The 5th Circuit Says the Federal Ban on Handgun Sales to Young Adults Is Unconstitutional
The government failed to persuade the appeals court that 18-to-20-year-olds are not part of "the people" or that the age restriction is consistent with the "historical tradition of firearm regulation."

The federal ban on handgun sales to adults younger than 21 violates the Second Amendment, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit ruled today. That law is "unconstitutional in light of our Nation's historic tradition of firearm regulation," a three-judge panel unanimously concluded in Reese v. ATF.
"Today's ruling is yet another critical FPC win against an immoral and unconstitutional age-based gun ban," said Brandon Combs, president of the Firearms Policy Coalition (FPC), which challenged the law along with two would-be handgun buyers and two other gun rights groups. "We look forward to restoring the Second Amendment rights of all peaceable adults throughout the United States."
Under 18 USC 922(b)(1), a provision that was included in the Gun Control Act of 1968, a federally licensed firearm dealer may not sell handguns to "any individual who the licensee knows or has reasonable cause to believe is less than twenty-one years of age." The 5th Circuit upheld that restriction in 2012, but that was a decade before the Supreme Court clarified the constitutional test for gun control laws in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen.
Under Bruen, the government has the burden of demonstrating that a law restricting conduct covered by "the Second Amendment's plain text" is "consistent with this Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation." The 5th Circuit concluded that the government's defense of Section 922(b)(1) failed that test.
The government's lawyers argued that 18-to-20-year-olds are not part of "the people" whose "right to keep and bear arms" is guaranteed by the Second Amendment. They cited "the common law's recognition of 21 years as the date of legal maturity at the time of the founding" and "the fact that legislatures have long established minimum age requirements for various activities."
As Judge Edith Jones notes in the 5th Circuit's opinion, however, "there are no age or maturity restrictions in the plain text of the Amendment, as there are in other constitutional provisions," which "suggests that the Second Amendment lacks a minimum age requirement." She also observes that "the right of the people peaceably to assemble" (protected by the First Amendment), "the right of the people" to be secure from "unreasonable searches and seizures" (protected by the Fourth Amendment), and the unspecified rights "retained by the people" under the Ninth Amendment "undoubtedly protect eighteen-to-twenty-year-olds as much as twenty-one-year-olds."
Jones adds that "the history of firearm use, particularly in connection with militia service, contradicts the premise that eighteen-to-twenty-year-olds are not covered by the plain text of the Second Amendment." Under the 1792 Militia Act, "eighteen-to-twenty-year-olds not only served in that militia, but were required to serve," she writes. "Eighteen-to-twenty-year-olds therefore must be covered by the plain text of the Second Amendment, as they were compulsorily enrolled in the regiments that the Amendment was written to protect….While the core of the right [to arms] is rooted in self-defense and unconnected with the militia, the text of the Amendment's prefatory clause considered along with the overwhelming evidence of their militia service at the founding indicates that eighteen-to-twenty-year-olds were indeed part of 'the people' for Second Amendment purposes."
In short, Jones writes, "the text of the Second Amendment includes eighteen-to-twenty-year-old individuals among 'the people' whose right to keep and bear arms is protected." Having failed to dodge the Bruen test, the government had to cite historical precedents that are "relevantly similar" to Section 922(b)(1). It relied "principally on mid-to-late-19th century statutes (most enacted after Reconstruction) that restricted firearm ownership based on age."
Those laws "were passed too late in time to outweigh the tradition of pervasively acceptable firearm ownership by eighteen-to-twenty-year-olds at 'the crucial period of our nation's history,'" Jones says. "The federal government has presented scant evidence that eighteen-to-twenty-year-olds' firearm rights during the founding era were restricted in a similar manner to the contemporary federal handgun purchase ban, and its 19th century evidence 'cannot provide much insight into the meaning of the Second Amendment when it contradicts earlier evidence.'"
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit reached a similar conclusion in July 2021, when a divided panel ruled in Hirschfeld v. ATF that "our nation's most cherished constitutional rights vest no later than 18," adding that "the Second Amendment's right to keep and bear arms is no different." But the court vacated that decision two months later after the plaintiff turned 21. A different 4th Circuit panel is considering another challenge to the federal age restriction on handgun sales, and today it heard oral arguments in that case.
The 9th Circuit weighed similar issues in 2021, when it considered Jones v. Bonta, a challenge to a California law that sets a minimum purchase age of 21 for all firearms. The following year, a 9th Circuit panel concluded that "the Second Amendment protects the right of young adults to keep and bear arms, which includes the right to purchase them." But the full court vacated that decision in September 2022 and remanded the case for further consideration by the district court, which upheld the law in December 2023.
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Makes sense.
Searching their homes to look for evidence of a drive- by shooting is subject to the full extent of the 4th Amendment. There is no lesser scope for persons 18-20 years of age.
Trying to punish them for committing a drive-by shooting is subject to the full extent of the 5th, 6th, and 8th Amendments. There is no lesser scope for persons 18-20 years of age.
Seems reasonable given the text of the Constitution. There's even an argument that it should be 17 and over, as 17 qualifies you for the militia
Well, 18 qualifies you for other things, like voting, or registering for the Selective Service (whereby you might get drafted).
