Due Process Demands Stricter Standards for Restraining Orders That Negate Gun Rights
In an upcoming Supreme Court case, the Cato Institute argues that the "threadbare procedures" required by federal law provide inadequate protection for constitutional rights.

Since 1994, federal law has prohibited gun possession by people who are subject to domestic violence restraining orders. Although that provision may seem like a commonsensical safeguard, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit ruled last February that it was not "consistent with this Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation"—the constitutional test prescribed by the U.S. Supreme Court's 2022 ruling in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen. On Tuesday, in United States v. Rahimi, the Supreme Court will consider whether the 5th Circuit was right about that.
Rahimi is primarily about the contours of the right to keep and bear arms as it was traditionally understood. But a Cato Institute brief notes that the case also raises the question of what due process requires when the government seeks to deprive someone of that right.
Under 18 USC 922(g)(8), which Congress approved as part of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, it is a felony, currently punishable by up to 15 years in prison, for someone to possess or receive a firearm when he is subject to a court order that restrains him from "harassing, stalking, or threatening an intimate partner" or the partner's child or from "engaging in other conduct that would place an intimate partner in reasonable fear of bodily injury" to the partner or the partner's child. The order must be preceded by a hearing of which the respondent "received actual notice," and it must include either a finding that the respondent poses "a credible threat" or language that "prohibits the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force" that "would reasonably be expected to cause bodily injury."
To issue an order, in other words, a judge need not conclude that the respondent actually poses a threat. To trigger the loss of gun rights, the order need only include boilerplate regarding the use of force. And as 5th Circuit Judge James C. Ho noted in his concurring opinion last February, orders that include such language are "often used as a tactical device in divorce proceedings," "are granted to virtually all who apply," are "a tempting target for abuse," and in some cases have been used to disarm the victims of domestic violence, leaving them "in greater danger than before."
Are the procedural protections specified by Section 922(g)(8) enough to guarantee the "due process" that the Fifth Amendment demands before someone can be "deprived of life, liberty, or property"? The Cato Institute, joined by the Goldwater Institute, thinks not.
When Congress enacted this provision, the Cato brief notes, the Supreme Court had not yet recognized that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to arms, which happened 14 years later in District of Columbia v. Heller. "The bare-bones framework for dispossession upon issuance of a domestic violence restraining order set forth in § 922(g)(8) evinces a legislative perception that the stakes for the gun owner are negligible and that the amount of process required to extinguish his Second Amendment rights is correspondingly minimal," Cato says. "Thus, all that § 922(g)(8) requires is notice of the proceeding and an opportunity to participate, together with either an express finding of dangerousness or an explicit prohibition of the use or threatened use of force against an intimate partner or child."
Now that armed self-defense has been recognized as an interest on par with other constitutional rights, Cato argues, due process clearly requires more. Currently, federal law does not require notice to the target of an order that it will deprive him of his Second Amendment rights, which he may not realize. That information is important, Cato says, because a respondent might not be inclined to contest an order that he thinks will merely forbid conduct that is "already unlawful (physically assaulting another person)" or "at the very least unethical (harassing, stalking, or threatening an intimate partner or their child)."
Respondents may also surmise, based on judges' readiness to issue protective orders "to virtually all who apply," that challenging them would be futile or worse. Cato notes that respondents have no right to be represented by an attorney if they cannot afford one and may end up having to pay the other side's legal fees. In Texas, where this case originated, that obligation goes only one way: Fees are shifted to the respondents if they lose, but respondents cannot recover their fees in the (unlikely) event that they prevail.
Section 922(g)(8) not only does not require a finding that respondents are dangerous. It also does not specify a standard of proof to establish that optional element. In most states, a "preponderance of evidence" is enough, meaning the proposition is more likely than not to be true. In the context of terminating parental rights, by contrast, the Supreme Court has held that a higher standard is required: "clear and convincing evidence."
Congress can address these deficiencies by amending the law. While the Supreme Court need not specify how that should be done, Cato says, the justices should recognize that the current procedural protections are inadequate when a "fundamental right" is at stake.
Section 922(g)(8) is "both historically anomalous and legally deficient in failing to ensure an adequate measure of procedural due process," the brief says. "The threadbare procedures set forth in § 922(g)(8) would be considered woefully inadequate to support the abrogation of other fundamental rights," such as the right to travel, the right to access the internet, or "the ability to petition the government for redress of grievances by attending a city council meeting." The "right of armed self-defense," Cato argues, "is no less important and no less entitled to an appropriate measure of procedural due process."
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such as the right to travel, the right to access the internet, or "the ability to petition the government for redress of grievances by attending a city council meeting."
