The Ridiculous Nature Of Modern Felonies ~ We’re All Felons Now!

Opinion

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In recent years, many on the political left had encouraged use of the politically correct term “justice-involved individual” to refer to those convicted of, even serious, crimes.

That is, until May 30. Upon that date, the great and the good rediscovered the pejorative “felon.” While their cynical use of the term is meant to conjure ideas of dangerousness and other severe negative connotations, such notions at this late date are dubious. Simply put, felonies aren’t what they used to be.

Traditionally, there were nine common law felonies. These included: murder, rape, manslaughter, robbery, sodomy, larceny, arson, mayhem, and burglary. Note that all but one of these crimes involves dangerous conduct involving direct attacks on another person or their property. The consensual form of the remaining crime has been abolished (Lawrence v. Texas (2003)). The remaining common law felonies are simple, have tangible victims, and are understandable to all but the most deranged as severe wrongdoing.

With the United States’ ever-growing reams of federal and state statutes and the bureaucrat-made law in the Code of Federal Regulations and state analogues accompanying it, this is no longer the case.

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch has made clear that he understands this issue.

The 2021 Supreme Court case Lange v. California involved the question of whether, under the Fourth Amendment, a law enforcement officer may always pursue an individual suspected of having committed a misdemeanor into a home without obtaining a warrant. The Court held that such a categorical exemption to the warrant requirement was impermissible.

During oral arguments there was much discussion on how to treat misdemeanor versus felonious conduct in such circumstances. Understanding the creeping expansion of the definition of felony, Gorsuch defended broad Fourth Amendment protections, noting,

we live in a world in which everything has been criminalized. And some professors have even opined that there’s not an American alive who hasn’t committed a felony in some – under some state law.

Gorsuch went on to explain,

what qualified as a felony at common law was — were very few crimes and they were all punished by the death penalty usually, and today pretty much again anything or everything can be called a felony.

In 2009, civil rights attorney and co-founder of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression Harvey Silverglate published the provocative book Three Felonies A Day: How the Feds Target the Innocent. The thesis of the book is that with the United States’ departure from the common law, almost every American is unwittingly guilty of a felony under the ever-expanding thicket of vague federal and state statutes and regulations.

The ridiculous nature of modern felonies should be easy for gun owners to grasp.

Consider the ATF’s bump stock rule. As U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas recently pointed out in his opinion in Garland v. Cargill (2024), for years bump stocks were sold in the U.S. with the blessing of the ATF. Then, in 2017 ATF reversed its own regulatory guidance and purported to outlaw the devices as “machineguns.” Under ATF’s rule, those who did not dispose of their lawfully-acquired property would commit a felony. It didn’t matter if a person was peaceful and otherwise law-abiding, mere continued possession of a lawfully-acquired item could subject them to a felony conviction.

As it turns out, ATF’s recent reinterpretation of federal statute was bogus all along and was thus overturned by the Supreme Court. However, the federal government’s behavior in this case is a testament to just how frivolous they are in concocting and defending new nonviolent felonies.

This wild expansion of felonies has a significant impact on Second Amendment rights.

Generally, federal law prohibits felons from possessing firearms. The Gun Control Act of 1968, as codified at 18 USC 922(g)(1), prohibits firearm possession by any person “who has been convicted in any court of, a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year.”

The meaning of that language is pared down in 18 USC 921(a)(20), which states,

(20) The term “crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year” does not include–

(A) any Federal or State offenses pertaining to antitrust violations, unfair trade practices, restraints of trade, or other similar offenses relating to the regulation of business practices, or

(B) any State offense classified by the laws of the State as a misdemeanor and punishable by a term of imprisonment of two years or less.

As one can see from 18 USC 921(a)(20)(A), even in 1968 lawmakers understood that it didn’t make sense to categorically prohibit anyone convicted of any felony, such as the obviously nonviolent, from possessing firearms. However, with such a limited carveout, those lawmakers perhaps failed to anticipate the sprawling growth of government.

