What is interesting is the firearms history cited by the court in its opinion. Page 28 mentions Da Vinci's organ gun, the Girandoni air gun carried by Lewis & Clark and the Corps of Discovery, the Lorenzoni flintlock repeater with internal magazine for power and ball, an allusion to the Henry ("That damn Yankee rifle you load on Sunday and shoot all week.") and the Lefauchaux revolver (20 shots).
Page 33-35 discuss the level of court scrutiny. General level of thumb the higher the level of scrutiny, the more the court seeks to safeguard the Constitution against government infringements. Strict Scrutiny is applied where is a compelling government interest. Generally there are no compelling government interest and most laws that come under strict scrutiny are struck down as unconstitutional. Mid-level scrutiny is applied to less than essential liberties like the rights of gays. The lowest, rational relation, is when the court feels there must be a rational relation between the law being challenged and government reasoning for the law. When this is applied, the government almost always wins. Fortunately here, the court applied strict scrutiny (page 43) nor was the law "narrowly tailored nor the least restrictive means of achieving these interests." That's pretty d*mning of California's law.
http://michellawyers.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Duncan-2019-03-29-Order-Granting-Plaintiffs-MSJ.pdf
As a former Californiastan resident, I am happy to see tyranny crushed. Now we have to work on Coloradostan.
Page 33-35 discuss the level of court scrutiny. General level of thumb the higher the level of scrutiny, the more the court seeks to safeguard the Constitution against government infringements. Strict Scrutiny is applied where is a compelling government interest. Generally there are no compelling government interest and most laws that come under strict scrutiny are struck down as unconstitutional. Mid-level scrutiny is applied to less than essential liberties like the rights of gays. The lowest, rational relation, is when the court feels there must be a rational relation between the law being challenged and government reasoning for the law. When this is applied, the government almost always wins. Fortunately here, the court applied strict scrutiny (page 43) nor was the law "narrowly tailored nor the least restrictive means of achieving these interests." That's pretty d*mning of California's law.
http://michellawyers.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Duncan-2019-03-29-Order-Granting-Plaintiffs-MSJ.pdf
As a former Californiastan resident, I am happy to see tyranny crushed. Now we have to work on Coloradostan.