Another Federal Judge Rejects the DOJ's Argument That Cannabis Consumers Have No Second Amendment Rights
U.S. District Judge Kathleen Cardone was unimpressed by the Biden administration's argument that marijuana users are too "dangerous" to own guns.

A federal judge in Texas recently agreed with a federal judge in Oklahoma that the national ban on gun possession by cannabis consumers violates the Second Amendment. Kathleen Cardone, a judge on the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas, also concluded that the federal ban on transferring firearms to an "unlawful user" of a "controlled substance," first imposed by the Gun Control Act of 1968, is unconstitutional.
The case involves Paola Connelly, who was charged with illegal possession of firearms under 18 USC 922(g)(3) after El Paso police found marijuana and guns in her home while responding to a domestic disturbance in December 2021. Connelly, who said she used marijuana "to sleep at night and to help her with anxiety," also was charged with violating 18 USC 922(d)(3) by transferring guns to her husband, a cocaine and psilocybin user. Both gun offenses are punishable by up to 15 years in prison.
As a preliminary matter, Cardone held that Connelly's Second Amendment claims were not precluded by prior decisions in which the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, which includes Texas, upheld Section 922(g)(3). Those decisions, she noted, preceded the Supreme Court's June 2022 ruling in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, which said gun control laws must be "consistent with the Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation."
Last February in United States v. Rahimi, the 5th Circuit concluded that Bruen required it to reconsider decisions upholding the federal ban on gun possession by people subject to domestic violence restraining orders. By the same logic, Cardone says in an order published last week, the 5th Circuit's precedents regarding Section 922(g)(3) are no longer binding.
As it has in previous cases involving the same law, the Biden administration argued that the gun ban for marijuana users meets the Bruen test because it is "relevantly similar" to colonial and state laws forbidding people to publicly use or carry guns while intoxicated. Like U.S. District Judge Patrick Wyrick, who deemed that ban unconstitutional in an Oklahoma case last February, Cardone was unpersuaded by that analogy.
"The historical intoxication laws cited by the Government generally addressed specific societal problems with narrow restrictions on gun use, while § 922(g)(3) addresses widespread criminal issues with a broad restriction on gun possession," Cardone notes. "The laws, therefore, are not relevantly similar in how and why they regulate firearms, and do not suffice to establish the constitutionality of § 922(g)(3)."
A 1655 Virginia law, for example, prohibited "shoot[ing] any gunns at drinkeing (marriages and ffuneralls onely excepted)." To show why that law is not "relevantly similar" to the ban that Connelly challenged, Cardone draws an analogy with contemporary laws that prohibit driving under the influence (DUI).
"The Virginia law regulated guns in much the same way," Cardone writes. "It prevented individuals from using dangerous equipment while intoxication might impair their abilities and judgment. Consider instead a law that would prevent individuals from possessing cars at all if they regularly drink alcohol on weekends. Nobody would say that this hypothetical law is similar to DUI laws in how it regulates cars. The hypothetical law's focus on possession, rather than use, of the vehicle imposes a much greater burden on drivers. A similar distinction exists between § 922(g)(3) and the Virginia law."
State laws enacted in the 19th century likewise were aimed at people who publicly carried or fired guns when they were drunk. By contrast, Section 922(g)(3) covers all cannabis consumers, including those who live in states that have legalized marijuana, even when they are not intoxicated, and it applies to private as well as public possession. A truly analogous rule regarding alcohol would categorically ban gun ownership by drinkers.
The government also argued that Section 922(g)(3) is consistent with a purported tradition of disarming "unvirtuous" people. "It is unclear whether legal authorities at the founding era would consider Connelly's homebound drug use 'unvirtuous,'" Cardone says. She notes colonial-era jurist William Blackstone's distinction between "public and private vices": While the former are subject to the "punishments of human tribunals," he said, the latter are subject only to "eternal justice." Blackstone explicitly applied that distinction to drunkenness.
"Connelly's alleged drug use more resembles private drinking than public drunkenness, casting doubt on the idea that history supports criminalizing or disarming her for this behavior," Cardone writes. "And more generally, nothing in § 922(g)(3) limits its applicability to public dangers or active intoxication, putting it out of step with colonial-era attitudes."
Cardone was equally unimpressed by the government's argument that Connelly was disqualified from owning guns because she was not "law-abiding." While her marijuana use, if proven, "would violate federal law," Cardone says, that offense is a nonviolent misdemeanor, and "no one even today reads [Second Amendment history] to support the disarmament of literally all criminals, even nonviolent misdemeanants."
