Friday, June 19, 2026

Supreme Court Rules Federal Drug-User Gun Ban Falls in US v. Hemani

“A unanimous U.S. Supreme Court just told the anti-gun movement and the U.S. Solicitor General that being a marijuana user alone provides no legal basis to strip an American of his fundamental Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms — and in doing so, the Court strengthened the Bruen pro-2A “text first, history second” methodology.”Professor Mark W. Smith, Four Boxes Diner Host

The Supreme Court has unanimously held that being a regular marijuana user, without more, provides no basis for stripping an American of his Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms.

In United States v. Hemani, every member of the Court agreed that 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(3) — the federal statute disarming “unlawful users” of controlled substances — cannot constitutionally be applied to Mr. Hemani, whose only offense was habitual marijuana use. A 9-0 judgment is rare in this corner of the law, and the federal government lost big time.

The U.S. Solicitor General, John Sauer, pressed this prosecution all the way to the Supreme Court over the loud objection of Second Amendment advocates and scholars. I was one of those 2A supporters who warned that the facts were bad and posed a significant risk to Second Amendment law.

Luckily for Team 2A, the gamble backfired, and Second Amendment jurisprudence is stronger for it.

The Nutshell Version

Strip away the doctrinal scaffolding, and Hemani is a reaffirmation of a basic principle developing in Second Amendment law: if the government wants to disarm someone, it must provide individualized evidence— in a legal proceeding — that the person poses a physical violent danger to himself or to others. An abstract statistical claim that a class of people tends toward bad behavior is insufficient. A regulatory inconvenience argument is not enough. A post-hoc historical analogy conjured up in litigation is not enough.

What the government needs is a genuine, well-established tradition of disarming people who pose the specific kind of threat it says that a particular defendant poses — and that tradition must be closely connected to the modern restriction it seeks to defend.

There is a second doctrinal takeaway hiding near the end of the opinion that deserves to be foregrounded: the Court made clear it will not accept the government’s litigation-driven attempts to recharacterize a statute enacted for one purpose as having been enacted for an entirely different purpose—in an attempt to shoehorn the modern law it into a historical tradition of firearm regulation. That kind of post-hoc rationalization is exactly the move that the government’s defense of § 922(g)(3) required, and the attempt was rejected by the Court.

A Case the Department of Justice Should Not Have Brought

Ali Hemani was convicted of possessing a firearm while being a regular marijuana user. Under § 922(g)(3), an “unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance” is a Prohibited Person who can face more than a decade in prison for the mere possession of a gun. The U.S. Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit, held that disarming Mr. Hemani on those facts violated the Second Amendment, and the government — having lost — chose to take the fight upstairs to SCOTUS. I opposed that decision in the strongest terms.

Several former Justice Department lawyers now sit on the Supreme Court, and the bloc least sympathetic to drug offenders could have joined the Justices least sympathetic to the Second Amendment to manufacture an anti-gun precedent we would have lived with for a generation. Sauer pushed anyway. Amazingly and thankfully, he lost, and he lost unanimously.

That outcome deserves credit on its own terms. Bad facts here did not make bad law. When a Court faces an unsympathetic defendant — and a habitual marijuana user in possession of a firearm is not going to command a great deal of public sympathy — the temptation to cut corners on doctrine in order to reach the comfortable result is real. But the Court rejected the government’s position anyway. And, that is what principled adjudication looks like.

Who Won — and, More Important, How

There are two questions to ask of any Supreme Court decision: who won, and how. The second matters more, because the methodology is what binds the lower courts across the next thousand cases.

As an application of Bruen, the majority opinion is good — better than good, in places. The Court did not merely rule for Hemani; Justice Gorsuch, writing for the Court, restated the Bruen framework with a rigor that should end a debate festering since 2024. After United States v. Rahimi, 602 U.S. 680 (2024), a chorus on both sides insisted the Court had quietly loosened New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, 597 U.S. 1 (2022) — that the government now need only gesture at history and the courts would rubber-stamp the result. I argued the contrary in the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, and Hemani vindicates my reading. With Hemani, the Court tightened the Bruen methodology.

On the specific historical analogues the government offered here — primarily laws targeting habitual drunkards — the Court engaged seriously with the “why.” It rejected the government’s very generalized claim that drug users, like drunkards, are dangerous as a class. More specifically, it examined what the historical drunkard laws were actually about and found that they were not primarily concerned with the danger drunkards posed. They were concerned with something more like mental incapacity — the inability to exercise sound judgment, to manage one’s affairs, to participate responsibly in civic life. That is a fundamentally different rationale than the dangerousness theory the government pressed in Hemani, and the Court refused to let the government paper over that gap. The historical analogue has to be closely connected to the modern restriction in purpose, not just in surface appearance.

