9-0 decision reaffirms that government cannot strip Second Amendment rights without individualized evidence of dangerousness
The U.S. Supreme Court handed the Gun Control Lobby a major defeat, unanimously ruling that the federal government cannot automatically strip Americans of their Second Amendment rights simply because they fall into a broad government-defined category.
In United States v. Hemani, all nine justices agreed that federal prosecutors violated the Second Amendment when they attempted to prosecute Texas resident Ali Hemani under a federal law that broadly bans firearm possession by certain drug users.
Writing for the Court, Justice Neil Gorsuch rejected the government’s argument that regular marijuana users can be presumed dangerous without any individualized evidence to support that claim.
While the ruling does not completely eliminate the federal statute, it sharply limits the federal government’s ability to disarm Americans based solely on labels, status, or bureaucratic assumptions.
The decision reinforces a principle long championed by the National Association for Gun Rights:
“Constitutional rights cannot be revoked without due process and individualized justification.”
According to NAGR President Dudley Brown, allowing government officials to remove fundamental rights through categorical bans creates a dangerous precedent that threatens every American’s liberties.
NAGR participated in the case by filing an amicus brief urging the Court to uphold the Founders’ understanding that rights come from the Constitution — not from government approval.
The Gun Control Lobby is expected to continue searching for new legal theories to justify firearm restrictions, but the Court’s unanimous opinion sends a clear message that broad disarmament schemes face serious constitutional obstacles.
For NAGR, the Hemani decision serves as proof that aggressive Constitutional litigation remains one of the most effective tools for defending the right to keep and bear arms.
As anti-gun politicians and activists regroup, NAGR says it will continue fighting in Congress, the federal courts, and ultimately the Supreme Court to ensure the Second Amendment is treated as a fundamental right — not a government-issued privilege.
Read more at CBS.
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