Another Judge Chips Away at Laws Barring Felons From Owning Guns
Now both a violent and nonviolent felon have been found by lower courts to have a Second Amendment right to own weapons. The Supreme Court will likely consider the issue in the near future.

The law barring felons from owning firearms suffered another significant judicial blow in a decision yesterday in U.S. v. Bullock. Generally knows as the "felon in possession law," U.S. Code 922(g)(1) prohibits firearm ownership for those found guilty of a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year. Jessie Bullock filed a motion in August 2022 to have such charges against him dismissed, and Judge Carlton W. Reeves of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi granted that motion yesterday.
Bullock had served about 15 years in state prison for manslaughter and aggravated assault after killing someone in a 1992 bar fight. The government indicted him in 2018, when he was 57 years old, for possessing a firearm despite his felon status, and wanted to give him another 10 years.
As Reeves sums up the history of Bullock's felon-in-possession case, a magistrate judge thought it was "'downright silly' to claim that Mr. Bullock 'poses a danger to his wife, contrary to her own sworn testimony, contrary to the time that he's been out on bond from this very incident'….Mr. Bullock has remained on bond ever since, without incident."
Bullock's claim, as Reeves put it, is that since he "finished serving his sentence long ago, and the available evidence indicates that the firearm the government complains of was kept in the sanctity of his home," the charge against him violated his Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms.
Reeves explicitly says that his decision involves an "as applied" challenge to 922(g)(1). He states outright that despite dismissing the case against Bullock, "the federal government may continue to prosecute other persons for violating § 922(g)(1)."
Still, the arguments he presents make a strong case for saying the law is unconstitutional in its entirety as written.
Reeves' reasoning is based on the 2022 Bruen decision, which overturned some New York restrictions on the public carrying of weapons. That case declared that to stand up under Second Amendment scrutiny, a law must be "consistent with this Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation." (Reeves makes it clear with near-sarcasm throughout the decision that he wishes the Supreme Court had not set the precedent requiring him to dismiss the case against Bullock; he has done this kind of "you idiots in the Supreme Court made me do this ridiculous thing" decision making in an earlier case upholding qualified immunity for a police officer, as Billy Binion reported here at Reason in 2020.)
Reeves cannot help (though he clearly would like to) but notice that the 120 previous U.S. district court cases the federal government relied on to prove that such laws are totally constitutional do not adequately demonstrate the required post-Bruen "historical tradition" to prop up the law. "In none of those cases did the court possess an amicus brief from a historian. And in none of those cases did the court itself appoint an independent expert to help sift through the historical record," Reeves notes.
Reeves also spells out later in his decision that the Justice Department has itself admitted in filings in other cases that the felon-in-possession law is, as stated in particular in an appellee brief in U.S. v. Pettengill, "firmly rooted in the twentieth century and likely bears little resemblance to laws in effect at the time the Second Amendment was ratified."
The facts that lead Reeves to toss the case against Bullock are surprisingly simple: "The federal felon‐in‐possession ban was enacted in 1938, not 1791 or 1868—the years the Second and Fourteenth Amendments were ratified. The government's brief in this case does not identify a 'well‐established and representative historical analogue' from either era supporting the categorical disarmament of tens of millions of Americans who seek to keep firearms in their home for self‐defense."
That bald statement does imply to this layman that the law should not be able to stand any constitutional scrutiny, though Reeves insists he's not saying that. His granting an actual violent felon, Bullock, the right not to be prosecuted for owning a gun follows on a June en banc decision from the 3rd Circuit in the case of Range v. Attorney General. That decision found the law unconstitutional as applied to a particular nonviolent felon who had merely lied on a food stamp application and never actually spent a day in jail—though he could have been sent up for more than a year, per 922(g)(1).
Reeves says there might be room for states to do things the federal government should not, or to legitimately keep certain felons from owning guns, even after Bruen; he posits that "American history might support state‐level felon disarmament laws; that at least would align with principles of federalism. It might support disarmament of persons adjudicated to be dangerous….And it likely does support disarmament of persons convicted of death‐eligible offenses. The power to take someone's life necessarily includes the lesser power to disarm them."
Reeves made news in this case last November by passive-aggressively complaining that he might need to appoint a historian to assist him in understanding the case, since the Bruen decision requires him to "play historian in the name of constitutional adjudication." Neither party in the case agreed that this was necessary; Bullock's team asserted that it was the government's burden to prove the historical validity of the felon possession laws, and the government just insisted that "the prohibition against felons possessing firearms is so thoroughly established as to not require detailed exploration of the historical record."
Reeves did not agree.
