California ban on openly carrying guns is unconstitutional, court rules

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California allowed citizens to carry handguns openly and holstered for self-defence without penalty until 2012.

California allowed citizens to carry handguns openly and holstered for self-defence without penalty until 2012.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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CALIFORNIA - A US appeals court ruled on Jan 2 that California’s ban on openly carrying firearms in most parts of the state was unconstitutional.

A panel of the San Francisco-based 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals sided 2-1 with a gun owner in ruling that the state’s prohibition against open carry in counties with more than 200,000 people violated the US Constitution’s Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms.

About 95 per cent of the population in California, which has had some of the nation’s strictest gun-control laws, live in counties of that size.

US Circuit Judge Lawrence VanDyke, who was appointed by Republican President Donald Trump, said the Democratic-led state’s law could not stand under the US Supreme Court’s 2022 landmark gun rights ruling.

That decision, New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v Bruen, was issued by the court’s 6-3 conservative super majority and established a new legal test for firearms restrictions. The test said they must be “consistent with this nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation”.

Judge VanDyke, whose opinion on Jan 2 was joined by another appointee of Mr Trump, said the latest case “unquestionably involves a historical practice – open carry – that predates ratification of the Bill of Rights in 1791”.

He noted that more than 30 states generally allow open carry. California itself allowed citizens to carry handguns openly and holstered for self-defence without penalty until 2012, he said.

“The historical record makes unmistakably plain that open carry is part of this nation’s history and tradition,” the judge said.

The ruling partially reversed a 2023 decision by a lower-court judge who had rejected a 2019 challenge to the law by gun owner Mark Baird.

While the appeals court largely sided with Mr Baird, it rejected his related challenge to California’s licensing requirements in counties with fewer than 200,000 residents, which may issue open-carry permits.

Senior US Circuit Judge N. Randy Smith, who was appointed by Republican former president George W. Bush, dissented, saying his colleagues “got this case half-right” as all of California’s restrictions complied with the Supreme Court’s ruling.

A spokesperson for California Attorney General Rob Bonta, a Democrat who defended the state’s ban, in a statement said his office is considering its options. “We are committed to defending California’s common sense gun laws,” the spokesperson said.

The 2022 Supreme Court ruling has prompted court cases nationwide challenging modern firearm restrictions, including in California.

A 9th Circuit panel in September 2024 upheld a California law that prohibits people with concealed-carry permits from carrying firearms at several categories of “sensitive places” such as bars, parks, zoos, stadiums and museums. REUTERS

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