Federal Judge in Colorado Insists There is No Second Amendment Right to Buy a Gun

Opinion

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Honest people can disagree with the Founders’ decision to enshrine the Second Amendment within the Bill of Rights.

They cannot, however, pretend that decision never happened.

For much of the 20th Century, however, gun control activists tried to convince the public that “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms” had nothing to do with the right of individuals to keep and carry guns for their own self-protection. That charade – never convincing to anyone who could read – has been debunked by the U.S. Supreme Court no less than four times in the last 15 years. But Second Amendment denialism remains an active strain of the firearm prohibition effort, as demonstrated by a federal judge in Colorado who ruled last week that whatever the provision means, it does not include the right to buy a gun.

That decision came in the case of Rocky Mountain Gun Owners v. Polis, which challenged Colorado’s three-day waiting period for firearm purchases. Proponents of the law undoubtedly knew it was in trouble after the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, which clarified how lower courts are to analyze challenges to gun control laws under the Second Amendment. Bruen stated: “When the Second Amendment’s plain text covers an individual’s conduct, the Constitution presumptively protects that conduct.  The government must then justify its regulation by demonstrating that it is consistent with the Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.” This test likely spells doom for Colorado’s waiting period, as laws of that type were completely unknown to the generation that adopted the Second Amendment.

Faced with this reality, Judge John L. Kane – appointed to the federal bench by Jimmy Carter in 1977 – decided to stretch reason to the breaking point by deciding the right to possess a firearm doesn’t include the right to acquire one.

The court began its analysis by acknowledging that the Second Amendment right articulated by the U.S. Supreme Court in the 2008 case of District of Columbia v. Heller meant “the individual right to possess and carry weapons in case of confrontation.” But then Judge Kane went on to insist: “[P]urchase and delivery are one means of creating the opportunity to ‘have weapons.’ The relevant question is whether the plain text covers that specific means. It does not.”

According to this “reasoning,” a state could completely ban the sale and delivery of firearms without implicating the Second Amendment. This would imply a right to have something, but not to obtain it through the most obvious and ordinary means.

Of course, it’s true that the Second Amendment says nothing explicitly about buying and receiving guns. But it’s also true the First Amendment says nothing explicitly about buying and receiving newspapers.

Nevertheless, any judge insisting a ban on newspaper sales would not implicate the First Amendment prohibition on “abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press” would in doing so disgrace himself and ruin his professional and intellectual credibility.

Perhaps recognizing this, Judge Kane hedged his bets by offering a number of alternative theories about why Colorado’s waiting period did not infringe the Second Amendment.

First, he theorized, “Even if purchasing a firearm could be read into the terms ‘keep’ or ‘bear,’ receipt of a firearm without any delay could not be, as the Founders would not have expected instant, widespread availability of the firearm of their choice.” Judge Kane attempted to bolster this argument by pointing to “expert” testimony that indicated firearm purchases at the time of the founding were not as convenient, prompt, or accessible as they are today.

But even these “experts” acknowledged this was because technology, production, and marketing were circumstantially more primitive in those days, not because legislators made a deliberate choice to delay firearm purchases. Of course, virtually nothing that involved the delivery of a good was as efficient and accessible to the founding generation as it is in modern times. But the U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly made clear that it will not tolerate “frivolous” arguments that 18th Century technological limitations delineate the scope of constitutional rights in the present day, including in a Second Amendment case that dealt with stun guns.

Next, Judge Kane pointed to language in Heller that he claimed rendered “presumptively lawful” any regulation on “the conditions or qualifications” of the “commercial sale of firearms.” He then argued: “Colorado’s Waiting-Period Act regulates only the sale, and specifically sellers, of firearms. … The Act does not apply to anyone who does not ‘sell a firearm.’”

Putting aside the fact that the disputed issues in Heller had nothing to do with firearm sales, much less mandatory waiting periods, Judge Kane was again resorting to frivolous formalism in attempting to stake his reasoning on the distinction between sellers and purchasers. Colorado’s waiting period imposes an arbitrary and de facto impediment on the purchase of guns, thereby implicating the rights of buyers at least as much as sellers. Returning to the First Amendment, no one would take seriously an argument that a person’s First Amendment right to access information was not implicated just because a particular restraint applied to a publisher or bookseller and not the reader himself.

Meanwhile, the language Judge Kane invoked to argue the Supreme Court allows firearm sales to be regulated cuts against his primary ruling by suggesting the Supreme Court considers such sales as the default starting point under the Second Amendment.

But Judge Kane wasn’t finished, and proposed yet another reason why Colorado’s waiting period is consistent with the Second Amendment, even if he were wrong about everything else.

Again, while acknowledging – as the parties themselves agreed – that waiting periods for firearm purchases were unknown in American law until well into the 20th Century, he still found them consistent with America’s historical tradition of firearm regulation. This was because, he said, “our Nation had a historical tradition of regulating the carrying and use of firearms by intoxicated individuals,” and “the Waiting-Period Act and the intoxication laws both work to prevent individuals in a temporary impulsive state from irresponsibly using a firearm.”

