He Lost His Gun Rights Because of a Misdemeanor DUI Conviction. That Was Unconstitutional, a Judge Says.
The case highlights the broad reach of a federal law that bans firearm possession by people with nonviolent criminal records.

The federal ban on gun possession by people with certain kinds of criminal records is often described as applying to "felons," but that shorthand is misleading. The provision, 18 USC 922(g)(1), actually covers anyone convicted of "a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year." That is why Pennsylvania resident Edward A. Williams lost his right to own a gun after he was convicted of driving under the influence, a misdemeanor, in 2005. Had Williams defied Section 922(g)(1) by possessing a firearm, he would have been committing a federal felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison.
That consequence violated Williams' Second Amendment rights, a federal judge ruled on Tuesday. U.S. District Judge John Milton Younge's decision in Williams v. Garland tracks the logic of a June ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit, which includes Pennsylvania. The latter case, Range v. Attorney General, involved a Pennsylvania man who likewise was convicted of a nonviolent misdemeanor: food stamp fraud. Both cases illustrate the breadth of this "prohibited person" category, which includes many Americans with no history of violence.
Back in 1995, Bryan Range pleaded guilty to fraudulently obtaining $2,458 in food stamps by understating his income. He returned the money, paid a $100 fine and $288 in court costs, and served three years of probation. But although he did not initially realize it, that Pennsylvania misdemeanor conviction also carried a lifelong penalty under Section 922(g)(1): permanent loss of his Second Amendment rights. Even though Range did not serve any time behind bars, his crime theoretically was punishable by up to five years in prison.
Applying the constitutional test that the Supreme Court established last year in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, the 3rd Circuit concluded that disarming Range was not "consistent with this Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation." Writing for the majority, Judge Thomas M. Hardiman noted that laws restricting gun rights based on criminal records were not enacted until relatively recently.
The first such federal law, the Federal Firearms Act of 1938, applied only to violent crimes such as murder, manslaughter, rape, kidnapping, robbery, and assault with a deadly weapon. In 1961, Congress expanded the ban to cover nonviolent crimes punishable by more than a year in prison. "We are confident that a law passed in 1961—some 170 years after the Second Amendment's ratification and nearly a century after the Fourteenth Amendment's ratification—falls well short of 'longstanding' for purposes of demarcating the scope of a constitutional right," Hardiman wrote.
The 3rd Circuit described its decision as "narrow," applying only to Range and "people like him." One of those people, Younge ruled on Tuesday, is Williams, who was arrested for DUI 23 years ago in State College. Although Williams completed a diversion program that resulted in the dismissal of that charge, it still counted as a prior conviction when he was again arrested for DUI in Philadelphia four years later. The prior conviction, combined with the fact that a breathalyzer put his blood alcohol concentration at 0.233 percent ("well above the legal limit of 0.08") after the 2004 arrest, made the second offense "a first-degree misdemeanor punishable by up to five years in prison." That was enough to trigger Section 922(g)(1).
Defending that application of the provision, the government cited laws enacted in the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries that prohibited people from either carrying or firing guns while intoxicated. "The Government points to several regulations permitting the disarmament of drunk or intoxicated persons," Younge writes. "None of these regulations allude to disarmament lasting beyond the individual's state of intoxication, and none provided for permanent disarmament, as Section 922(g)(1) does. Certainly, this Court agrees that using a firearm while intoxicated is dangerous, but historical regulations which momentarily disarmed certain individuals for temporary mental incapacity cannot be considered similar to the sanction of permanent disarmament for past DUI convictions."
In Range, the Justice Department tried to avoid the need to come up with "relevantly similar" historical analogs by arguing that the Second Amendment applies only to "law-abiding" people. Once Range committed food stamp fraud, the government argued, he was no longer part of "the people" whose rights that amendment guarantees.
The 3rd Circuit rejected that argument in no uncertain terms. "At root, the Government's claim that only 'law-abiding, responsible citizens' are protected by the Second Amendment devolves authority to legislators to decide whom to exclude from 'the people,'" Hardiman wrote. "We reject that approach because such 'extreme deference gives legislatures unreviewable power to manipulate the Second Amendment by choosing a label.'"
The Justice Department has not given up on that argument. Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar recently told the Supreme Court that the federal ban on gun possession by people who are subject to domestic violence restraining orders is constitutional because it is limited to "dangerous individuals" (which is not actually true). But she repeatedly indicated that, in the government's view, dangerousness is not the only legitimate criterion for disarming people.
"Bruen recognized that Congress may disarm those who are not law-abiding, responsible citizens," Prelogar said. "Throughout our nation's history, legislatures have disarmed those who have committed serious criminal conduct." She argued that "history and tradition" show legislators may disarm "those who have committed serious crimes defined by the felony-level punishment that can attach to those crimes."
That claim conveniently matches the language of current federal law. But as the 3rd Circuit noted in Range, Prelogar's account does not match historical practice prior to the 20th century. And as the 3rd Circuit also noted, the approach recommended by Prelogar empowers the government to strip individuals of their constitutional rights based on how legislators decide to classify an offense.
Chief Justice John Roberts asked Prelogar if "someone who drives 30 miles an hour in a 25-mile-an-hour zone" would qualify as "law-abiding." Yes, Prelogar said, because that is not a "serious crime." Roberts asked if she had in mind the distinction between misdemeanors and felonies. Yes, Prelogar said, "that is the relevant category with
respect to law-abiding citizens."