Danger Is the Dividing Line

Again and again, the opinion returns to a single principle: America’s historical tradition of firearms regulation permits disarming a person only when he has been found to be a violent danger to himself or others. Not a danger to “democracy,” not a regulatory inconvenience — a physical, violent danger, established through some legal formal process.

That last point is where the Court emphasizes process. The opinion draws a sharp line between § 922(g)(3) and the provisions that survive precisely because they demand process before the right is lost:

“Certain other provisions of section 922 — such as subsection (1), disarming convicted felons, and subsection (4), disarming any person adjudicated as a mental defective or committed to a mental institution — involve some manner of pre-deprivation process before an individual’s Second Amendment rights are lost. For that reason they differ from section (g)(3) here, and nothing in our opinion should be taken to cast doubt upon them.”

“Pre-deprivation process.” Read those words carefully.

The Court places substantial weight on the availability of pre-deprivation hearings under the historical habitual drunkard laws — and their absence under § 922(g)(3) — as part of what makes the modern statute constitutionally deficient. I will note, in fairness to the government, that this argument has some tension at its edges: if the disqualifying feature of § 922(g)(3) is simply that one routinely uses any amount of a controlled substance unlawfully, and if that were itself a legitimate basis for disqualification, it is not obvious what pre-deprivation process would look like. What hearing establishes that you regularly smoked marijuana? That said, the Court’s point stands as a structural matter: the historical analogues that survived involved some individualized legal determination before the right was extinguished, and this statute does not.

Those words are also aimed squarely at red-flag regimes that confiscate firearms before any finding of dangerousness. And Justice Gorsuch closed the historical escape hatch on the 1791/1868 question:

“As in Bruen, we do not need to decide today whether courts should primarily rely on the prevailing understanding of an individual right when the Fourteenth Amendment was ratified in 1868 or when the Bill of Rights was ratified in 1791. For reasons explored below, the government cannot establish that the Second Amendment at either point in time permitted anything like its prosecution here.”

Either date, the government loses. There is no tradition of disarming people merely for using an intoxicating substance.

“All Americans” and a Signal on the AR-15 Fight

Two further passages from the opinion deserve attention. The Court wrote that the Second Amendment secures the rights of “all Americans” — language I do not read as accidental. It quietly forecloses the fringe argument that illegal aliens belong to “the people” of the Second Amendment, a theory that was never going to command five votes. And a concurrence by Justice Jackson, joined by Justice Sotomayor, is revealing for what it omits. They register their disagreement with Bruen’s methodology, yet say not a word against District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570 (2008) — the decision protecting arms “in common use” and casting out only those that are “dangerous and unusual.” Even the Court’s two most skeptical members left Heller untouched. For the AR-15 cases now climbing toward review, that silence is a tell.

What Hemani Does Not Decide — And What That Means

This is Hemani’s most important caveat, and it deserves honest treatment: this decision is much more in line with Rahimi as simply an application of Bruen than it is a case that breaks new doctrinal ground. The Court was careful to cabin its holding. In footnote 3, it declines once again to resolve whether 1791 or 1868 is the controlling historical period. In footnote 6, it expressly cautions that its conclusions about § 922(g)(3) should not be read to imply any problem with § 922(g)(1) or (g)(4), because those provisions involve pre-deprivation hearings. And at page 18 of the opinion, the Court pointedly leaves open the possibility that other methods of disarmament may be constitutional — particularly for people who use far more dangerous drugs than Mr. Hemani did.

The Bottom Line

So where does this leave us? I see no path by which the Supreme Court that rules 9-0 in Hemani, but then turns around and upholds Hawaii’s no-carry default rule in Wolford v. Lopez. We may well take two Second Amendment victories from this term. But the bigger lesson is structural. The government built this case to test the limits of Bruen and Rahimi, and the Court answered by reinforcing both in a gun-rights friendly way.

It refused to accept surface-level historical analogues. It refused to let the government recharacterize statutes after the fact to manufacture a historical fit. It demanded individualized process before rights are extinguished. And it did all of this unanimously.

To conclude, amazingly bad facts here did not make bad law. Every lawful gun owner in America woke up today with a stronger right than he held yesterday, and every pro-Second Amendment lawyer litigating the next case now has a unanimous opinion to cite. In short, a great day for the Second Amendment.


