, the State itself, not a private property owner, is excluding firearm owners from most of New Jersey by default."
The state said the new rule "protects property owners' right to exclude firearms from their property by removing their obligation to affirmatively tell every repairperson or customer that firearms are prohibited" (emphasis added). That argument, Bumb says, only confirms that "a rebuttable presumption to carry" was the preexisting rule. She "agrees with Plaintiffs, at least at this stage, that this provision unconstitutionally turns the presumption of the right to keep and bear arms under the Second Amendment on its head."
During oral argument, Bumb called attention to the quandaries that New Jersey's law creates for permit holders. She asked New Jersey Deputy Solicitor General Angela Cai whether a UPS employee licensed to carry a handgun would "violate the law when he gets up to the front door and the owner says you should not have come on my property if you're armed." Yes, Cai replied. In other words, permit holders are committing a crime punishable by up to five years in prison even before they find out that a customer or business owner does not want guns on his property.
When you combine that default rule with the location-specific bans and the restrictions on guns in cars, which require that they be kept unloaded in the trunk or a "securely fastened" container, you have scenarios like this one, which Bumb also described during oral argument:
Someone with a concealed carry permit wakes up and plans his day…He puts the firearm in the trunk. He goes to his cousin, who doesn't want firearms. He leaves it in the trunk. He then goes to the local market that permits firearms. He goes and he gets [the gun] out of the trunk, puts it together in public view. Citizens see. Citizens are going to get alarmed. Perhaps he's brandishing the weapon [a distinct crime], one might argue. And then [he] goes to the local market. Then he comes back out. He then brandishes the weapon, one could argue, puts it into the trunk and goes to another establishment where he's not quite sure, so he puts it in the trunk and then goes up, gets the express consent, yes, that's fine, goes back to his trunk…assembles the firearm and then…reenters the property.
That's how the State envisions the day in the life of a gun owner?
Pretty much. "That could be, Your Honor," Cai conceded.
That situation seems plainly inconsistent with the right to bear arms. "As Plaintiffs lament, the challenged provisions force a person permitted to carry a firearm in New Jersey to 'navigate a "veritable minefield,"'" Bumb writes. "At some point on the line, when a constitutional right becomes so burdensome or unwieldy to exercise, it is, in effect, no longer a constitutional right. Plaintiffs have made a convincing case that this legislation has reached that point."
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This means that Illinois's new assault weapons ban is probably toast as well. It's good news.
It's a federal judge, but in a different district. Would the precedent apply to Illinois?
If a federal judge in New Jersey saw fit to overturn these types of restrictions, a federal judge here in Illinois will probably do likewise - no precedent, just an educated guess based on how these decisions have gone.
If two federal judges from two different districts have conflicting rulings, that would present an opportunity for SCOTUS to step in a further clarify the matter.
Wow, your username really does not check out.
Yes, a precedent in a sister circuit is considered “persuasive authority”, which means the judge can, but it not required to, consider it in issuing his own ruling.
(Inside the circuit or if the ruling came from a superior court, it would be “controlling authority”, and the judge would be required to consider it.)
The Supreme Court Bruen precedent does.
No precedent was set in New Jersey or New York yet. They just issued restraining orders, keeping the state from enforcing.
But in general, no. They may take that under advisement but they are not bound to the decisions made outside their jurisdiction. Only the Supreme Court can bind the other circuit courts to precedent.
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If I were a judge, I'd ask the legislators of such laws if they were willing to give up their security detail's firearms.. After the obvious reply, I'd declare WELL, I GUESS YOU AREN'T AGAINST FIREARMS. Case dusmissed.
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There are 2 types of precedent.
Binding precedent is precedent by a higher court, aka a court to which an appeal could be made.
Persuasive precedent is not officially binding on the court in question, but is considered sufficiently related to be considered when interpreting the law.
This ruling is going to trigger a lot of folks. I hope it doesn’t backfire for His Honor. He may want to hide out in his chambers for awhile.
His Honor will retire momentarily to go and powder his nose, while hoping that he will NOT get powder burns!
Roll out the barrel,
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Hit me with your best shot! Fire away!
Happiness is a warm gun.
Pat Benatar has said that she will no longer perform "Hit Me with Your Beat Shot," because it may promote gun violence.
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Fire away....
Says the mom who sang Hell Is For Children
Boy, Murphy looks a bit like Malcolm Tucker in that photo.
Fuck failing Phil Murphy.
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"The State may regulate conduct squarely protected by the Second Amendment only if supported by a historical tradition of firearm regulation," U.S. District Judge Renée Marie Bumb writes in her January 9 opinion.
That's right Murphy, you got Bumb Fucked!!!
Now go after the assault weapons ban, hollow point ban, and FID cards in general.
Dear, God, I hope so. There is no purpose for the FID. I also want to get ride of the whole permit to purchase a handgun too. I joke with people that I got through more background checks each year than people who have top secret security clearance.
Can’t I just get a background check speed pass? Kind of like PreTSA so I can skip background checks?
Only in the People's Republic of NJ = the patent end run around 2A.
Truly, the communists and socialists would be proud of Phailing Phil Murphy and the People's Duma (legislature).
