Florida's post-Parkland law raising minimum age to purchase a gun to 21 is upheld
Last edited Thu Mar 9, 2023, 07:54 PM - Edit history (2)
Source: CNN Politics
CNN A federal appeals court on Thursday upheld a Florida law passed after the massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that raised the minimum age to purchase a gun from 18 to 21. The 3-0 ruling from the 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals comes as aged-based restrictions are shaping up to become a flashpoint in the legal battles over gun access since the Supreme Court last year laid out a new test for determining a gun restrictions constitutionality.
Seventeen people were killed in the shooting by a 19-year-old on February 14, 2018. In an opinion written by Circuit Judge Robin Rosenbaum, the panel concluded that the Florida law was consistent with our Nations historical tradition of firearm regulation a reference to the Supreme Courts landmark Second Amendment ruling last year that instructed courts to look to whether a firearm restriction has historical analogues when assessing the restrictions constitutionality.
The National Rifle Association had challenged the Florida law shortly after it was signed in March 2018. The ruling may also be short-lived. Republican lawmakers this week introduced a bill that would lower the minimum age required to buy a firearm in the state from 21 back to 18.
An NRA spokesperson said in a statement that the association was disappointed with the ruling and that it is currently assessing our appeal options. The NRA also looks forward to the Florida legislature addressing the issue and removing this unconstitutional ban, the spokesperson, Amy Hunter, said. In its opinion, the 11th Circuit pointed to laws that barred young adults from possessing firearms that were enacted by states around the same time of the adoption of the Constitutions 14th Amendment, which extended the Second Amendment protections to states.
Read more: https://www.cnn.com/2023/03/09/politics/florida-gun-law-parkland-marjory-stoneman-douglas-high-school
Article updated.
Previous article -
In an opinion written by Circuit Judge Robin Rosenbaum, the panel concluded that the Florida law was "consistent with our Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation" - a reference to the Supreme Court's landmark Second Amendment ruling last year that instructed courts to look to whether a firearm restriction has historical analogues when assessing the restriction's constitutionality. The National Rifle Association had challenged the Florida law shortly after it was signed in March 2018.
In its opinion, the 11th Circuit pointed to laws that barred young adults from possessing firearms that were enacted by states around the same time of the adoption of the Constitution's 14th Amendment, which extended the Second Amendment protections to states. "Between the Fourteenth Amendment's ratification and the close of the nineteenth century, at least sixteen states and the District of Columbia joined Alabama, Kentucky and Tennessee--a total of at least twenty jurisdictions--in banning sales of firearms to 18-to-20-year-olds," Rosenbaum wrote. "These regulations, like their pre-ratification predecessors, were state responses to the problem of deaths and injuries that underage firearm users inflicted."
Much of the 11th Circuit opinion grapples with a question left open by the Supreme Court's June decision - known as New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen: whether courts should look to the historical record around the Second Amendment's ratification in 1791, or the ratification the 14th Amendment in the 1860s.
Original article -
The 3-0 ruling from the 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals comes as aged-based restrictions are shaping up to become a flashpoint in the legal battles over gun access since the Supreme Court last year laid out a new test for determining a gun restriction's constitutionality.
This story is breaking and will be updated.
CaliforniaPeggy
(149,614 posts)jimfields33
(15,793 posts)republianmushroom
(13,590 posts)Karadeniz
(22,513 posts)LiberalArkie
(15,715 posts)the purchasers state of residence or the purchasing state rules. In other words an 19 year old Floridian could not purchase a weapon in Georgia and a 19 year old Georgia person could not purchase a weapon in Florida.
Zeitghost
(3,858 posts)You can not purchase a firearm outside of your home state.
Just to clarify, you can purchase a firearm, but you can not take possession of it. The seller has to ship it to your home state where you would need to go through the background check process and follow any local laws.
LiberalArkie
(15,715 posts)to Arkansas. I picked it up at the gun shop in Houston a week or so later before I went home.
Glad to hear that.
sl8
(13,767 posts)Zeitghost
(3,858 posts)in the purchasers state.
I was only referring to the "taking posession" part.