About Mark W Smith

Constitutional attorney and bestselling author Mark W. Smith hosts the Four Boxes Diner Second Amendment channel on Youtube and Rumble; is a member of the U.S. Supreme Court Bar; and his Second Amendment scholarship has been cited by many attorneys and judges, including by attorneys in legal briefs submitted to the U.S. Supreme Court. Professor Smith’s most recent book is ISRAEL DISARMED: What the October 7 Attack Teaches Americans about the Right to Bear Arms and he has lectured at Harvard Law School, Yale Law School, Princeton University, the Wharton School at U. Penn, and Oxford University. He is a frequent speaker at the Federalist Society’s Annual National Lawyers Convention in Washington, D.C.

Mark W Smith




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Suppressors Are Protected Arms, Fifth Circuit Rules in Major 2A Case

Radical Firearms Sinter Suppressor
The Fifth Circuit ruled that suppressors are Second Amendment “Arms,” even as it upheld Brennan Comeaux’s NFA conviction. IMG Jim Grant

The Fifth Circuit just gave gun owners a major Second Amendment win on suppressors, even though the man who brought the case still lost.

In United States v. Brennan James Comeaux, the court affirmed Comeaux’s conviction for possessing an unregistered silencer under the National Firearms Act. That part is not the victory. The victory is what the court said on the way there: suppressors are “Arms” protected by the Second Amendment.

Comeaux was charged after deputies searched his home and found firearms and suspected silencers. ATF determined the devices were suppressors, and Comeaux admitted he had manufactured and possessed them. He challenged the NFA’s registration requirement, arguing that the law violated the Second Amendment both on its face and as applied to him.

The district court rejected his argument, treating suppressors as “dangerous and unusual weapons” outside the Second Amendment. The Fifth Circuit rejected that theory. “Silencers are ‘Arms,’” the panel held.

The court explained that suppressors reduce loudness, lower the risk of hearing damage, reduce recoil, eliminate muzzle blast, increase accuracy, and allow faster follow-up shots. Suppressors make firearms safer, more controllable, and more effective for lawful self-defense. That is exactly why millions of gun owners want them.

The government argued that suppressors are not protected because a firearm can technically function without one and because suppressors were not historically tied to founding-era militia service. The Fifth Circuit said that is not the test. Under Bruen, an arm does not have to be “necessary” to make a gun fire. It must facilitate armed self-defense.

That is a massive rejection of the anti-suppressor narrative. Suppressors are not Hollywood assassin tools, used by criminals. They are safety devices. They protect hearing, reduce blast, improve control, and make shooting less abusive to the shooter and everyone nearby. In much of the world, suppressors are treated as normal safety equipment. In America, the government shoved them into the NFA and spent decades pretending they were too dangerous for ordinary citizens.

Comeaux changes the legal battlefield. The ruling also creates a direct split with the Ninth Circuit.

Just weeks ago, in United States v. DeBorba, the Ninth Circuit held that suppressors are not protected “arms” because they are optional accessories and not necessary to the ordinary operation of a firearm. The Fifth Circuit has now said the opposite. Suppressors are protected because they help a firearm serve its core lawful purpose.

In the Ninth Circuit, gun control lawyers will point to DeBorba and say suppressors are outside the Second Amendment altogether. In the Fifth Circuit, gun owners can now point to Comeaux and say the Constitution covers them. That kind of direct disagreement is exactly the sort of issue that eventually draws Supreme Court attention.

Gun owners should not overread the decision. Comeaux does not legalize unregistered suppressors. It does not strike down the NFA. It does not mean the ATF registry disappeared overnight.

Comeaux still lost because the panel said it was bound by United States v. Peterson, another Fifth Circuit suppressor case.

Peterson treated the NFA’s suppressor registration system as a presumptively lawful “shall-issue” regime unless the challenger shows abuse, such as exorbitant fees, long delays, arbitrary denials, or some other evidence that the system is being used to burden the right. Comeaux did not build that record, so his conviction was affirmed.

That also explains how Comeaux changes Peterson. If Peterson were decided today, the Fifth Circuit could no longer dodge the threshold question by assuming suppressors might be protected. Comeaux answers that question. Suppressors are arms. But Peterson’s result likely would not change unless the challenger made a stronger record showing that the NFA process itself burdens the right.

Judge Edith Brown Clement, joined by Judge Stuart Kyle Duncan, made the next fight crystal clear. She agreed that suppressors are protected arms but warned that Peterson wrongly turned Bruen’s footnote about shall-issue carry permits into a new hurdle for gun owners. Clement did not mince words: “Peterson ought to be revisited.” In her view, courts should be applying text, history, and tradition, not inventing a half-step that lets the government escape real constitutional scrutiny. That is where this fight is headed.

The NFA survived today, but the government’s favorite anti-suppressor argument did not. The Fifth Circuit said suppressors are not outside the Second Amendment just because politicians and bureaucrats say so.