Notably, Cardone is quoting a 2019 dissent that Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit. Barrett argued that the federal ban on gun possession by people with nonviolent felony records sweeps too broadly. In making that case, she took it for granted that a nonviolent misdemeanor is not enough to justify depriving someone of his Second Amendment rights.
As applied to Connelly, such a rule seems especially perverse given President Joe Biden's position that marijuana use should not be treated as a crime at all. Cardone notes Biden's "blanket presidential pardon" for people convicted of simple marijuana possession under federal law. Because that pardon applies to conduct that occurred before October 6, 2022, it would cover the marijuana that police found in Connelly's home.
What about the government's claim that marijuana users like Connelly are too "dangerous" to be trusted with guns? "Even if history broadly supports disarming dangerous individuals, there is little evidence that Connelly herself is dangerous," Cardone says. "The Government has not alleged that she committed any violent or threatening acts. Instead, its core allegation is that she possessed and used marijuana."
Cardone notes that more than 20 states "have legalized the recreational use of marijuana, and millions of U.S. citizens regularly use the substance." She thinks "it strains credulity to believe that taking part in such a widespread practice can render an individual so dangerous or untrustworthy that they must be stripped of their Second Amendment rights."
Cardone also notes that Section 922(g)(3), unlike restrictions that hinge on a conviction or a judicial order, deprives people of their Second Amendment rights "without a hearing or any preliminary showing from the Government." They "must choose to either stop their marijuana use, forgo possession of a firearm, or continue both practices and face up to fifteen years in federal prison."
Cardone extended her analysis to the charge that Connelly illegally transferred guns to her husband. His behavior, unlike Connelly's, did indicate that he posed a danger to others: Police arrested him after "they heard several shots and observed [him] standing at his neighbor's door with a shotgun." But that fact, Cardone says, does not preclude Connelly's facial challenge to Section 922(d)(3), which applies even to nonviolent drug users.
Because banning gun transfers to drug users is tantamount to banning possession, Cardone concluded, that provision raises the same concerns as Section 922(g)(3). She therefore dismissed both charges against Connelly.
Unlike Cardone and Wyrick, Allen Winsor, a judge on the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida, thought the government's "historical analogues" were close enough. Last November, Winsor dismissed a lawsuit in which Florida medical marijuana patients sought to recover their Second Amendment rights. The plaintiffs are asking the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit to overrule Winsor.
In response, the Biden administration continues to argue that forbidding cannabis consumers to own guns is like telling people not to carry guns when they're drunk. The Justice Department, meanwhile, is appealing Wyrick's decision, and it can be expected to appeal Cardone's as well.
For those keeping partisan score, it is notable that all three of these judges were appointed by Republican presidents: Cardone by George W. Bush, Wyrick and Winsor by Donald Trump. Their disagreement seems to reflect evolving conservative views of marijuana as well as the impact of Bruen.
Whatever you make of that, cases challenging the constitutionality of Section 922(g)(3) will soon be considered by three federal appeals courts: the 5th Circuit, the 10th Circuit, and the 11th Circuit. Assuming they reach different conclusions, the Supreme Court is apt to intervene, decisively settling the question of whether the right to keep and bear arms includes an exception for people who dare to consume a psychoactive substance that legislators deemed intolerable more than two centuries after the Second Amendment was ratified.
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Can't Biden just ignore the ruling?
Nobody needs 3 branches of government.
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Where were all these people when a judge in Hawaii where putting nation wide injunctions on Trump, he could have just ignored it right?
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Vanity Fair no less; sure, while States are employing nullification to ignore federal laws [marijuana, immigration, gun control] they don’t like, let’s watch the federal government render itself asunder and violate the foundation of separation of powers.
I’ve come to believe that the sooner it pulls itself apart, the better.
Which branch has all the armed goons?
The People.
If you like your judicial branch you can keep your judicial branch.
Biden could be the spiritual successor to Andrew Jackson.
Using marijuana to deprive someone of their gun rights is just too useful a cudgel for the Biden administration to ever relinquish. So as of now, if I test positive 30 days after last use, I would be too "dangerous" or "unvirtuous" to legally possess a firearm.
Our government is just way beyond fucking stupid, and hopes you are too.
Only beer drinkers should have guns!
So as of now, if I test positive for marijuana within the last 30 days during a random surprise urine test I get to lose my Commercial Drivers License (CDL). Not quite the same as a Constitutional Right but eating a gummie 2 weeks ago should have no bearing on my ability to drive today.
To date, I am unaware of anyone high on cannabis committing armed robbery at a Dunkin Donuts or a Mrs Fields.