The U.S. Supreme Court rulings in District of Columbia v. Heller (2008) and New York State Rifle & Pistol Association Inc. v. Bruen (2022) made clear that that the Second Amendment right and impositions on it must be considered in light of the nation’s historical tradition. Given the current reality around felonies, and just how much it differs from the historic record, there has been renewed interest in cabining the 18 USC 922(g)(1) prohibition and state analogues to those convicted of violent crimes or at least crimes indicative of some amount of dangerousness.

In 2009, the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy published a widely circulated item written by former Deputy Assistant Attorney General C. Kevin Marshall with a title that posed the reasonable question “Why Can’t Martha Stewart Have a Gun?” In it Marshall explained,

In 2004, domestic diva Martha Stewart was convicted of obstruction of justice, making false statements, and two counts of conspiracy in connection with dubious stock transactions. Although sentenced to only five months in jail plus a period of supervised release, she risked a much harsher punishment. Because she was convicted of a crime punishable by more than a year in prison, federal law bans her from having any gun.

Is the public safer now that Martha Stewart is completely and permanently disarmed? More to the point, how could such a ban be constitutional, now that the Supreme Court, in District of Columbia v. Heller, not only has confirmed that the Second Amendment secures a personal right to keep and bear arms, but also has emphasized its historical tie to the right of self‐defense?

Marshall endorses a regime that would limit firearm prohibitions to those convicted of crimes of violence. The author noted,

the “crime of violence” concept developed then tracks, both historically and rationally, the basis on which a disability should proceed constitutionally: by focusing on convictions indicating that one actually poses some danger of physically harming others rather than simply being dishonest or otherwise unsavory.

Disabilities based on a conviction ought to rest on a justification sufficient to override or qualify the right of self‐defense underlying the Second Amendment, and the “crime of violence” concept does so.

Likewise, in 2019 Justice Amy Coney Barrett, then a judge on U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, suggested that firearm possession prohibitions should be tied to dangerousness while dissenting in the case Kanter v. Barr. The case involved the Second Amendment rights of an individual with a felony mail fraud conviction stemming from the almost comically nonviolent crime of selling Medicare non-compliant therapeutic shoe inserts.

Taking issue with the categorical ban on felons possessing firearms, Barrett explained,

History is consistent with common sense: it demonstrates that legislatures have the power to prohibit dangerous people from possessing guns. But that power extends only to people who are dangerous. Founding-era legislatures did not strip felons of the right to bear arms simply because of their status as felons.

The federal and state governments’ campaigns to criminalize everything, that Justice Neil Gorsuch so aptly pointed out, show little sign of abating. This, along with the decisions in Heller and Bruen, should prompt a serious examination as to the legality and efficacy of blanket prohibitions on felons possessing firearms.


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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Wass

It’s worth noting: In New Jersey, every (that means EVERY) violation of state law regarding guns and ammo, is a felony. For example:The mere possession of a hollow point bullet outside one’s home or transporting it without proper precautions is a felony,

musicman44mag

OMG, how hitlerisk. And I thought Oregoneistan was bad.

swmft

mass has the same stupid ideas, governor of mass sent people to southern boarder to tell the illegals the shelters are full go elsewhere gee too stupid like new yak give them money and they will stay not leave, give them shelter they will stay

Roland T. Gunner

If I had a dollar for every jackass I have ever met, originally from New Jersy but now residing in Texas, who waxed enthusiastically about how wonderful New Jersey is, I would be a rich man.

swmft

there are so many people in government that want to be important, they make up bs to say someone else is bad, goobers out of control. Only role of government is as referees, someone is way out of line they get put in penalty box

Arizona

They are arrogant power-seeking authoritarians, who have no Constitutional authority to vote on every crazy idea they have, yet do it anyhow, in direct violation of their oath of office and the Constitution’s limits on Congressional power. They have no legal authority to tell us what type of light bulbs to use, how much meat or gas or electricity we can use, what type of Freon goes in our air conditioners, yet they pass “laws” repugnant to the Constitution. They passed a law a few years back to treat us all as drunk driving felons, requiring breathalyzers or other devices… Read more »

swmft

that is what has gone wrong and why rope is needed

Carbuilder

The irony is that breaking into this country illegally is NOT a felony

musicman44mag

That like so many other things needs to change.