About Duncan Johnson:

Duncan Johnson is a lifelong firearms enthusiast and unwavering defender of the Second Amendment—where “shall not be infringed” means exactly what it says. A graduate of George Mason University, he enjoys competing in local USPSA and multi-gun competitions whenever he’s not covering the latest in gun rights and firearm policy. Duncan is a regular contributor to AmmoLand News and serves as part of the editorial team responsible for AmmoLand’s daily gun-rights reporting and industry coverage.Duncan Johnson




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Thursday, June 18, 2026

3D Printed Guns Are Going Mainstream, and Gun Control Can’t Keep Up

A new Rolling Stone profile takes a closer look at the rise of 3D printed guns and the people behind the DIY firearms movement.
3D printed guns are moving from online subculture to mainstream firearms debate as DIY builders continue to outpace gun control efforts. iStock-2191244801

In the rolling hills of Appalachia, a man named Yeezy, online handle YZY_PRINTS, sits in his workshop surrounded by plastic and metal. Sheriffs show up at his door one day, not with cuffs but paperwork. He’s got an AR-15 leaning nearby, just in case. No raid. No drama. Just the everyday tension of a guy who prints his own guns and isn’t shy about saying why.

That scene comes straight from a recent Rolling Stone profile that dropped this week. The piece paints a vivid picture of the “plastic revolution” in firearms. What was once the domain of tinkerers and underground forums has exploded into something bigger. Thousands now participate worldwide. Hundreds in the U.S. alone design, test, and share new models at breakneck speed. And it’s not just fringe anymore. It’s going mainstream.

A decade ago, building a functional firearm at home meant serious machining skills, a full shop, and deep pockets. Today? A decent 3D printer, some filament, and freely available CAD files can get you started. The lower receiver, the serialized heart of many guns, emerges from layers of plastic. Bolt on real parts, and you’ve got something that shoots. Reliable enough for range days. Untraceable by design. Legal for personal use in most states.

The Rolling Stone story highlights how far this has come. Yeezy’s “Glong”, a pistol frame that doubles as a bong, might sound like a meme. But it shows the creativity bubbling up. Designers iterate fast. Online repositories host thousands of files. Communities stress-test them, fix flaws, and release updates. New printers handle tougher materials. Print times drop. Durability climbs. What started with the single-shot Liberator pistol has evolved into working MP5 clones, suppressors, and more.

Critics freak out, of course. They call them “ghost guns” and warn of criminals, kids, and extremists arming up without background checks. Law enforcement in places like New York and California pours resources into specialized units. Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg’s team displays seized printed guns like trophies. They push new laws, sue repositories, and pressure printer companies. Some stats show 3D-printed pieces turning up at crime scenes, though numbers vary and context matters. A 2024 NYPD figure cited in the article put 3D-printed guns at a fraction of the number of “ghost gun” recoveries.

But here’s the thing the hand-wringers miss. Most of this activity stays legal. Hobbyists aren’t flooding streets with crime guns en masse. The drivers? Ideology and access. People across the spectrum, left, right, libertarian, share a core belief: the right to bear arms shouldn’t depend on government permission slips.

Yeezy himself mixes far-left memes with hardcore 2A advocacy. He sees printing as empowerment. If authorities target certain groups, plastic levels the field.

That democratizing effect is hard to overstate. Traditional gunsmithing demanded apprenticeship and expensive tools. Now, a working-class kid with a $300 printer can experiment. Veterans, preppers, and enthusiasts in restrictive states; they all tap the same open-source ecosystem. Forums buzz with troubleshooting threads. Designers compete for robust, easy-to-print models. It’s innovation at the speed of the internet, not bureaucratic rule-making.

Of course, risks exist. Bad actors can misuse anything. But the same goes for cars, knives, or fertilizer. Banning files or printers won’t stop determined people. It just drives the community further underground or offshore. Early Liberator designs circulated despite takedowns. Today’s repositories prove resilient. As one prosecutor admitted in the Rolling Stone piece, creators keep outsmarting regulations.

Recent court fights underscore the tension. The Supreme Court has weighed in on ghost gun kits, affirming some regulatory power. Yet core principles hold: individuals can make their own firearms for personal use without serialization in most of the country. Only a handful of states ban 3D-printed guns outright. Enforcement remains patchy. Printed frames often blend with factory parts, complicating detection. Metal detectors? Not always reliable for polymer-heavy builds.

This shift echoes broader tech disruptions. Remember when home computing seemed exotic? Or when file-sharing upended music? Guns follow suit. The cat’s out of the bag. Printers get cheaper and better every year. Materials improve. Knowledge spreads freely. You don’t need a machine shop anymore; just curiosity and patience.