There are a few problems with that position. First, as Range and Williams show, even nonviolent misdemeanors can trigger the loss of gun rights under Section 922(g)(1). Second, the felonies covered by that provision include many offenses that do not involve violence, such as mail fraud, embezzlement, and obstruction of justice, along with offenses, such as drug dealing, that do not even involve the violation of anyone's rights. Third, if the only criterion is whether an offense is classified as a felony or whether it is subject to "felony-level punishment," legislators have unreviewable power to dramatically limit Second Amendment rights by 1) criminalizing common behavior (such as speeding) and 2) classifying it as a felony.
Last February, in an Oklahoma case involving the federal ban on gun possession by cannabis consumers, U.S. District Judge Patrick Wyrick highlighted that last danger. "Imagine a world" where a state "could make mowing one's lawn a felony so that it could then strip all its newly deemed 'felons' of their right to possess a firearm," he said.
Wyrick posed that very hypothetical to the government's lawyers. "Remarkably," he said, "when presented with this lawn-mowing hypothetical argument, and asked if such an approach would be consistent with the Second Amendment, the United States said 'yes.' So, in the federal government's view, a state or the federal government could deem anything at all a felony and then strip those convicted of that felony—no matter how innocuous the conduct—of their fundamental right to possess a firearm."
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He’s gunning for this to be overturned.
This judge shot the previous decision down.
Restrictions such as these should be dismissed lock, stock, and barrel.
I'm sure the Justice Department will come back loaded for bear(s in trunks).
If the prison system let the suspect out unintentionally, that would be an accidental discharge.
Yes, prosecutorial overreach is squarely in the crosshairs.
The judge may want to see you in his chamber for that.
Considering the Supreme Court is hearing both Rahimi and Range, they have two rounds in the chamber.
This comment chain is triggering.
So, in the federal government's view, a state or the federal government could deem anything at all a felony ... no matter how innocuous the conduct...
That's been going on for a while now. Getting tough on crime and all that.
Correct. Ashli Babbitt lost her right to bear arms due to her peacefully protesting at the Capitol.
Um, no. I was talking about legislatively turning non-violent and victimless crimes into felonies under the guise of being "tough on crime" in order to deprive people of all kinds of rights through the courts, not the canonised saint of some demented Trump religion.
Civil trespass =/ loss of 2A protections.
You’re such a worthless cunt. It’s just a shame you won’t nut up and finally kill yourself
DUI literally kills people. It is a crime of violence. A drunk with a gun is not something you want to see.
now do his other constitutional rights
If DUI is so bad why do the courts and legislatures return the privilege to operate a motor vehicle on the public roads to the convicted person?
Seems one should strip a privilege long before stripping a constitutional right.
If everybody carried a gun that problem would soon fix itself.
DUI does (sometimes) kill people. It is not, however, a crime of violence. And as the article very clearly points out, there is a vast difference between temporarily disarming someone who is currently impaired and permanently disarming someone for a long-ago impairment.
Maybe change it from
“1) who has been convicted in any court of, a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year”
to
“1) who has been convicted in any court of, a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year, and has been sentenced to serve a jail term exceeding one year.”
I'll buy that for a dollar!
My conviction on Felony sale of Marijuana in Colorado in the 90s wouldn't have resulted in stripping me of my 2nd amendment rights. I served 4 years of probation. No prison time.
Better but still too low. I could game that by outlawing lawn mowing, setting the sentence to 1 year + 1 day and then granting probation. You've still "been sentenced to serve a jail term exceeding one year" even though you won't see the inside of a jail.
Stick to actually violent criminals who are unable to demonstrate that they have reasonably rehabilitated themselves.
Maybe he can get an SBR with a bump stock.
I subscribe to the "If you can't be trusted with a gun, why are you walking around with the rest of us?"
If you can't be trusted with a gun, you can't be trusted with a knife, a car, gasoline, etc.
Completely agree.
Absolutely agree. If a person is not imprisoned, that person should enjoy all liberties that any other non-incarcerated person enjoys, all else equal. Including gun rights and voting rights.
"He Lost His Gun Rights Because of a Misdemeanor DUI Conviction. That Was Unconstitutional, a Judge Says."
Good. Even if you are a former felon you still have the right to defend yourself. There are also plenty of ways to be a felon without having committed a violent crime or being a violent person.
I believe the intent here is to deprive as many people as possible of their 2A rights, by any possible means. If I’m caught going 30 in a 25, that would do it.
Because Rev Arty’s “betters” say so. And guns are bad.
No jurisdiction in the United States of America prohibits someone, who had been convicted of killing someone arising from a car crash that they were at fault for while driving drunk, from purchasing or possessing an automobile.
If you can strip citizens of their 2A rights for the "right" reasons it's a pretty small step to strip them of ALL rights. Then all they have to do is come up with more "right" reasons and no one will have any rights.
Decades ago a coworker was convicted of a felony sentenced to probation, community service, and restitution.
All because his wife forgot to write a check into the check register.
The rent check he wrote bounced.
Never share a checking account with anyone, not even your spouse.
It is a curiosity that the "right to bear arms," not for the benefit of a well-regulated militia has more gravitas than the right to vote, freedom from religion, the right to live as one chooses and identify as one sees them themselves. All of which are in the very same constitution. Curious.