Something about the SG's response has been bugging me. Follow my thought and tell me if I'm wrong, please.
First, let's take a look at the way the SG has phrased the question being asked:
Whether 36 C.F.R. 2.4(b), which prohibits “[c]arrying or possessing a loaded weapon in a motor vehicle, vessel or other mode of transportation” on National Park Service land, violates the Second Amendment as applied in this case.
Now look at what the actual cert petition asks:
- Does the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution protect a right to possess and carry a firearm for self-defense outside the home?
- If there is a Second Amendment right to possess and carry a firearm for self-defense outside the home, is it constitutional to prohibit law-abiding citizens’ possession and carrying of loaded weapons in motor vehicles while on National Park Service land?
Those are 2 distinct and different questions.
The SG has (almost) completely avoided the possession outside the home question, which is central to the cert petition itself. By moving the focus to the regulation that was violated, a regulation no longer at issue, the SG hopes to avoid the Court taking up the "outside the home" issue.
In that respect, the issue then becomes much simpler. It was a lawful regulation at the time of conviction. [pay no attention to the man behind the curtain, waving that fundamental rights flag] Preserving the lower courts interpretation of
US v. Hark (1944) and its decision.
I don't believe
Hark can stand as valid precedent, when it conflicts with a fundamental right that existed before the court identified it (See McDonald, 561 U.S. at ___ (slip op., Thomas, J. Concurrence at 15, quoting Heller, 554 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at 19) (“
t has always been widely understood that the Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a pre-existing right”))). [emphasis in the original]
If Hark fails, so does the conviction.
Which then should open up the question of whether the core right to self defense, exists outside the home. We believe that the right of self defense is inherent in all places, at all times, wherever and whenever such protection is not directly afforded by the government.
In those places and times where the government can not or will not protect the people, then the government can not have any rational reason to strip the individual of this seminal right.
This is not an absolutist view of the right. It merely builds upon the foundation laid by Heller.