Circuit Court Strikes Down New York’s Post-Bruen Vampire Rule Carry Ban
NY’s law making all private property that’s open to the public off-limits to carriers unless owners posted signs explicitly allowing concealed carry there is struck down.
NY’s law making all private property that’s open to the public off-limits to carriers unless owners posted signs explicitly allowing concealed carry there is struck down.
Meanwhile, the Virginia-based National Rifle Association along with SAF and FPC have already filed both state and federal lawsuits challenging the new SpanBan.
The complaint asserts that, with the removal of the excise tax on constitutionally protected arms like suppressors and SBRs, the NFA registration regime can no longer be upheld as a legal exercise of Congress’s taxing power.
If the administration is serious about keeping its promises, it must stop fighting against the People’s rights and abandon its defense of these immoral and unlawful restrictions.
Last night, in a Friday night news dump, Newsom signed into law a bill that bans GLOCK pistols. The bill was ostensibly written because criminals are able to print illegal switches that convert standard semi-auto GLOCKs into fully automatic handguns.
“The Trump DOJ’s scheme would gut nearly every lawsuit against the federal government unless and until the Supreme Court steps in,” said FPC President Brandon Combs.
Gun owners must remain vigilant, even when “our side” is in charge. Trump may be friendly to the 2A, and his actions may be well-intentioned, but this lawsuit reminds us that political loyalty is no substitute for constitutional fidelity — and no one is perfect.
“The dismissal of this appeal should be the final nail in the coffin of this unconstitutional Biden ATF assault on gun owners. As we explained in the case filings, braced pistols are not ‘short-barreled rifles’.”
Leave it to the Dorr Brothers to label the biggest neutering of the National Firearms Act scheme in history a
The State cannot point to a single law from the Founding or framing tradition that wholesale blocked nonresidents from participating