New Jersey to pass a new law with slightly different wording but to the same unconstitutional effect in 3....2....1.
And the great cycle of Blue State life continues.
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New Jersey's government got the Bumb rush.
New Jersey legislators will now have to find some other ways to boost their violent crime rates.
Thank goodness there are still honorable justices out there....
That won't let the Nazi-Guns take-away everyone's Self-Defense...
I can occasionally persuade an irrational gun-grabber into logically agreeing with the concept that laws against self defense only empower those who intend to break the law, but it's always short lived.
Cool fake story bro.
I'm sure you get into imaginary arguments with irrational gin grabbers all the time.
No amount of data or reasoning is going to change the mind of someone committed to gun control. You may as well argue about religion, or politics, with them. It will just have to suffice that they have lost.
One at a time. Know anyone like that? Coworker or uncle? I doubt they've ever held let alone shot a gun. Take them to the range. Seriously. I have. And it has changed minds.
People do change their minds occasionally. It's worth trying, at least in some cases.
Usually only when they're spraying out a larger exit hole.
This won't end until SCOTUS overturns the NFA.
OT, seems like Ken disappeared.
He joined the mercenaries to save Ukraine. A regular James Bond.
To save Ukraine from Zelensky and Biden?
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He went Russian into it.
He quit stalin and putin a solid effort? He will be tsarry.
He's just a slav to his impulses.
Thank you. Thank you for putin it this way.
Fuck, chumby already did that. Oh well.
The law needs to address what the gun's intentions are.
It’s worth a shot.
And Democrats claim that it’s conservatives trying to destroy Democracy.
Democracy is 51% or more of the people figuring out how to rob and enslave the other 49% or less. When Democrats say someone is destroying OUR (their) democracy, they mean taking away their ability to be tyrannical bullies.
Many of the rank-and-file voters supported these laws because they have compelling reasons to fear the street thug and the gangbanger .
Those who actually make and enforce these laws have different motives. and sometimes, they admit their motives.
https://twitter.com/TrekDestroyer/status/1615101334252027906
the rank-and-file voters have been presented with the red pill.
"This is addressing the legal, law abiding, responsible citizens. That’s what it’s designed to do"
IOW, those who will do nothing wrong, and have the most to lose by ignoring stupid laws.
Criminals, OTOH, don't give a shit.
We should encourage their honesty (when it occurs). There is, after all, a rational argument for disarming the law-abiding citizens as well as the criminals. Most illegal guns begin life as legal guns, not to mention the fact that legal guns make suicide easy and quick. Violent domestic crimes and mass murders, too: all of these things are made commonplace by the wide availability of legal guns. Moreover, if you're a politician, going after the law-abiding is much easier (at least in theory) than actually fighting crime.
Most of the developed world has embraced these arguments--and enjoys exponentially less violent societies as a result. For various historical reasons, Americans have not, and most likely never will. Insane levels of gun-related violence are simply the price Americans pay for that freedom. Did you think freedom was free?
No, the gun situation in America will not change; the 2nd Amendment will not be repealed. Nor will gun violence decrease significantly in our lifetimes. It may get worse, either as a result of increasing proliferation of weapons among the "non-law abiding" citizens, or as a result of blowback against increasingly strident restrictions on gun rights (which, of course, would also be undertaken by newly "non-law abiding" citizens). But the politicians and their pet courts will increasingly exploit the people's anxieties around guns, because doing so works for them.
The only question in my mind is, will the rule of law get taken down as a result?
Maybe we could just mandate some sort of privacy curtain to be erected around one's trunk area every time a gun owner needs to load and unload the weapon before putting it in the vehicle?
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A twelve year old can ascertain that these virtue signaling fantasies will never become law, but the sheep keep doing it over and over and over. When will the taxpayers revolt?
Never.
"New Jersey legislators emulated New York's approach with a bill that Gov. Phil Murphy signed into law last month."
The 12-year old does have an excuse...
The problem is that state legislatures seem to be increasingly willing to cock a snook at the Supreme Court. Not only on the left, but also on the right, as the evidence shows. Andrew Jackson's proclamation ("John Marshall has made his decision now let him enforce it") is becoming increasingly popular--on boaf sidez. This could be a signal that the recent "balance" between the three branches of government is weakening. I don't know where it will lead, but it won't be towards stability.
He and I disagreed on this issue leading up to the SMO. I may have called him NeoKen W Schultz…Ken’s a capable adult and no doubt is doing well wherever he is. I still believe he either holds an appreciable quantity of shares in a MIC company and/or works for one. Either way, wish him the best.
"...Ken went full Ukraine narrative war hawk..."
Disagreed.
He took the position that Putin was the aggressor and neither the US nor NATO had any sort of blame in the issue; my position as well. And got tired of explaining it.
He wasn’t Putin up with any arguments.
I was a bit surprised he left over it. But hey, I'm starting to lose track of the Reason Exoduses.
I think he's in real estate.
He was all in for intervention in Libya too.
More recently, I haven’t seen Soldiermedic76 lately. I enjoy his posts, they’re often quite informative.
The 'wrong' people are leaving.
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