For Second Amendment supporters, that’s the point. The Founders never intended self-defense to require a federal license or corporate middleman. In an era of eroding trust, pandemic lockdowns, surveillance, and politicized enforcement, DIY capability feels like insurance. Yeezy’s backyard range tests capture that raw appeal. Bang after bang from a gun the government doesn’t officially know exists. Empowering. Liberating.

Skeptics point to tragedies. High-profile cases grab headlines, like the one involving a printed suppressor. But data doesn’t support claims of an epidemic overwhelming law enforcement. Many “ghost guns” come from kits or milling, not pure printing. Hobbyists dominate the scene, not street gangs. Police units admit most printed guns they encounter aren’t tied to violence. The real threat, some argue, gets exaggerated to justify broader controls.

Meanwhile, the community grows. Social media amplifies it. YouTube tutorials (before they get yanked) teach basics. Merch like Yeezy’s “It Was Never About Hunting” shirts signals the cultural moment. Even in blue cities, interest persists underground. In red states, it flourishes openly. Cross-political alliances form around shared principles of autonomy.

Looking ahead, expect more evolution. Hybrid builds combining printed and machined parts. Better alloys for high-stress components. AI-assisted design tools are speeding iteration. Regulators will scramble with new rules, lawsuits, and international pressure on file hosts. But technology outpaces policy. Printers will enter more homes. Files will mirror across decentralized networks. The genie won’t go back in the bottle.

The Rolling Stone article captures the human side through Yeezy’s story. A guy from tough roots who found power in creation. His politics might differ from yours, or mine, but the underlying drive resonates with millions who value self-reliance. In Trump’s America—or any administration’s—the idea that citizens can arm themselves without permission strikes a chord.

3D gun making isn’t a fad. It’s mainstreaming because it solves real barriers: cost, availability, bureaucracy. It puts capability back in individual hands. For better or worse, that’s the future. Debates will rage in courts and Congress. But in garages and workshops across the country, printers keep humming. Frames take shape. Freedom, one layer at a time.

Ghost Gun Crackdowns Expose the Dirty Secret of Gun Control

CTRLPEW Expands Federal Lawsuit, Accuses California Of Policing 3D Gun Speech In Florida


About John Crump

Mr. Crump is an NRA instructor and a constitutional activist. John has written about firearms, interviewed people from all walks of life, and on the Constitution. John lives in Northern Virginia with his wife and sons, follow him on X at @crumpyss, or at www.crumpy.com.

John Crump




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The Survey Says: Dems Largely Dismissive of 2A Threat

GunVote SIG P365 9mm. I Voted sticker on a SIG P365XL 9mm handgun.
A new AP/NORC survey reinforces the notion that Democrats treat the Second Amendment as a regulated privilege, rather than protective of a fundamental right. IMG Jim Grant

A new poll by the Associated Press and NORC Center for Public Affairs Research on personal freedoms and whether they are under threat reveals once again that Democrats are largely dismissive of any peril facing the Second Amendment, at the same time party leaders have been leading the charge to erode the right to keep and bear arms (RKBA).

According to The Independent, the survey revealed, “Democrats were more inclined to see a greater threat to freedom of speech, with about six in 10 believing it faces a “major threat,” compared to four in 10 independents and roughly one-third of Republicans.”

“Conversely,” The Independent added, “Republicans expressed greater concern about the right to keep and bear arms; while most Americans consider this right important, about 8 in 10 Republicans agreed, compared with 4 in 10 Democrats and 50% of independents.”

Coincidentally, Democrats and their media allies have lately been reacting positively to Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger’s signing of several gun control measures, almost uniformly described as “gun violence prevention legislation” (WDBJ) or “gun safety laws” (WSLS) while critics insist they won’t actually prevent violent crime or make anyone safer.

Naturally, the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Center for Gun Violence Solutions declared in its headline, “Virginia Governor Spanberger Signs Historic Gun Violence Prevention Bills into Law.”

Only the Richmond Times-Dispatch accurately described what Spanberger signed as “gun control” legislation.

But it is exactly the kind of legislative erosion of rights protected by the Second Amendment which the recent AP/NORC poll says are raising more alarms among conservatives and independents.

According to the poll, only 21 percent of Democrats think gun rights are under a major threat, while 36 percent think the Second Amendment is under a “minor” threat, and 42 percent don’t believe any threat exists.

Conversely—and this is what gun voters should keep in mind as November approaches—40 percent of Republicans say the Second Amendment is under a “major threat,” and 41 percent believe it is under a “minor threat.” Only 19 percent of Republican poll respondents think gun rights are under no threat at all.