Judge Kane was dismissive of plaintiffs’ attempts to point out the obvious distinction that intoxication speaks to the condition of a particular individual in a particular moment, while the waiting period broadly applies to firearm sales generally, regardless of the buyer’s condition or state of mind. His response to this fundamental difference was that the intoxication laws affected all intoxicated persons, some of whom also might not have behaved irresponsibly with a firearm.

Judge Kane’s final gambit was to suggest that the Supreme Court had indicated a general openness to shall-issue licensing schemes for carrying firearms, so long as they were not directed to “abusive ends.” This, he said, was analogous to the waiting period, because both require a “defined requirement” to be met before exercise of the right, and plaintiffs had not proven the waiting period was abusive.

Judge Kane offered no limiting principles for what sorts of laws purportedly aimed at impulsive or irresponsible behavior or that imposed “defined requirements” prior to the exercise of the right to keep and bear arms might be permissible under the Second Amendment. But it’s difficult to understand how his reasoning would be distinguishable from the “interest-balancing” the Supreme Court specifically rejected in Bruen, which likewise focused on why the government purported to be acting, not on whether such actions were well-established in American history.

There is perhaps no legal rule so clear and unequivocal that it cannot be purposely misconstrued by a judge who is more interested in his preferred outcome than in actually following the law. But if the Polis case shows anything about Bruen’s historical test, it’s that it makes spotting such judges easier than ever.

Read Related: 2nd Amendment Guarantees Rights To Acquire & Train With Guns, Not Just RKBA ~ VIDEO


About NRA-ILA:

Established in 1975, the Institute for Legislative Action (ILA) is the “lobbying” arm of the National Rifle Association of America. ILA is responsible for preserving the right of all law-abiding individuals in the legislative, political, and legal arenas, to purchase, possess, and use firearms for legitimate purposes as guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Visit: www.nra.org

National Rifle Association Institute For Legislative Action (NRA-ILA)

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J.galt

Judges that cross their fingers and lie when they take the oath to “uphold and defend” the constitution should be disbarred.and prosecuted for treason

Cappy

As an old friend of mine explained: You can sell sh!t for chocolate once, but you can never go back to that town. We need to start throwing these idjits out of our towns.

Darkman

Making them someone else’s problem. Just revoke their ability to be a jurist. Permanently…

swmft

rope does that

Bubba

I’m a Shibari expert so let me tie the knots.

Arizona

The judge knows he is full of crap, and he knows we all know, and he doesn’t care, as his opinion will serve the Left until courts finally take it back up and remand it

Ledesma

Colorado historically was a strong 2A State. Now, it’s just another place transformed by unrestricted immigration. And almost 100% of today’s immigration is leftist immigration! From the police states and dictatorships of the world!

musicman44mag

How true. They are brought up in a world with no guns and a dictatorship that rules over them, and they don’t realize that guns were the most important part of the element to why they were slaves. They come running to a country that stands for freedom with that misconception. Democrats instill that America has the highest danger of all countries of being shot with a gun and they buy it. Since they don’t know the truth, like the kids in schools today, they are misled and brainwashed into believing the lie and the democrats get more anti-gun votes… Read more »

Bubba

There in lies the problem.

SCOTUS should be taking 2nd Amendment cases immediately.

hippybiker

its time to bring back “Tar and Feathers!”

Foco Rigido

Time to employ the 2A for the reason(s) the Founders intended.

CBW

Judge John L. Kane illustrates how to say you are a Communist, domestic enemy of the US Constitution without saying you are a Communist, domestic enemy of the US Constitution. He needs to be arrested and jailed.

DIYinSTL

Kane exemplifies the difference between “conservative” and “liberal” judges. The former care about the law irrespective of the outcome and the latter care only about the outcome irrespective of the law.

ridgeview

The democrat MARXIST part puts party and there ideologies above country and constitution!Always have always will till there stopped!

Bubba

That’s sh!ts made in New York City!
New York City?

Get a rope!

DonP

He then argued: “Colorado’s Waiting-Period Act regulates only the sale, and specifically sellers, of firearms. … The Act does not apply to anyone who does not ‘sell a firearm.’”

And the temporary solution is:

Come on down to Bud’s gun shop where we are having a before Christmas Sale… buy a holster, gut a free pistol! We can’t sell you a gun, but we can sell you a holster! (Prices may vary)

If the shop is only selling holsters, the store is not going to “sell a firearm” and, as stated above, the act does not apply.

Capn Dad

Clever!

ridgeview

COMMUNIST MARXIST democrat!

Bill

Sorry, “judge”, but the three day waiting period applies far more to buyers than it does to sellers, since the buyers are the ones being restricted from possessing the product that they purchase. This farce of a law regulates neither sale nor purchase, as both take place simultaneously within several moments on the first day. Instead, it regulates (prohibits immediate) possession by the purchaser. Duh.

musicman44mag

Hi Bill. I don’t know but wouldn’t the state stopping the FFL from giving the person the gun right away somehow work against the commerce act and thereby be unconstitutional?

