The Case against Maryland
OK folks, Here is an interesting filing, yesterday at the Supreme Court:
http://www.supremecourt.gov/Search.aspx?FileName=/docketfiles/10-1207.htm
Code:
~~~Date~~~ ~~~~~~~Proceedings and Orders~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Apr 5 2011 Petition for a writ of certiorari filed. (Response due May 5, 2011)
Apr 20 2011 Waiver of right of respondent Maryland to respond filed.
The State of Maryland has filed a waiver of their right to respond to the request for cert. In other words, The State is not going to challenge the appellee at this time. Not even with a rephrase of the question asked by Stephan Halbrook.
When you consider that the Maryland High Court, the 4th Circuit and several district courts (not to mention
all the defendants) have all said that the Supreme Court never said arms were protected anywhere but "in the home," this indicates that even the State of MD wants this settled, one way or another.
If the SCOTUS grants cert, the question that will be answered is:
QUESTION PRESENTED
Whether peaceably carrying or transporting a registered handgun outside the home, without a carry permit that is unobtainable by ordinary, law-abiding citizens, is outside of the scope of “the right of the people to . bear arms” protected by the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Then there's the
Wollard case, which is at the district court where we have multiple motions and cross motions for Summary Judgment. Final response is due by 05-12-2011 by the State. If the Judge holds for SAF/Gura then MD will effectively be a "Shall Issue" State.
What will not be resolved (in
Wollard) is whether this is a right. That is true of all the varied "carry" cases. That is, before all the asinine CC laws can be changed, there must be judicial notice that we have the right to bear arms outside the doorstep. That is what at stake in the
Williams case.
It may be that
Wollard is stayed if the SCOTUS grants cert in
Williams. I suspect that all the other "carry" cases may be stayed as well.
There are some not-so-subtle implications, nationwide, should the right to bear arms be recognized by the SCOTUS. Even though this is a criminal case, keep in mind that it was the MD carry laws that made Williams a criminal. Had he had the right to bear arms, he would not be a criminal.
Stephan Halbrook has crafted a very well worded question. Unlike previous attempts (by the NRA), this isn't a kitchen-sink case. There is only a single issue here: Does the 2A protect a right to bear arms outside your doorstep?
If the SCOTUS answers in the affirmative, then it's a whole new ball-game.