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November 26, 2024

Fifth Circuit panel reverses notable Second Amednment dismissal of federal felon-in-possession prosecution

I noted in prior posts (assembled below) the work of US District Judge Carlton Reeves in a case after the Supreme Court's landmark Bruen ruling in which a defendant challenged application of the federal criminal statute prohibiting felons from possessing firearm.  Judge Reeves intially asked the parties whether he "should appoint a historian to serve as a consulting expert" before deciding, in a 77-page opinion, that the Second Amendment required dismissal of the indictment in US v. Bullock. 

I now see that yesterday, though this three-page per curiam unpublished opinion, the Fifth Circuit reversed citing the Supreme Court's opinion in Rahimi setting limits on Bruen: "In light of recent precedent, the district court erred when it held that § 922(g)(1) violates the Second Amendment as applied to Bullock."  Here is a bit of the fairly brief analysis:

Here, Bullock previously misused a firearm to harm others when he shot one individual, fired into a crowd of others, and in the process killed an innocent passerby. A ban on his ability to possess a firearm “fits neatly” within our Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation. See [Rahimi, 144 S. Ct.]  at 1898–902....

Bullock’s violent conduct here is also “relevantly similar” to, and arguably more dangerous than, the “prototypical affray [which] involved fighting in public,” the precursor to the “going armed” laws punishable by arms forfeiture. Rahimi, 144 S. Ct. at 1901. And the justification behind going armed laws, to “mitigate demonstrated threats of physical violence,” supports a tradition of disarming individuals like Bullock pursuant to § 922(g)(1), whose underlying convictions stemmed from the threat and commission of violence with a firearm.  Id.; see United States v. Diaz, 116 F.4th 458, 470 n.5 (5th Cir. 2024).

The Diaz ruling from a couple of months ago cited here (and blogged here) certainly presaged this outcome, and Bullock is a long way from the best advocate for limits on felon disarming.  But Diaz suggests that at least some "modern" felons may not be lawfully disarmed, and it will be interesting to see if and when a Fifth Circuit panel addresses a potentially toughter Second Amendment case. 

Prior recent related posts:

November 26, 2024 at 03:34 PM | Permalink

Comments

The appellate outcome of this case was perfectly obvious to anyone who read Diaz. That Judge Reeves reached the opposite conclusion could make one wonder whether he was influenced by his own opinions about "over-incarceration" rather than by law.

Posted by: Bill Otis | Nov 27, 2024 11:46:38 AM

Judge Reeves' ruling/opinion was handed down when Bruen and the Fifth Circuit's first Rahimi decision were the key controlling law. Justice Thomas's dissent in Rahimi, when SCOTUS overruled the Fifth Circuit's opinion, surely supports a view that Judge Reeves was quite faithful to Bruen and Second Amendment law as of June 2023. That SCOTUS decided to "remake" the law in Rahimi leads me to wonder whether and how originalist approaches to the Second Amendment can be viewed as any less subjective than other interprative methodologies.

Posted by: Doug B | Nov 27, 2024 4:38:59 PM

You're both wrong: Judge Reeves did what he did as an act of civil disobedience: to force an appeal and, hopefully, expose what he saw as the fallacy of the historical analysis required by Bruen.

Posted by: Da Man | Nov 29, 2024 1:09:45 PM

Da Man --

A judge who intentionally violates the law to "expose" what he regards as its "fallacy" is an abomination. Suppose a judge who strongly disagrees with his state supreme court's having suspended imposition of the death penalty imposes a death penalty anyway and orders it carried out immediately? That's not judging. It's using your office to do what you personally want, which is the definition of abuse of office. If you're right about Judge Reeves, he should be impeached and removed.

Posted by: Bill Otis | Dec 1, 2024 10:34:24 PM

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