Among Independents, 34 percent say RKBA faces a major threat, 35 percent believe it is under a “minor threat” while 28 percent do not perceive any threat, according to the AP/NORC poll.

Translation: Democrats blithely disregard the importance of Second Amendment rights to tens of millions of their fellow citizens, and as illustrated by the actions of Democrat-controlled legislatures, the right to keep and bear arms is treated more like a government-regulated privilege.

For example, among the bills Spanberger signed, according to WDBJ, are:

  • HB969 (Delegate Marcia Price), which “establishes the Virginia Gun Violence Prevention Center Workgroup to create the infrastructure to make Virginia a national leader in gun violence prevention.”
  • HB217 (Delegate Dan Helmer), SB749 (Senator Saddam Salim), which “Protect Virginia families, law enforcement, and communities by prohibiting the future sale of assault-style weapons.”
  • HB871 (Delegate Mark Downey), SB348 (Senator Jennifer Boysko), which “Requires safe storage of firearms to protect children and prevent theft.”

Historically, there is nothing to suggest that criminals will abide by these or any other gun control bills Spanberger signed. But it made good headline fodder for the Virginia media.

Overall, 35 percent of AP/NORC poll respondents say the right to keep and bear arms is extremely important, and 22 percent believe it is “very important.” Another 24 percent believe the RKBA is “somewhat important” while 11 percent say the Second Amendment is “not very important” and only 7 percent believe it is “not important at all.”

As noted by The Independent, “only about one-third of respondents or fewer felt these rights were secure from potential threats.”

Polling on gun rights has always been interesting. A few years ago, Gallup polled America to learn that 56 percent of U.S. adults said gun laws should be stricter, while 31 percent believed they should stay the same and 12 percent favored less strict gun laws.

Last December, Legal Reader published the results of a poll showing only 28 percent of Republicans/conservatives supported stricter laws, while 86 percent of “Democrat-leaning” people want tougher laws, further reinforcing the notion that Democrats are the party of gun control.

What all of these surveys fail to clarify is that constitutional rights are not subject to public opinion polls. Rights specifically mentioned and protected by the Constitution would only be up for grabs if the country were to hold a Constitutional Convention. The entire Bill of Rights would be on the table, like it or not.

The true value of such surveys is that they repeatedly and consistently reveal which political party is stronger on individual rights, including the Second Amendment, and which party fails that test.

Maryland Court Finds Gun Possession Alone Not Enough For Police Stop

Why the Third Circuit Is Sitting on the Cheeseman and Koons Cases — They’re Waiting for SCOTUS


About Dave Workman

Dave Workman is a senior editor at TheGunMag.com and Liberty Park Press, author of multiple books on the Right to Keep & Bear Arms, and formerly an NRA-certified firearms instructor.Dave Workman




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Washington Supreme Court Upholds DUI Gun Ban in McLellan v. Brown

Washington Supreme Court ruling on DUI gun ban and Second Amendment rights in McLellan v. Brown
Two DUIs, no gun rights: Washington’s high court upheld a law disarming citizens over repeat nonviolent offenses, despite a sharp Second Amendment dissent. iStock-1127873736

The Washington Supreme Court ruled on June 11, 2026 that the state can strip gun rights from anyone convicted of two DUIs within seven years. The 5-to-4 decision upheld House Bill 1562, a 2023 law that dramatically expanded the categories of offenses triggering firearm prohibition. Four dissenting justices issued a blistering rebuke, accusing the majority of authorizing preemptive disarmament based on speculation rather than actual violent conduct.

The case of McLellan v. Brown began when two Washington residents had their concealed carry permit applications denied after multiple DUI convictions. A Spokane County Superior Court judge initially found merit in their constitutional challenge, but the state’s highest court reversed that decision and upheld the ban.

House Bill 1562 went into effect on July 23, 2023, after passing the legislature almost entirely along party lines. Representative My-Linh Thai sponsored the bill in the House with support from Representative Beth Doglio and over a dozen co-sponsors. The measure passed the House 51 to 45 and the Senate 28 to 21 before then-Governor Jay Inslee signed it into law.

The law marked a dramatic departure from Washington’s previous firearm prohibition framework, which had been limited primarily to felony convictions. For the first time, repeat misdemeanor DUI offenses became grounds for stripping Second Amendment rights. The statute even counts DUIs that were pleaded down to lesser charges like reckless or negligent driving, as well as offenses committed as a minor or in other states.

Justice G. Helen Whitener authored the dissent, joined by Justices Charles Johnson, Sheryl Gordon McCloud, and Salvador Mungia. Whitener focused on a key distinction that gun rights advocates view as decisive: a DUI conviction involves no intent to inflict physical harm. It is not a violent crime.