To preview how the Supreme Court might ultimately consider the issue Reeves' decision has brought to renewed prominence, he quotes extensively from a pre–Supreme Court dissent from now-Justice Amy Coney Barrett in the 2019 7th Circuit decision Kanter v. Barr, in which she agrees that sweeping prohibitions on all felons, though possibly not demonstrably dangerous ones, should not stand under the Second Amendment. (Rickey Kanter got a Trump pardon.) Elsewhere in Reeves' decision in Bullock, the judge quotes Bruen concurrences from Justices Samuel Alito and Brett Kavanaugh in which they both say out loud that Bruen in and of itself did not cast doubt on existing laws prohibiting felons from owning guns. Reeves thinks references by Justice Antonin Scalia in the 2008 Heller decision (which first established that the Second Amendment meant individual citizens had a right to keep commonly owned weapons for self-defense in the home; Bruen extended that to public carrying) to "law abiding, responsible citizens" are mere dicta with no power to prevent a decision like his.
Reeves goes on to somewhat slyly speculate about how the Supreme Court might look upon what he's done, while concluding that "this Court will refrain from counting the Justices' votes today."
But Reeves does explain that "another common method of denying these motions"—that is, previous motions such as Bullock's that did not succeed—"is to tally the felon‐in‐possession votes implied by Bruen's concurrences and dissent. Recall that in these separate opinions, six Justices endorsed felon disarmament. Five of those Justices are still on the Court. As a result, some district courts have assumed that as a simple matter of realpolitik, there is no chance the Supreme Court will find § 922(g)(1) unconstitutional in a future case….It certainly is tempting for busy trial judges to try and resolve complicated issues via this kind of calculation. But this Court cannot honor an advisory opinion on an issue that was not before the Supreme Court."
Some facts about felon-in-possession laws from FY 2021 from the U.S. Sentencing Commission (USSC): 7,454 such convictions came before the USSC, and the number from 2017 through 2021 was always over 6,000 a year.
Over 97 percent of such violators were men, 56 percent were black, 95 percent were U.S. citizens, and their average age was 34. Over 96 percent of such offenders were sentenced to prison, with an average sentence of 60 months.
Through a complicated point system, the USSC divides offenders' "criminal history category" into six categories; of those sentences under 922(g)(1), 39 percent were in one of the three lower categories.
While the figures cannot be known for certain, one analysis surmises up to 100,000 convicted felons in the U.S. still own guns, despite the fact that the federal government insists (and most courts agree) that it is categorically illegal to do so—although this Bullock decision and the 3rd Circuit's Range decision are chipping away at that certainty.
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If you aren't incarcerated, you should have all your constitutional rights.
It ain't that hard, folks.
Exactly, from gun rights to the right to vote.
Exactly wrong. Each right revoked through due process of law (freedom; gun ownership; sex offender limitations; voting) may be specified by law to be set individually during sentencing.
Don't worry, though. We now have a majority in the SCOTUS for the first time in 70 years actually dedicated to the Constitution, not "Social Justice."
I take your point but you have misread mine. Longtobefree expressed an opinion - "should" - with which I am in general agreement. This does not mean that I am claiming that it is unconstitutional to deprive people of their rights when not incarcerated.
What has been done, however, is to enact a FEDERAL level law that automatically and universally disarms EVERYONE convicted of certain classes of offense. And THIS is precisely wrong and unconstitutional.
I would agree to a change whereby part of the original curt case will in fact set ALL forms of punishment and restrction, including the loss of the use of arms, and each category be given a particular tme frame or set of conditions that would determine whether or when each class of right would be restored.
Part of that MUST include a review of ALL offenses labelled "felony". The food stamp guy mentioned is one case in point. People get busted for driving more than 20 mph above the posted speed limit.. most states label this an automatic felony, thus disarming anyone so convicted. Wrong. I've been on many roads that are posted at 85 in ione state. but twostats over a roadway identical or equivalent in every way is posted at a stupid slow 55. So in one state what is perfectly legal is labelled felony in a couple states over. Or what about I 15 eastbound out of Barstow headed out across rifle shot straight flat level smooth three lane roadway with NO traffic..... and them Chippies DO likes them a gettin a few pieces of payin' paper into some hands of the peons.
Our right to arms and self defense is SO important that oror to removing that right from anyone there must be a careful examination of all the pertinent factors, and a case specific finding regarding the potential loss of those rights.
Of coirse some jurisdiction will "find" against the accused in every case..... just don't get busted in those places.
If losing the right to X were an individualized decision made as part of the sentence for your particular crime, you might have a point. Given the current structure, you are entirely wrong because the rights are not in fact being revoked through due process.
100%
100% wrong. Each right revoked through due process of law (freedom; gun ownership; sex offender limitations; voting) may be specified by law to be set individually during sentencing.
Don't worry, though. We now have a majority in the SCOTUS for the first time in 70 years actually dedicated to the Constitution, not "Social Justice."
Agreed.
Why do believe our Constitution does not allow revoking different rights for different duration through the due process of law? Where in the Constitution do you believe it says such a thing?
Each right revoked through due process of law (freedom; gun ownership; sex offender limitations; voting) may be specified by law to be set individually during sentencing.
Don't worry, though. We now have a majority in the SCOTUS for the first time in 70 years actually dedicated to the Constitution, not "Social Justice."
Indeed there is no such language in the Constitution but right wing judges add language that isn't there on a regular basis.