Given that KBA is a constitutional right and what we know about cannabis consumption, the Biden admin is just plain wrong.
Given that
KBA is a constitutional right and what we know about cannabis consumption,the Biden admin is just plain wrong.U.S. District Judge Kathleen Cardone was unimpressed by the Biden administration’s argument that marijuana users are too “dangerous” to own guns.
Biden thinks everyone is too dangerous to own guns. Weed is a first step to bar a large bloc of people from exercising their 2A rights.
Summed it up well Idaho. And they are not about to do any backtracking on that endeavor.
Exactly
They're main priority is to take away all the guns. Every possible excuse or means to get closer to that is on the table.
If they could tie anti-abortion laws into gun grabbing they'd turn pro-life real fast.
Not all the guns. Just the guns owned by the icky OTHER people. No bodyguard for a lefty upper crust type person is going to lose their gun. No Chicago gang-banger is going to lose their gun. It's all about waging culture war on the other side: THOSE people, the ones who wave the 2nd amendment flag.
The non trans should not have guns!
"Weed is a first step to bar a large bloc of people from exercising their 2A rights."
why do you think they don't just de-schedule it and end all of these kind of stupid things for weed?
I'll raise you one libertarian cred and ask what part of the Constitution authorizes the schedule.
i don't think the constitution authorizes >90% of the laws we have.
but the scheduling is written is such a way that it can be done at pretty much any time by any administration. odd to go and pardon all the non-violent offenders and not take that obvious next step..... instead keeping it illegal to justify using it to remove 2nd amendment rights.
While it is true that many of the laws we have today may not have explicit authorization in the Constitution, the Constitution also allows for flexibility and interpretation as society evolves. However, the issue of selective enforcement and pardoning of non-violent offenders raises questions about the true intentions behind the continued criminalization of certain activities. In the context of skateparks, this highlights the importance of advocacy and community involvement to push for the legalization and regulation of activities that may be seen as "fringe" or unconventional. By working within the system and advocating for change, progress can be made towards a more just and equitable society.
See Wickard v. Filburn, 317 U.S. 111
Except Brandon himself who is prone to shooting a shotgun into the dark off a balcony to scare away people knocking on his door and who thinks every firearm is a "weapon of war" not to mention the Kel Tec 9mm carbine used by the latest transsexual school shooter is an "assault rifle".
Kel Tec? What a hunk of junk.
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The only question I have is: Who is the Biden Administration targeting here?
Blacks or Hippies?
If it’s Hippies, then I support fully support the policy.
But I think it’s probably Blacks and we need to throw the racist bastards out.
But ironically Hunter Biden may be one of the most immediate beneficiaries of the ruling because it may take that avenue of attack off the table for the GOP.
Too bad all the US Attorneys are Biden appointees. Otherwise, one mught do his duty and indict Hunter for his proven possession of a firearm while being an admitted unlawful user of controlled substances. Maybe that would get the Biden administration to reevaluate its position on the constitutionality of this law that the administration defends when applied to people not named Biden.
I predict that once two thirds of the states have recreational marijuana, the feds will cave in.
That's something that my fan club can quote me on.
What about recreational cheap plastic flutes? When will we be able to get supposedly-allegedly-high on THOSE, w/o Special Sperm-Emissions from Our Pubic-Serpent Superiors? (AKA, from our Own Specially Self-Appointed and Self-Anointed Sacred Jakes, the One-Eyed Pubic-Serpent Trouser Snakes?)
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If she had used her right to be silent, she wouldn't be in this situation.
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So when is Hunter getting arrested for smoking crack with his gun in his hand?
As a medical marijuana patient, I'm prohibited from buying a firearm from a licensed gun dealer, but thanks to IL's FOID card system, that no one likes, at least I can buy one directly from another current FOID card holder as long as we document the transfer accordingly. I'm not a fan of the FOID card laws, but at least I can legally acquire a used firearm w/o being punished for the medication I need to survive.
In recent years, there has been a growing debate over whether individuals who consume cannabis should be allowed to exercise their Second Amendment rights. The Department of Justice (DOJ) has argued that cannabis use makes individuals "unlawful drug users" and therefore ineligible to own or possess firearms under federal law. However, this argument has been challenged by multiple federal judges, including a recent ruling by Judge S. Thomas Anderson of the Western District of Tennessee. https://learn-share.com/ In his ruling, Judge Anderson rejected the DOJ's argument, stating that it "strains logic" to suggest that cannabis users are inherently dangerous and should be stripped of their Second Amendment rights. This ruling represents a significant victory for advocates of cannabis legalization and gun rights, and may set a precedent for future cases involving the intersection of these two issues.