Eugene Volokh has posted about a U.S. District Court decision issued Monday where the court, on Second Amendment grounds, lifted the disability under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(4) ( adjudicated mentally defective) to possess firearms. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...ically-committed-10-years-ago-when-he-was-15/. The decision is Keyes v. Lynch, 1:15-cv-457 (U.S. Dist. Ct., M.D. Pa. July 11, 2016) and is available here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...content/uploads/sites/14/2016/07/KeyesYox.pdf. As explained near the end of this post, this is an "as applied" decision.
The court found that the Pennsylvania procedure to lift a firearm ownership disability did not comply with federal standards and therefore based its ruling on the Second Amendment. The person in question had been involuntarily hospitalized for eight days when he was 15 years old for cutting himself and being found a potential danger to himself or others. In the ten years since that time, he had served with the Army in Afghanistan where he operated fully automatic weapons, grenade launchers, and other weapons. He is currently a Pennsylvania correctional officer authorized to carry firearms in the course of his employment (through an exemption in 18 U.S.C. § 922). He had never had a relapse and a psychologist opined he did not pose a threat to others and was mentally stable.
The district court recognized that Heller said restrictions on the "mentally ill" from possessing firearms were presumptively lawful but that the plaintiff had overcome that presumption. General statistics about possible relapses were insufficient given the above evidence. According to the district court, its decision appears to be the first holding that § 922(g)(4) violated the Second Amendment "as applied."
An "as applied" violation means that under the specific facts of the case, the statute violated the Second Amendment. The statute itself, however, remains constitutional on its face. Mr. Volokh expects the government to appeal.
The court found that the Pennsylvania procedure to lift a firearm ownership disability did not comply with federal standards and therefore based its ruling on the Second Amendment. The person in question had been involuntarily hospitalized for eight days when he was 15 years old for cutting himself and being found a potential danger to himself or others. In the ten years since that time, he had served with the Army in Afghanistan where he operated fully automatic weapons, grenade launchers, and other weapons. He is currently a Pennsylvania correctional officer authorized to carry firearms in the course of his employment (through an exemption in 18 U.S.C. § 922). He had never had a relapse and a psychologist opined he did not pose a threat to others and was mentally stable.
The district court recognized that Heller said restrictions on the "mentally ill" from possessing firearms were presumptively lawful but that the plaintiff had overcome that presumption. General statistics about possible relapses were insufficient given the above evidence. According to the district court, its decision appears to be the first holding that § 922(g)(4) violated the Second Amendment "as applied."
An "as applied" violation means that under the specific facts of the case, the statute violated the Second Amendment. The statute itself, however, remains constitutional on its face. Mr. Volokh expects the government to appeal.