I can think of examples of LEFT-WING judges doing something of that nature, such as in Roe V. Wade. Can you provide an example of a "right-wing" judge doing that? The case in this article is NOT an example of such.
See above. The process involved is not in fact due process of law. An individualized sentence that revoked those rights might be but the current rules are not.
Making people into felons is a package deal for disenfranchisement and preventing them from armed insurrection for being disenfranchised.
The idea that this has any relation to preventing armed insurrection is silly.
First, you'd have to declare a huge segment of the population violent felons.
Second, last I checked armed insurrection was illegal everywhere, so this is about as meaningful as a gun free zone.
"Gosh. I was going to start an armed insurrection, but then I learned it was illegal for me to own a gun! Darn!"
They may want to disarm the population, but the idea that felony prohibitions against firearms ownership is how they'll go about it is ridiculous.
People want to keep violent felons from owning guns because the vast majority of violent crime is committed by repeat offenders. These people don't deserve to be trusted with guns. If you want to approach that by just never letting them out of jail, I'm okay with that, too. Three strikes laws reduce violent crime. But there's no reason they should have the right to a gun after their first strike.
You are either free or not. There is no middle ground. Either get back in jail where you belong, get in front of the firing squad, or get in the electric chair. But once you have paid your debt to society, that society no longer should have the right to hold it over your head. You are forgiven or you aren't. What is the point of jail if you aren't cleared when you come out ? Execute them or leave them alone.
Disarming people who have demonstrated their inability / unwillingness to comply with our laws is common sense. They SHOULD be disenfranchised - that is part of the punishment.
+1 for all rights, both natural rights and civil rights.
Exactly wrong. Each right revoked through due process of law (freedom; gun ownership; sex offender limitations; voting) may be specified by law to be set individually during sentencing - just as we put heinous pedophiles on the sex offender list with commensurate limitations on their freedoms after their prison term ends.
Don't worry, though. We now have a majority in the SCOTUS for the first time in 70 years actually dedicated to the Constitution, not "Social Justice."
Why? What principle is this based on other than, "Because I think so?"
What about those granted parole (or probation for that matter)? Surely there can be restrictions on parolees such as limits on who they associate with and requirements that they report to a parole officer once a month. Why would it be wrong to include restrictions on firearms possession to that list?
As far as I know, no one HAS to accept parole. Aren't they free to stay in prison and rely on the prison system for their protection rather than be out of prison for the remainder of their sentence but without firearms to protect themselves?
Don't listen to the leftists here. There is nothing in our Constitution saying that the penalty for a crime cannot have separate components of differing duration. Just like we put sex offenders on the sex offenders list for life.
Maybe someday we will invent cures for those who are violent; sex offenders; or Progressives in general. Until then, it is perfectly reasonable to return a person to society so as not to be a burden on that society yet continue to restrict their (gun/child proximity/voting) rights. And yes, the latter is an INTENTIONAL "disenfranchisement." Why? 100% of criminals will all say they should get all of their rights back the moment they are no longer behind bars. Baloney.
Don't worry, though. We now have a majority in the SCOTUS for the first time in 70 years actually dedicated to the Constitution, not "Social Justice."
Apparently it IS hard for you, Cletus. Laws and courts may most certainly set individual sentencing duration for different rights revoked so long as the law specifies that latitude.
If you serve your time for molesting children, you remain on the sex offender's list forever. That's because we cannot reliably "cure" pedophilia." That is part of the LEGAL REMEDY specified in the law.
If you serve your time for armed robbery, you may still have part of your sentence be a lifetime revocation of your 2A rights, voting rights, etc. for as long as the laws specify.
Don't worry. SCOTUS has a solid Constitutional majority. They'll set it right.
Totally agree.
For sound economic perspective go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
play historian in the name of constitutional adjudication.
Or judge, you could just - I don't know - have studied law at one of those law teaching schools.
Buena.
Well, as long as it's decided by a bunch of unaccountable judges, not elected legislatures, because that's the American way.
"Bullock had served about 15 years in state prison for manslaughter and aggravated assault after killing someone in a 1992 bar fight."
The only reason the Supreme Court would take this case is to have an appealing set of facts to uphold the felon in possession law.
Nobody seems to realize why this issue is so difficult.
In 1791, and even 1868, there wasn't much of a problem with felons having gun rights, because most of them were hung!
This didn't start to be a problem until we lowered the bar for a felony, and then started letting them all out of prison after their sentences were served.
@TPKeller. Exactly right. The bar for felony is so low that at least in Texas its a running joke at the courthouse that everything is a felony. Except for public servants of course wherefrom there are almost no felonious crimes that can be committed.
But voters don't really care about their rights, as long as their representatives vote for more money or no abortions. Most people deserve their government!
Vote out the Republicans who keep enacting those laws.
You mean all those evil Republicans like our current Drug Warrior-in-Chief?
Don't be a moron. Just as many Democrats are equally responsible for those laws.
The gun nuts want to arm violent felons.
Look, we know you're a racist fuckwit, just admit you're afraid of black people who can fight back.