As Americans, we have every reason to celebrate our rights and freedoms, especially on Independence Day. Can the senseless crimes of a relative few be so despicable to justify the infringement of the constitutional rights of law-abiding individuals in hopes that such crimes will then abate or, at least, not be as horrific? More specifically, can PICA be harmonized with the Second Amendment of the United States Constitution and with Bruen? That is the issue before this Court. The simple answer at this stage in the proceedings is “likely no.” The Supreme Court in Bruen and Heller held that citizens have a constitutional right to own and possess firearms and may use them for self-defense. PICA seems to be written in spite of the clear directives in Bruen and Heller, not in conformity with them. Whether well-intentioned, brilliant, or arrogant, no state may enact a law that denies its citizens rights that the Constitution guarantees them. Even legislation that may enjoy the support of a majority of its citizens must fail if it violates the constitutional rights of fellow citizens. For the reasons fully set out below, the overly broad reach of PICA commands that the injunctive relief requested by Plaintiffs be granted.
No. 45 Harrel v. Raoul, No. 3:23-cv-00141, slip op. at 3–4 (S.D. Ill.)

Some compelling prose from Judge McGlynn, District Court Judge, S.D. Ill. He gets it.

He does the right thing and grants the preliminary injunction. The state runs to mommy, the Seventh Circuit court.

There, Woods and Easterbrook make a mockery of judicial decorum, judicial precedents, and show their utter disrespect for the Supreme Court. They decided that icky guns aren’t arms under the Second Amendment, so there was no infringement.

As the Amici said in United States v. Kittson

The parties and the lower court mischaracterized Bruen as requiring a two-step analysis. Appellant’s. Br. (“AB”) at 35; 1-ER-46-47. Unfortunately, lower courts and reviewing courts have been similarly mischaracterizing the breadth and application of Bruen’s analysis, to the point that the myth of a two-step analysis has become pervasive, including in this Circuit. See United States v. Alaniz, 69 F.4th 1124, 1128 (9th Cir. 2023) (asserting that Bruen abrogated one two-step test but then adopted another); see also United States v. Duarte, No. 22-50048, 2024 WL 2068016, at *4 (9th Cir. May 9, 2024) (also erroneously applying the new two-step test). This panel should use this opportunity to correct this error.

By its plain language, Bruen eschews a two-step test and calls for a one-step test: “Despite the popularity of th[e] two-step approach, it is one step too many.” Bruen, 597 U.S. at 19. It would make little sense for the Court to expressly abrogate a step as unnecessary only to then reinsert a substitute.

Because the district court fundamentally misunderstood the approach Bruen requires, this case provides an excellent opportunity for this Court to clarify that the simple requirement that a Second Amendment case implicate the right to keep or bear arms is not a significant analytical “step,” and thus, as the district courts and other courts have transmuted it, an imposing hurdle. Rather, it is a simple qualifier. This is critical because courts have cynically transformed this manufactured first step into a barrier relieving the government of its burden of the historical analysis altogether, unfairly shifting burdens from the government to civil plaintiffs (or criminal defendants), and reinserting the interest balancing derided and forbade by Bruen under the guise of a purported “plain text” analysis that allows lower courts like this one to treat obvious arms-related questions as though they are not.

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By awa

3 thoughts on “When a Judge gets it right”
  1. Thank you. It’s nice to see that, while the battle is uphill, we occasionally do find valleys along the way. Or some metaphor about the road etc., it’s been a long day and my brain hurts. 🙂

    1. My brain hurts too. It has been a long couple of days. Back aches from bending and standing. I’ve got burns on both arms from hot chips. I’ve got a dozen small cuts and scraps from I don’t know what. And I have a huge smile on my face.
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      Thanks for the feedback. That also puts a smile on my face.

      1. Random cuts, nicks and scrapes are the shop’s way of telling you to work on your spatial awareness. 🙂 (Seriously, it always amazes me how sharp a 90 degree corner can be, if machined with care and good tooling.)
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        There’s nothing quite matches the feeling of making something yourself and seeing it work like you envisioned.
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        That feeling happens with software and simulations, certainly; moreso when I get something I designed into the lab and it checks out. Neither matches the feeling of having taken it from napkin to machined metal all by myself, though.

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