This enquiring mind would like to know. Did I make a lucky guess?

swmft

if it was a transfer from out of state,that would apply,but not an in stock gun

TStheDeplorable

Would the good Judge agree that despite the 1st amendment a state can impose background checks and waiting periods on purchases of bibles? If not, then he is just abusing his position to drive up the costs of the plaintiffs to secure their constitutional rights.

Trussman

I wonder how he would like it if he took his wife to a fancy eatery for their anniversary, and was told to come back in three days? Or if his daughter was being threatened by an ex boyfriend, went to buy a firearm to defend herself, and was forced to wait 3 days, only to be brutally attacked on day two. People that buy a gun with the intent to commit a crime, don’t usually buy it the day of, they buy the gun ahead of the event, as part of their planning stage. Therefore, the 3 day wait… Read more »

Jaque

At what point will Americans be triggered to initiate Revolutionary War 2 ?

musicman44mag

Bruen says readem and weep just like Washington, Oregoneistan and Kommiefornia are going to do in the end including Commierado.

Last edited 1 year ago by musicman44mag
pigpen51

The judge says that the waiting period stops an impulsive gun purchase by someone. That must mean that a person who already owns firearms doesn’t need to follow that waiting period law, because they are already able to impulsively use a firearm to commit some undefined illegal act. I really do hope that the Republicans find enough brains to win the presidential election in 2024, and retake both branches of the legislature. And that they have the guts to fix some of the infringements on ALL of our constitutional rights. The last time they had the control of the government… Read more »

MICHAEL J

He’ll only be around for a little while, but the the damage is done and there are many to take his place.

Boz

See the 1959 Gary Cooper movie THE HANGING TREE. We need MORE hanging trees.

GomeznSA

Ope -while I don’t advocate unnecessary hangings, the application of them as ‘earned’ – with the attendant publicity – ‘might’ get some of the totalitarians to mind their manners.
Remember that in the old Russian navy they hung an admiral every now and then to keep the rest of the fleet in line. Perhaps a ‘bit’ extreme but it did seem to work.

Bubba

Bottom line is Government needs the stay the fטck out of my personal business.

Until I take aways someone else’s rights leave me the Fטck alone.

Capn Dad

Ah just think how it will be when there is no longer cash and all sales of everything must go through a checkout monitored by people like this judge. Fun times ahead!

swmft

api and 50 bmg

Patch

One would think that if you are lobbying organization based on a specific right, you could understand that the Constitution grants us no rights. It does not provide 1st Amendment Rights, 2nd Amendment Rights, 5th Amendment Rights, etc. It grants us NO RIGHTS. That same statement hold true to being an organization, like AmmoLand, would understand where your rights come from and start to educate your subscribers on that fact. Our rights are inherent in our being and were granted to us by our Creator. Words matter folks. If the Constitution grants us a right, then changing the Constitution can… Read more »

GomeznSA

Back in the day there were people who ‘insisted’ that the moon was made out of green cheese. There are still folks who ‘insist’ that the earth is flat. Point is, they were/are just as wrong as this so-called ‘judge’.

Bill

I appreciate gun rights groups that bring a challenge to laws such as this. However, I also believe in the admonition of Sun Tzu that one should never pick a battle that they cannot win. This is not to say that the battle here should not have been picked. Far from that, it is to say that the battle is not over until it has been won. It is no “kudos” to anyone who starts legal action against laws like this and then, if a judge finds against their argument, stops and says to gun owners, “Well, we tried.” Nothing… Read more »

KDad

This shows how far these left wing Judges will go to uphold the DemoCRAT agenda of disarming Americans! If you have the Constitutional right to possess a firearm, then you MUST have the right to purchase one! A firearm doesn’t just appear out of thin air, in your hand, without you purchasing it!! Very twisted logic from a very liberal, left wing Judge!!!

Bubba

Diet Coke!

That’s for any John Mulaney fans…..

In reference to the thin air comment. 🙂

Tony

You have the right to vote but have no right to be given a ballot ,

The left is conducting a scorched earth policy hoping that they can keep people unarmed long enough to get new judges appointed to eviscerate all of our constitutional rights, not just the right to bear arms.

SMH

Last edited 1 year ago by Tony
Bubba

When are these @sshole judges going to be held accountable for knowingly infringing on a right?

Fטck them all.
Let’s get on with this civil war and show the woke left degenerates what the founding meant.

musicman44mag

Lol, one word and you got my vote with it. Makes my day!

swmft

breaking bad fits atf better

musicman44mag

That’s more than one word though.

Ledesma

This sounds awful. But it’s just the liberal way of saving us from machine gun attack. And attacks from machine nests.

Colt

please review ANY 4 boxes diner video on this one…