“The State is depriving individuals of their Second Amendment constitutional right to bear arms before they commit a violent crime on the assumption that one day they might,” Whitener wrote. She called the 2023 law an unconstitutional “outlier” that “violates the respondents’ constitutional rights under the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.” Writing for the 5-to-4 majority, Justice Steven González held that the state met its historical burden under Bruen by pointing to three enduring principles: the tradition of disarming groups deemed dangerous by legislatures, restricting firearm possession for serious crimes, and founding-era regulations restricting firearm use by presently intoxicated individuals.

The dissent invoked the analytical framework established by the U.S. Supreme Court in New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen in 2022 and United States v. Rahimi in 2024. Those decisions require any gun regulation to align with the historical tradition of firearm regulation at the time of the Founding. Rahimi specifically held that disarming someone requires proof they pose a genuine current danger.

Gun rights organizations have been building legal arguments against exactly this type of categorical disarmament. The Second Amendment Foundation filed an amicus brief in a related Third Circuit case in December 2025, challenging a lifetime federal gun ban over a decades-old misdemeanor DUI. SAF’s Director of Legal Research and Education, Kostas Moros, argued that “the government’s position defies Bruen and Rahimi,” stating that “History shows that Founding-era laws addressed the risks of intoxication and firearms through temporary restrictions on those currently impaired, never by stripping gun rights forever from someone who once drank irresponsibly but has since reformed.”

SAF has also advanced the broader historical argument that Founding-era laws only addressed the danger of mixing intoxicants and firearms by temporarily disarming the actively impaired, never by permanently stripping gun rights from people who used a substance in the past but posed no current threat.

The Firearms Policy Coalition has pursued parallel litigation. In a Supreme Court brief filed in Holloway v. Attorney General Garland, a case involving a Pennsylvania man stripped of gun rights after a misdemeanor DUI, FPC argued that “Mr. Holloway would not have forfeited his Second Amendment rights for driving under the influence in the vast majority of states,” making his permanent disarmament a function of geography rather than constitutional principle.

William Kirk, president of Washington Gun Law and a prominent Second Amendment attorney, has argued that the historical tradition around substances like alcohol only supports restricting firearm possession while actively intoxicated, not categorical status-based disarmament after the fact.

The Cato Institute has taken a similar position, stating in an amicus brief that “while driving under the influence is not admirable conduct, it is not usually the type of offense that means a person should be permanently unable to possess a gun” and that “looking at the maximum punishment of an offense is the sort of broadly prohibitory approach that the Supreme Court said is impermissible.”

Even before the bill became law, the Washington Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers opposed it, calling its list of new prohibiting crimes “too expansive.”

Gun rights advocates are widely expected to pursue a federal appeal. The Washington ruling stands as a test case for how far states can push categorical disarmament under the post-Bruen legal landscape. For Second Amendment supporters, the answer is clear. The Constitution does not permit the government to strip fundamental rights from citizens who have harmed no one, based solely on the statistical possibility that they might one day pose a danger.

Wolford and Hemani: Supreme Court Decisions in Second Amendment Cases Expected Soon

Hemani at SCOTUS: Will Marijuana Users Stay Banned From Gun Ownership?


About José Niño

José Niño is a freelance writer based in Charlotte, North Carolina. You can contact him via Facebook and X/Twitter. Subscribe to his Substack newsletter by visiting “Jose Nino Unfiltered” on Substack.com.

José Niño




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Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Florida AG Won’t Appeal Ruling Striking Carry Ban for Adults Under 21

Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier X post about under-21 concealed carry ruling
Florida AG James Uthmeier announced the state will not seek further review after the 4th DCA ruled Florida’s under-21 concealed-carry ban unconstitutional. IMG Jim Grant

Florida’s Fourth District Court of Appeals handed gun owners a major Second Amendment win, but Attorney General James Uthmeier made the ruling even more important with one sentence on X: the state will not seek further review.

That means Florida is not planning to keep fighting to preserve its ban on otherwise eligible adults under 21 carrying a concealed firearm. Instead, Uthmeier said his office will work with the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services to implement the court’s order.

“In another win for the unalienable rights of Floridians, the 4th DCA agreed with our position that Florida’s law banning adults under 21 from conceal carrying a firearm is unconstitutional,” Uthmeier wrote. “We will not seek further review and will work with @FDACS to implement the court’s order.”

That statement turns Jaylen Tyrus Eubanks v. State of Florida from an important appellate ruling into something much more important for Florida gun owners.