^Just in case anyone was worried that Cato might actually be putting their advocacy of a passive right above their advocacy of one or more policies requiring active support of
rightsabilities.No, not everybody has a right to petition the government for redress of grievances at a city council meeting. Not everybody is governed by a city council. Not all city councils hold meetings open to the public in such a fashion. Not all city councils address any/all grievances at said meetings in such a fashion.
People have a right to bodily autonomy and free association, freedom from unjust confinement, but there is no "right to travel" and, even if there were, it ceases at the lines you choose to selectively ignore in support of cultures that don't necessarily recognize any of your 1A or 2A rights.
As such, go fuck yourself for trying to stick your open borders/BLM/Antifa/ACAB nose in the 2A tent.
No, not everybody has a right to petition the government for redress of grievances at a city council meeting.
I mean it doesn't even extend to ex presidents.
"there is no “right to travel”"
https://constitution.congress.gov/browse/essay/artIV-S2-C1-13/ALDE_00013789/%5B'travel'%5D
At the end of the day, this is simply "Believe all women."
There will be hysterics when this gets tossed by SCOTUS.
I can hear the "Misogynistic!" cries already.
Let us never forget the words of Judge Wayne Andersen.
https://archive.md/mgil3
In the past, pro-gun legal groups made an effort to choose appealing litigants, but this defendant sounds like a violent and dangerous jerk. I agree that orders granted ex-parte to divorce litigants should not end 2nd Amendment rights, but it sounds like there was an objective hearing in this case.
but this defendant sounds like a violent and dangerous jerk.
How is possessing a rifle and pistol violent and dangerous? They were found in his house, he wasn't brandishing anything.
God only knows what would've happened if he was wearing a MAGA hat!
In only good people who never get in trouble deserve due process protections, then there's no point to those protections in the first place.
This case wasn't chosen by gun-rights groups. It made it's way thru the courts by his own attorneys. It's only now that gun rights groups are trying to minimize any damage from a less than attractive defendant.
The same way that Rosa Parks was cherry picked.
Rahimi, just from what I’ve read of him, is as odious as they come. I expect he will be spending much of his natural life behind bars, not that it will be all that long.
Rand v Garland is a much more appealing case, re an individual who was deprived of his 2A rights for a misdemeanor charge for which he spent no time in jail but could have served a maximum of 2 years for omitting a few hundred dollars of income from an application for state assistance (welfare fraud).
Brady disqualification never happens ex parte. That isn’t the problem. The problem is that the standard of proof is minimal, there are often statutes that require the judicial officer to analyze the evidence in the way most likely to limit DV, and simple verbal altercations (perceived by the petitioning party as threats to do harm) or a one-time mutual skirmish in which the male simply tries to restrain the female or protect himself are sufficient.
In the rural district in which I have practice and been a magistrate, it is common practice for judges to just issue ex parte and not even set a hearing (no Brady DQ) or to let the Respondent decide not to have a hearing and not to risk a Brady DQ, which responding parties often do even if they vehemenently disagree with the allegations.
In my opinion, the federal law needs to be re-worked to provide more case-by-case analysis. A guy who gets pissed over something and runs his mouth but has no history of violence or a guy whose wife comes at him and he just tries to restrain her should not be treated the same way as a guy who has beat the shit out of women, had prior firearm and/or violent offenses, or is sending repeated and very specific threats to harm or kill the protected party. But federal law gives state judicial officers zero discretion.
"intimate partner"??
What's that when it's home?
I doubt they have been intimate since before the restraining order.
I doubt they have been intimate since before the restraining order.
Anyone in law enforcement or social services want to chime in on this?
Yea, the language is always “current or former intimate partners” in my experience. And, not that this needs to be said, but it just means fucking. No wining, dining, kissing, or foreplay proof required.
Our domestic violence laws apply to partners in on/off again relationships, former dating relationships, or a kid in common and extend even to roommates (or former roommates) with no past relationship. It's a rather wide net that is cast.
So if you get in a dispute with your roommate for not paying their share of bills and threaten them (pay your bills or I am going to kick your ass) - they can get a domestic violence restraining order on you and you can lose your 2nd amend rights. Its some bullshit.
With all the hatred in the comments towards Cato I'm surprised nobody is championing these laws that Cato opposes as a matter of principle.
Wut?
Never forget.
Then Columbine murders happened while this law (and the 1994 Assault Weapons Ban) were in effect.
That means this law protected nothing but fuck all and jack shit.
What did you expect when "protection" orders are issued at the drop of a hat? It is standard practice for a woman's lawyer to advise that she obtain an order during divorce to strengthen her position. Then you have Judges that have to think about re-election and there is no downside for them to issue an order, whereas if they didn't issue one and something happened to the person requesting one, it would be a club to be used by a political opponent. It is the same as "red flag" laws. There's no downside politically in issuing them, while not issuing one can be a disaster.
"...currently punishable by up to 15 years in prison..."
Gang members and dope dealers who shoot and kill people do even get that.