Positive Gun News of the Day

4th Circuit Court of Appeals decision inKolbe v. Hogan.

At issue was the Maryland Firearms Safety Act (FSA) which was a feature based assualt weapon ban, specific rifle and pistol ban, and a ban on magazines with a capacity greater than 10 rounds. It exempted retired police from many of the provisions as well. At the district level, the court applied intermediate scrutiny and somehow upheld the FSA. The reasoning was, paraphrasing, because it wasn’t a total ban and other firearms were available, then it was permissible. In addition, the district court concluded that magazine were not firearms and therefore were not covered by the 2nd amendment. The case was appealed to the 4th circuit. From the opinion:

(my bold)
Sent back down to the district level so they can apply the correct level of scrutiny. If this holds, I’m optimistic that the FSA will fall. The ruling could go en banc or go to SCOTUS, but for now this is a big win.

Some of the key ideas the opinion focused on were the concepts of “dangerous **and **unusual” and “in common use”. This court determined that a firearm must be both dangerous AND unusual, else it would fall under the 2nd amendment. In addition, it noted that the AR-15 platform semi-automatic rifle is the most common rifle today:

(my bold)
The court was dismissive of this so called “high capacity” claim.

The court also expressly rejected the argument that other types of weapons were available so the ban was okay. It cited Heller calling this frivalous and chided other circuits for adopting this reasoning that was specifically rejected in Heller.

The court did however uphold the exemption for retired police, defeating the equal protection claim. This part I think was wrong - retired police have no special power or duty that regular citizens have and there is basis to support exempting this class of people from any law.

I did enjoy this retort to the dissent:

Is this a judicial F U?