9th Circuit Temporarily Restores the Right To Bear Arms As It Mulls California's New Gun-Free Zones
The state's law, which a federal judge enjoined last month, prohibits firearms in most public places.

California's sweeping restrictions on public gun possession are on hold again.
The new rules had taken effect on January 1, thanks to an adminstrative stay issued by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit. But on Saturday, the appeals court dissolved that stay in May v. Bonta, allowing the preliminary injunction that U.S. District Judge Cormac Carney granted on December 20 to take effect. That means Californians with carry permits can now use them without risking prosecution for entering the state's newly created gun-free zones, which cover most public places.
Senate Bill 2, which Gov. Gavin Newsom signed into law on September 26, "turns nearly every public place in California into a 'sensitive place,' effectively abolishing the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding and exceptionally qualified citizens to be armed and to defend themselves in public," Carney noted when he issued the injunction. "California will not allow concealed carry permitholders to effectively practice what the Second Amendment promises. SB2's coverage is sweeping, repugnant to the Second Amendment, and openly defiant of the Supreme Court."
Carney was referring to the Supreme Court's 2022 ruling in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, which upheld the right to carry guns in public for self-defense. S.B. 2 effectively nullifies that right by prohibiting guns in 26 categories of "sensitive places," including parks, playgrounds, zoos, libraries, museums, banks, hospitals, houses of worship, public transportation, stadiums, athletic facilities, casinos, bars, and restaurants that serve alcohol. The list also covers any "privately owned commercial establishment that is open to the public" unless the owner "clearly and conspicuously posts a sign at the entrance" saying guns are allowed.
New York, New Jersey, Maryland, and Hawaii have attempted the same end run around Bruen, making carry permits easier to obtain but much harder to use. Like California's law, those states' location-specific gun bans prompted litigation that resulted in federal injunctions.
Thanks to the 9th Circuit's stay, "the Second Amendment-protected right to carry a firearm outside of the home has been effectively destroyed in California for all people with concealed carry weapon permits," the plaintiffs in May v. Bonta said in their motion for reconsideration of the stay. Their lawyer, C.D. Michel, noted that permit holders could "no longer carry their handguns in any public place except some streets, sidewalks, and at the few private businesses that have posted signs affirmatively allowing carry on their private premises."
By allowing S.B. 2 to take effect, Michel said, the appeals court departed from its usual practice of using administrative stays to maintain the status quo until a case can be considered on the merits. "California's attempt to defy the U.S. Supreme Court…interrupts the status quo ante of 'where' people with carry permits can exercise their right to armed self-defense," he noted.
Michel suggested that the 9th Circuit would not have issued such a stay if California had passed a law that impinged on other civil liberties. "From a constitutional law perspective, the position that Plaintiffs find themselves in because of the administrative stay allowing SB 2 to go into effect is no different than if the State had passed a law banning protest in most public spaces," Michel wrote. "Despite a district court agreeing that such a law upset the status quo of allowing peaceful public protest and inflicted a grave First Amendment injury on hundreds of thousands of citizens, protests against an unpopular war or a corrupt politician would then nonetheless be put on hold for months or longer while the State's emergency stay motion defending the law received more vetting by the appellate court."
That outcome, Michel said, would be "patently unacceptable." The fact that "the same sort of pause on the Second Amendment right is now being entertained in this case," he argued, "lends unfortunate credence to concerns that despite the Supreme Court's unambiguous holding to the contrary, the Second Amendment is still considered a second-class right in this Circuit."
Michel also noted that the 9th Circuit had chosen not to stay a preliminary injunction against Hawaii's law in Wolford v. Lopez. "Pending the outcome of the Wolford appeal, Hawaiians are not subject to the restrictive new law, and the pre-law status quo remains in effect," he wrote. "Hawaii's post-Bruen carry restrictions on newly-designated sensitive places remain unenforceable pending appeal, while California's post-Bruen carry restrictions on newly-designated sensitive places are inexplicably enforceable pending appeal. The reasons for these differing outcomes and interpretations of what would preserve the status quo for one state's citizens but not the other's are not readily apparent, and seem to be logically irreconcilable."
The 9th Circuit evidently thought Michel had a point. But that does not necessarily mean the appeals court, which historically has been highly sympathetic to gun control, will agree with Carney's assessment of S.B. 2. Oral arguments in May v. Bonta are scheduled for April.
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…shall not be infringed.
When gun control nuts are saying the second amendment only grants rights to the government, who do they think would do the infringing?
To be more precise they conflate National Guard with militia. I get your point though. I respond to them by asking if any government ever asked permission to have an army or use force.
