Supreme Court intervenes in Illinois gun bans challenged by firearms groups
Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett Requests Response from Illinois Locality Over Gun Rights Lawsuit
Gun rights advocates are challenging a city ordinance passed last year by Naperville, Illinois, which is similar to an Illinois state law enacted this year barring the sale and possession of certain semi-automatic rifles and magazines. Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett has requested a further response from Naperville officials after the advocates sued over the ban.
The Lawsuit
- The National Association for Gun Rights (NAGR), in conjunction with the National Foundation for Gun Rights (NFGR), says the law conflicts with the high court’s NYSRPA v. Bruen decision last year, which ruled gun laws must align with constitutional text and history.
- “We’re thankful the Supreme Court is taking the Second Amendment rights of Illinoisans seriously,” Dudley Brown, President of NAGR, told the Washington Examiner. “Any ban on so-called ‘assault weapons’ is plainly unconstitutional, and now it is on the city of Naperville to explain the legal justification for their ban. Of course, there isn’t any. The bans were ludicrous from the start, and if Illinois had any sense, they would wave the white flag now and save us all some time.”
The Bruen Decision
Since handing down the Bruen decision last year, the high court so far has not taken up another Second Amendment dispute. However, the Bruen decision made waves across lower courts, leading to 31 successful claims against previously existing gun restrictions across various states with gun control laws.
The Supreme Court in January declined to intervene in an emergency dispute over a law in New York that places restrictions on carrying concealed firearms, with the justices allowing the law to remain in place while the lower court challenges progress.
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