Before we get too giddy dancing with joy thinking the Supreme Court is going to magically abolish NY (and other states) permit system, I think some deep background information would be useful, particularly for those members here who live and/or grew up in "free-er" states.
I grew up in New York state, and moved away permanently in 1979. The system, as it existed back then (and for generations before then) required a pistol permit to POSSESS a handgun. It was entirely arbitrary, totally up to the whim of the issuing Judge.
Applying for the permit required 5 sets of fingerprints, 4 photographs (passport size), and 3 character references (non-family members), and the application also included a question asking the reason for applying for the permit.
Which is where it got a bit tricksy. A Judge in one county would only approve permits with "Hunting and Sporting purposes" as the reason. IF you aaid "Self defense" or "personal protection" or anything like that, the judge would not approve it.
In the next county, the Judge would only approve permits for self defense, and if it said anything else, it was denied. So you needed to do some research before submitting the application.
And, the permit I'm talking about was just for possession and open carry. It did NOT allow concealed carry (and, was not valid in NYC, at all).
Concealed carry permits were not something for the masses. In effect, they were only available to those who provided qualifying "special reasons". Licensed private security, private detectives, businessmen who carried large amounts of cash to deposit at the end of the day, and those people who were "connected" (by being related to, or donating enough cash to the right people...
) were the only ones that seemed to qualify...
A little more info about the "regular" permit, it allowed possession (at home) and lawful open carry (such as while hunting, ONLY for the pistol(s) listed on the permit.
Each gun was listed on the permit, by make, caliber, barrel length and serial number. It was typed on the back of the permit paper. So for example, your permit might say "S&W .357Mag 6" #N123456.
That gun, and ONLY that gun was legal for you to possess and open carry. NO OTHER, unless it was also listed on the permit.
And, they were rather serious about that. Due to a car wreck in the late 60s my Mom & Dad wound up doing some checking and learning that, if something happened to Dad (like being killed in a car wreck) if no one else in the household had a pistol permit, listing his handguns on it, then his pistols would have to be surrendered to the State.
The State Police said they would keep them 30 days and then destroy them. (or sell them, which was allowed in those days, and yes, they would keep the money...)
The County Sheriff would, if a permit was applied for, keep them until the application was either approved or denied. Approved, they would give them back, denied, they would dispose of them like the State Police...
Mom applied right away, and both my brother and I applied when we turned 18. (yes, 18, not 21, because we knew a Judge who would approve at 18)
And all our permits listed all the pistols Mom & Dad had on them. Which, when I went into the Army, was 7 pistols. More than most folks we knew.
And the permit was good for life, unless revoked. And a Judge could revoke for any reason he chose....
I don't think things have gotten any more relaxed in the decades since I moved away, and I've heard that the lifetime duration went away, and the fees hugely increased.
Don't think for a minute that they don't keep track of them all, though they are kind of slow about some things....in about 2001 I got a letter from NY informing me that since I was no longer a resident of NY, my pistol permit was no longer valid, and, they wanted it back...AND they wanted to know where the pistols listed on it, were ...
Get that?
The wallet sized paper (not cardstock) non laminated paper they issued in 1975, in 2001, the wanted it back. My reply would not pass TFL's language filters, but essentially I told them to go pound sand...
SO, that's a bit of first hand background on how things were back then. I can only believe nothing has been reduced and more added in the years since.
Now, on to the looming SCOTUS case...
If I am understanding it correctly, what the High Court is going to do is restrict their review to the "special requirements" needing to be shown to obtain a concealed carry permit.
I seriously doubt the Court would rule that requiring a permit for concealed carry to be unconstitutional. What I think they will rule on is having to provide the state with some "special need" in order to obtain the concealed carry permit. This does not mean they will rule that the permit be "Shall Issue", either, they could rule only that the requirements be the same for all, which is what I am expecting at this time.
get your popcorn ready, this one will be one to watch...