And, you're misinterpreting the 2nd, if you think the people's right to bear arms, is intended for the militia's use.
The historical context recognizes the right to keep and bear arms as a necessity to ensure a militia. All of the militia acts historically include all able-bodied men aged 18-45 years old.
All of the history points to just that including the text of the 2A itself.
I think you are confusing the argument people use to justify that arms are only for the militia, and not for the people. If you read the Dick Act, you'll have a better understanding of the unorganized and organized militia, and in order to have a militia, you need armed people. So, yeah...
The militia clause in the 2nd is not to ensure that the militia is armed, but to ensure that the armed are a militia.
A militia in the Constitutional sense is distinguished by being armed only with those weapons commonly and legally available to ordinary private citizens. If a group has weapons beyond that - if it has special government permission for weapons that ordinary citizens are prohibited or heavily restricted from having - then it's not a militia in the Constitutional sense, but some other sort of military or paramilitary organization.
So when modern cops are exempted from the usual gun-control laws, that disqualifies them for "militia" status and makes them "standing armies" or "troops, or ships of war" instead. Likewise the National Guard, armed with weapons restricted or prohibited to John and Jane Doe. The founders considered this a bad thing; they wanted to avoid what we now call "militarized police" although they generally used the term "standing armies" for the concept instead.
The point of the 2nd's militia clause is to prevent this, by endorsing law enforcement by groups that qualify for militia status, rather than being standing armies or militarized police. And the RKBA clause is partly there to block the whine of "we neeeeed better weapons!" from law enforcement, by banning artificial legal caps on what qualifies as a militia weapon.
Cops say they need full-auto M16s, .50 caliber machine guns, and grenade launchers? Fine - as long as those are available without legal hindrance to John and Jane Doe and thus keeping the cops so armed within the bounds of being a militia.
As I don't think that, I'm not misinterpreting 2A. It is certainly not restricted to the militia's use, but as the age for the Federal militia is 17...
https://uscode.house.gov/view.xhtml?path=/prelim@title10/subtitleA/part1/chapter12&edition=prelim
It would be perfect and deeply constitutional.
Congress shall provide for organizing, arming, and training the militia. At age 17. Universally open to them all. Not 'registering' them for some vague selective service.
It would completely change the politics of this. It's just part of the last year of HS.
I always found the argument that a person isn't responsible enough until they are 21 absurd. I was an E-5 in the Navy, weapons qualified and worked with nuclear weapons before my 21st birthday. Yet on leave I couldn't have a beer in my home State or own a pistol. I couldn't even buy pistol ammunition to practice for my medal qualifications.
I find that last part interesting because as a kid my father used to send me in to go buy ammo because at the time it required a signature and he was paranoid.
The Navy also never trusted you with a weapon except specifically in the course of your duties and only while performing them - they're locked up in the armory the rest of the time.
The Navy never really considered us 'adults' except when it came time to discipline someone for not acting like one.
This is good. Setting the legal age for voting to 18 but 21 for handguns is illogical and irrational. To be honest I don't see a problem with teenagers and young adults having the right to bear arms to defend themselves from threats. Now do booze next. Makes no sense you can legally vote but not drink.
Guns don’t kill people, the government does.
> Young Adults Is Unconstitutional
'Young adults' is usually a term for like 16-17 year olds. 18+ are just 'adults'.
They seem pretty young to me.
If we're talking about legal adulthood, then 16-17 aren't any kind of adult. And young adults are a subset of adults.
I lived in BK (Bushwick + Bedstuy) 14 years - never saw one single legally permitted gun owner, but lots of guns - all of them pistols.
Strike that, I worked with *1* black Teamster, who told me he liked deer hunting - but he lived in Queens.
Not to mention that the Constitutional Amendment established the Federal voting age at 18 years in 1971.
18 to vote, or get drafted, 21 to buy alcohol or cigarettes, ??? to sign a mortgage, variable by state AND sex (not "gender"!) to get married, and biological brain development indicating full maturity about 25 ... seems to me that the whole thing is a clusterfrak and prohibiting sales of legal devices to someone under the age of 21 is capricious,
The logic is iron clad, but after Rahimi, I no longer trust the Court to follow their own announced logic.
The proggies must be going into a nut roll over this wise decision.
If it were up to the proggies, only the secret police, the vanguards of the revolution and their bodyguards would be allowed to own firearms, not the masses.
Only the 'armed-theft' Gov 'Guns' get 'Guns' in a [Na]tional So[zi]alist Empire. /s
We know what you leftards are up to.
This is good news - now lets do the same for alcohol and tobacco; OR change it all to 21, including voting, because people in general 18-20 are not very wise.
They are not very wise (and more so every year that goes by) PRECISELY because they're are baby'ed by the State.
If you want a wiser population change it to 12.
12 seems a little young. Most haven't even gone through puberty yet. There might be a case for SOME 14 to 17 year olds but leaving the defacto age of adulthood at 18 with a provision allowing those younger to emancipate themselves from state-based age restrictions if found mature or capable enough is reasonable. With that said, constitutional based rights (free speech/religion, bear arms) should apply equally to every citizen regardless of age.
Also with the same rights and freedom from restrictions the same responsibility and accountability should also apply.