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The 2 critical words most on the left ignore is "the people".
"The people" is everyone else. Not you.
They're too busy pretending that the framers in the late 18th century were fully aware of how the meaning of the word "regulated" would change over the next 200+ years and that people who had just forcibly overthrown the "legitimate" government under which they'd been born then immediately set out to establish a new authoritarian regime.
Sort of like how the 9th Circuit likes to pretend that they aren't more or less the judiciary arm of the Democratic Party.
I can't figure out how it is that there could be some kind of basic incompatibility between leftist opinions and self-awareness, but the overlap in that particular Venn diagram certainly appears to be a very narrow sliver.
The current inability of even the most obviously biased judicial systems in America to put forward a coherent standard for decisions on controversial issues is reflective of the chaos reigning in official institutions overall lately. Those institutions seem to have abandoned any pretense of any overarching governing principle, let alone a basic Constitutional limit on government authority. Apparently, they feel that they can do anything they like no matter how outrageous, even when they know beyond a shadow of a doubt that those actions will be overruled sooner or later.
Throw enough shit at the wall and eventually some will stick.
Or bankrupt the 2nd Amendment supporters.
True. With no money to challenge a bad law, it just skates by.
They keep us and the NRA in court every chance they get,with unlimited tax dollars.
The process is the punishment.
Good thing they are not wasting tax dollars, right?
Newsome and Caliphonia ignore our sacred law
to enrich all the attorneys in their legislature and
other locals. Jews aren't America's problem,Lawyers are.
I think you're mistaking unwillingness for inability.
The possibility that the judges on the various appeals circuits aren't aware of Supreme Court precedents and rulings from within the last 15 years (Heller was in 2009, Bruen since then) is nil. They choose to make rulings which will run counter to those precedents which happen to run counter to some chosen ideology; which is why they also reverse themselves so quickly when it's pointed out in public that they've chosen to do the opposite of their sworn duty to uphold the Constitution.
Inability is inherent, this is intentional.
But what does this have to do with election deniers?
The election deniers couldn't have nearly overthrown the government on Jan 6th 2021 if they'd shown up at the capitol without any guns...
[Puts up hand to cover glow of dockers, dress belt, and open carry of satin-finished stainless]
I like those little compact 1911 type 45s.
See guys. If you strategically vote for dems, you'll have occasional rights until they figure out new ways around USSC rulings.
All because Republicans couldn't figure out how to win an election without going full MAGtard.
Subverting the Constitution = Progress.
Following the Constitution = Racism.
It's a pickle.
Since more government is the only appropriate solution to literally any problem (including when the problem is too much government), anything which claims to put limits on the size and scope of government can't be acknowledged.
Also, concentrating all power into the hands of one individual is the last remaining bulwark against our nation degenerating into a dictatorship.
2 + 2 = 5
Ignorance is Strength
Two legs bad, four legs good! (rinse, repeat)
I know it's pure fantasy, but I'm going to go ahead and daydream that when SCOTUS gets ahold of this law they sentence everyone who voted for it and he governor who signed it to federal prison for deprivation of rights under color of law.
No government can either "restore" or "rescind" a natural, God-given right.
They can only infringe on that right, or not infringe on it.
The right is always there.
Always.
HERE HERE!
They can if there's no God, obviously.
Rights are not given to us by Allah; we either fight for them or lose them.
OMG! Did you see that guy? How horrible! He's wearing Dockers!
The 9th Circuit isn't sympathetic to gun control.
It's hostile to Heller and the idea that there's an individual right to own a gun. In fact, they're so hostile to it that they're willing to throw other constitutional rights out the window if they're implicated as well.
Gun control proponents merely provide the vehicles by which a majority of the 9th Circuit run over the 2nd Amendment.
In fairness, the 9th enjoined Hawaii's attempt to circumvent Heller and, after a reconsideration, stayed California's attempt here. The article mentions both cases.
I would agree that there are judges in the 9th who are openly hostile to the 2A but I'm not sure that it's entirely fair to generalize their prejudices to the entire institution. I would prefer to assign specific blame where it rightfully belongs - on the individual prosecutors and judges who cut down the laws of the land without regard for the winds that would blow then.
Not the entire circuit is aggressively hostile to 2A, only 7 of the 9 seem to be. There were a handful of decisions where by the luck of the draw the 2 actual liberals on the circuit ended up in a 3-judge panel that heard some gun control cases and chose not to reflexively back the Dem Party platform but at least one of those rulings was then scuttled by re-hearing the case before all nine of them.