Supreme Court Narrows Law Banning Drug Users From Owning Guns
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/18/us/politics/supreme-court-drugs-guns.html
Supreme Court Narrows Law Banning Drug Users From Owning Guns
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/18/us/politics/supreme-court-drugs-guns.html
Florida Appeals Court Strikes Down Ban on Concealed Carry for Young Adults
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/17/us/florida-concealed-carry-young-adults.html
I am fucking seething after reading this 🤬
Last September, Ríhanna Kelver was standing outside the Crowbar & Grill in Laramie, Wyoming, preparing to start her bartending shift, when she noticed a group of men across the street. One of them was shouting in her direction, and Kelver heard several homophobic and transphobic slurs as he began approaching her. Moments later, according to court testimony and surveillance footage, the man shoved Kelver to the ground hard enough to injure her tailbone.
Kelver responded by drawing a pistol from her bag, chambering a round, and pointing the weapon at the man who had pushed her. She kept the safety on and never fired. The man and his companions retreated.
Today, Kelver, a 28-year-old trans woman, faces two felony charges—aggravated assault and possession of a deadly weapon with unlawful intent—which could carry up to 15 years in prison. The man who shoved Kelver and who allegedly initiated the confrontation, known only as “S. Durham,” has not been charged.
— Caroline E. Light, “Do Trans People Have ‘Stand Your Ground’ Rights? Wyoming’s Answer May Be ‘No.’”
If psychic rage alone could kill a person, the judge who presided over the pretrial hearing in this case would drop dead right now.
#Slate #News #USpol #USA #WY #Transmisia #StandYourGround #GunRights
Guilt by Association: Ninth Circuit Battles Over Gun Permit Denied for Member Of BoozeFighters Motorcycle Club
In a case that pits Second Amendment rights against public safety concerns, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit recently heard arguments in Shilling v. County of San Diego. Plaintiff Kenneth Shilling challenged the county’s decision to revoke his concealed carry weapon (CCW) permit solely based on his membership in the Boozefighters Motorcycle Club. The dispute highlights deeper tensions in post-Bruen America: how far can local officials go in denying gun rights based on associations, and does this constitute unconstitutional discrimination?
What Happened: The Facts of the Case
Kenneth Shilling held a valid CCW permit in San Diego County until a change in sheriff leadership altered the landscape. In December 2023, Sheriff Kelly Martinez revoked his permit, citing Shilling’s affiliation with the Boozefighters Motorcycle Club (BMC), which the sheriff’s department internally labeled a “criminal street gang.” This classification stemmed from an unpublished policy deeming members “dangerous” under prior “good moral character” standards.
Even after California updated its laws following the 2022 Supreme Court New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen decision—which struck down subjective “proper cause” requirements—counties retained discretion. Shilling sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging violations of his First Amendment right to freedom of association and Second Amendment right to bear arms. A federal district court dismissed much of the case on immunity and mootness grounds (Shilling eventually received a new permit), but his attorney Gary Gorski appealed to keep the challenge alive to prevent future harms.
The “how” is straightforward: an internal policy allowed blanket denial based on group membership without individualized evidence of criminality by Shilling himself. The “when” traces to a sheriff’s policy shift post-election, amplified by California’s evolving CCW framework in 2024, which aimed for more objective criteria but left room for interpretation.
Why This Matters: Core Constitutional Questions
Why did the county act? Public safety. Motorcycle clubs, particularly those with outlaw reputations like some one-percenters, have documented ties to crime in law enforcement databases. Sheriffs argue that associating with groups involved in violence, drugs, or organized crime creates a reasonable risk for permit holders who carry firearms in public. Denying permits protects the community from potential escalation.
June 19th 2026 The Biggest Release Of Raw Unfiltered Biker Music in a generationShilling and advocates counter that this is guilt by association. No evidence showed Shilling committed crimes; the denial rested purely on membership. This raises “why” questions about due process: Can an unpublished policy override constitutional rights? Gorski warned of a slippery slope—labeling lawyers, bar patrons, or political groups as “dangerous” could strip rights arbitrarily.
Post-Bruen, courts must evaluate gun regulations against historical traditions. Subjective “dangerousness” based on associations may lack clear historical analogs, favoring shall-issue regimes with objective disqualifiers (felonies, domestic violence, etc.).
Pros and Cons of the County’s Approach
Pros (Public Safety Perspective):
Cons (Rights Perspective):
Is This Discrimination?
Yes, arguably viewpoint or associational discrimination. The First Amendment protects freedom of association, including with unpopular groups, absent imminent harm (see NAACP v. Alabama). Applying this to gun rights implicates the Second Amendment’s core protection for “law-abiding, responsible citizens.”
Critics see class or cultural bias: Motorcycle enthusiasts, often blue-collar, face hurdles that affluent applicants might not. It echoes concerns about “good moral character” clauses historically used against minorities or dissidents. However, if the club has verifiable criminal activity, individualized assessments (not blanket bans) would better balance rights and safety.
California’s shift to “objective criteria” post-2024 was meant to fix subjectivity, yet cases like this show implementation gaps. Long wait times and varying county policies exacerbate access issues.
Broader Implications and the Road Ahead
This case tests whether post-Bruen reforms truly constrain discretionary power. A Ninth Circuit win for Shilling could force counties to abandon guilt-by-association tactics, requiring evidence of personal disqualifiers. A loss might embolden sheriffs, inviting more litigation up to the Supreme Court.
The panel—Trump appointees Kenneth Lee and Patrick Bumatay, plus Biden appointee Jennifer Sung—heard arguments on May 21, 2026. No immediate ruling, but the decision could clarify boundaries for concealed carry nationwide, especially in permissive states with restrictive pockets.
Ultimately, this isn’t just about one man’s permit. It’s about whether constitutional rights are indivisible or can be traded for administrative convenience. Strong gun rights advocates argue that law-abiding citizens, regardless of hobbies, shouldn’t lose fundamental protections on flimsy associations. Public safety proponents insist that ignoring group dynamics invites tragedy.
As courts navigate this, the balance must favor evidence-based decisions over stereotypes. True discrimination occurs when rights are stripped without cause; reasonable regulation protects everyone. The Ninth Circuit’s ruling will signal which way the scales tip in California’s ongoing gun rights battles.
Sources / References:
Gun rights groups see 'golden age' under Trump administration
https://www.npr.org/2026/05/20/nx-s1-5810190/gun-rights-trump-rules-atf
The Second Amendment and the Administration: A Necessary but Complex Alliance
I just finished reading an interesting piece over at Reason regarding the administration’s relationship with Second Amendment advocates. It’s the kind of article that makes you sit back and think. The article argues that while the current administration is a "powerful" ally for gun rights, it can also be "unreliable." After looking at the facts, I find myself in a position of both agreement and firm defense of the President's record. Where I Agree: The Need for Absolute […]The DOJ's civil rights division is investigating gun rights violations