swmft

parents are not citizens neither are the children

musicman44mag

End DACA!!!!

swmft

foreign students MUST PAY to go to public school just like in every country on the planet , to access hospital services must show insurance,or give a deposit

musicman44mag

SORRY FOR THE LONG POST. LOL, I don’t want any foreign students in America that will take our knowledge we provide and use it against us. If America wouldn’t be so dam caring about helping others and just took care of themselves like other countries do, other countries might be figuring out what a computer is now and be able to build a copy and then shrink it. I think medical care should be free. I am tired of paying the plantation owners money to have medical care especially when the game has been changed to where all you can… Read more »

Roland T. Gunner

Health coverage being tied to employment is all about keeping us in the workforce, “productive”, generating tax revenue.

When I retired, I budgeted for health insurance, not realizing the standard coverage avail, BCBS Texas basic coverage, is for practical purposes worthless. Around $30k a year in premiums and deductibles before they pay for a single aspirin or tongue depressor. I could afford to buy the indurance, but I could not afford to use it.

I dont know what their premium plans cover, because I couldnt afford them anyway.

I dont have health insurance.

PMinFl

Are you exempt from Medicare? often due to employment status (government or railroad employment).

musicman44mag

Hi there. Sorry it took me so long to respond. I have been very sick for about a week and just managed to get on here for a few responses yesterday. I am lucky because if I didn’t have Medicare and my extra insurance from retirement, I would be dead. I learned all about our system in 1980 when I needed a torn meniscus repaired or I could not walk. A tire man that cannot walk or repair tires using crutches? Wife made 25 dollars more than she should have so I could not get any aid. There was no… Read more »

jack mac

While the Surgeon General dwells on a non-existent gun violence public health crisis he says nothing of the real public health crises. The most severe public health crisis is the lack of affordable and adequate health care and some two hundred thousand deaths by malpractice per year.

swmft

milk in glass bottles or metal tins, beer in returnable bottles,If you think about it Louie 14 cognac came in a decanter that had a deposit

Stag

If there is no victim then there is no crime.

hasbeen

the real felons are all in politics masquerading as dumb as craps. with their usurped power they now get to make laws that make the innocent felons and the felons their masters.

Monkey Mouse

And you wonder why 60% of those polled think the US will be in a Civil War very soon. Appears that the government wants it and the more people they disarm, the better the chances are for them to win. News flash – that battle was lost before it was even fought.

Bigfootbob

Seems like the NRA has been asleep at the switch, (forever), and are spinning their failures trying to become relevant. It sickens me to think about all of the lost opportunities this organization has either ignored or even worse, been on the wrong side of.

Fortunately we have genuine 2A champions doing yeoman’s work. It’s going to take a lot of work for the NRA to become relevant, if it’s even remotely possible.

J.galt

Yeah…….thanks for nothing nra

swmft

1934 gca was theirs, 1968 update too when scotus said wait you cant mack someone register something if the cant have it 5th …the 5th they see the infringement and not 1st or second court is useless

Novice.but.learning

Excellent analysis.

2A Gun Guy

Everyone has the Right to Self Defense, especially now!

Nanashi

Note that all but one of these crimes involves dangerous conduct involving direct attacks on another person “

Not content with trying to convince the world the Second Amendment applies to nothing, the NRA now wants you to think malakoi don’t need diapers and leave kids alone.

jack mac

Allowing any citizen not lawfully confined to be deprived of any right divides Americans into two classes: Those subjugated to firearm-prohibited persons and those not yet subjected. This essentially voids the 2nd Amendment.
There are only two methods of preventing unconfined persons from doing and obtaining anything: Confinement or dearth.

Logician

OK, going well beyond just an “opinion”, as this article is referred to at the top of it, it is a well established fact that those who commit crimes, relinquish ALL of their pretended right to power and authority over others! How can it not be so? Is there any instance at all that can be named, wherein criminals should be allowed to roam free to wield power over others and commit even MORE crimes? There is none! And that is why we have jails and prisons, to contain the criminals so they don’t harm even more people! The next… Read more »