The opinion itself says it is “not final until disposition of timely-filed motion for rehearing,” which is standard appellate language. But the Attorney General’s public decision not to seek further review removes the biggest question hanging over the case.

The state is not appealing. It is moving toward implementation.

The Fourth DCA ruled that Florida’s concealed-carry age restriction is unconstitutional as applied to law-abiding adults ages 18 to 20. The case targets section 790.06(2)(b), Florida Statutes, which requires a person to be 21 or older to qualify for a concealed weapon or firearm license.

That age requirement mattered even after Florida adopted permitless carry. Florida’s permitless carry law still requires an unlicensed person to satisfy the criteria for receiving and maintaining a concealed carry license. One of those criteria was being 21. So the state created a legal trap: adults under 21 were old enough to be treated as adults, but not old enough to satisfy the state’s carry rules. The Fourth DCA rejected that scheme.

“Can law-abiding adults, aged 18 to 20, be prohibited from exercising their Second Amendment rights to self-defense available to other law-abiding adults?” Judge Spencer D. Levine wrote for the court. “The plain text of the Constitution and our country’s history and traditions say no.”

Florida allows 18-year-olds to vote. Florida allows 18-year-olds to join the military, shoulder adult responsibilities, and face adult consequences. Yet when the right at issue was armed self-defense, the state treated those same adults like constitutional children.

Eubanks was 18 when he was arrested in Broward County after police responded to a report involving a handgun. Officers found an unholstered handgun on his waist. He was charged with carrying a concealed firearm and improper exhibition of a firearm. He challenged the concealed-carry charge, arguing that Florida’s categorical ban on 18-to-20-year-old adults carrying concealed firearms violated the Second Amendment. The trial court rejected his argument. The Fourth DCA reversed.

The court applied the Supreme Court’s post-Bruen framework. First, it asked whether the Second Amendment’s plain text covers the conduct. The answer was yes. Adults ages 18 to 20 are part of “the people,” and public carry falls within the right to “bear arms.”

Then the burden shifted to the government to prove that Florida’s restriction was consistent with the nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation. The state could not do it.

The opinion leaned on recent federal appellate decisions, including Worth v. Jacobson from the Eighth Circuit and Lara v. Commissioner Pennsylvania State Police from the Third Circuit, both of which recognized that 18-to-20-year-old adults are protected by the Second Amendment. The court also noted that Founding-era militia laws required young adults to arm themselves, not wait until their 21st birthday before exercising a constitutional right.

That history is devastating to modern gun-control arguments. The same age group that anti-gun politicians now claim is too young to carry was historically expected to appear armed for militia service. America’s tradition was not disarmament of young adults. It was responsibility, arms, and duty.

The State Attorney’s Office tried to defend the restriction by arguing that 18-to-20-year-olds were considered minors at the Founding and that young adults disproportionately misuse firearms. The court rejected that public-safety shortcut. Under Bruen, the government does not get to save a gun law by waving around statistics and saying, “Trust us.” It must show a historical tradition that justifies the restriction.

The Fourth DCA also relied on Rahimi for an important point: the government may disarm people who are found to pose a credible threat, but it cannot simply declare an entire class of adult citizens “irresponsible” and strip them of a right. That is exactly what Florida’s law did.

The court concluded that section 790.06(2)(b) is facially unconstitutional as applied to 18-to-20-year-olds and vacated Eubanks’ concealed-carry conviction.

Uthmeier’s announcement is the part Florida gun owners should watch now. The Attorney General is saying the state will not keep this case alive through further appellate review and will instead work with FDACS, the agency that handles Florida concealed weapon/firearm licensing, to implement the order.

That does not mean every 18-year-old can walk into a gun shop and buy a handgun from a federally licensed dealer. Federal handgun sales restrictions still exist. This case is about Florida’s carry scheme and whether the state can deny otherwise eligible adults under 21 the same public-carry rights available to other adults. The answer from the Fourth DCA is no.

With the Attorney General declining to appeal, the answer from the state appears to be: Florida will comply.

Young adults can defend the country. They can vote for the politicians who write the laws. They can be prosecuted as adults. Florida can no longer treat them as adults for every burden of citizenship while treating them like children when they want to exercise the Second Amendment.

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About Duncan Johnson:

Duncan Johnson is a lifelong firearms enthusiast and unwavering defender of the Second Amendment—where “shall not be infringed” means exactly what it says. A graduate of George Mason University, he enjoys competing in local USPSA and multi-gun competitions whenever he’s not covering the latest in gun rights and firearm policy. Duncan is a regular contributor to AmmoLand News and serves as part of the editorial team responsible for AmmoLand’s daily gun-rights reporting and industry coverage.Duncan Johnson




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