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September 4, 2024
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Judge Rules Illinois Public Transit Firearms Carry Ban Unconstitutional


Authored by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times,

A federal judge recently ruled that Illinoisโ€™s ban on carrying guns in public transportation and in transportation facilities is unconstitutional, citing the Supreme Courtโ€™s 2022 landmark decision.

โ€œAfter an exhaustive review of the partiesโ€™ filings and the historical record, as required by Supreme Court precedent, the Court finds that Defendants failed to meet their burden to show an American tradition of firearm regulation at the time of the Founding that would allow Illinois to prohibit Plaintiffsโ€”who hold concealed-carry permitsโ€”from carrying concealed handguns for self-defense onto the CTA and Metra,โ€ U.S. District Judge Iain D. Johnston wrote in his Aug. 30 opinion, referring to two Chicago-area transportation systems.

The judge was cited the Supreme Courtโ€™s decision, N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, which found a New York law unconstitutional and that the ability to carry a pistol in public was a right guaranteed under the Second Amendment. The decision also said that, in future decisions, the judiciary should evaluate firearms regulations in light of the โ€œhistorical tradition of firearm regulation.โ€

Under the Supreme Courtโ€™s 2022 standard for seeing whether firearms regulations fall under the Constitution, the government must demonstrate that the measure is within U.S. historical traditions.

Treating โ€œany place where the government would want to protect public order and safety as a sensitive place casts too wide a net โ€ฆ [and] would seem to justify almost any gun restriction,โ€ Johnston wrote.

He also rejected Illinois state attorneysโ€™ arguments that the Bruen test did not apply in this case because the state, which owns the property, can regulate what individuals take onto its property.

โ€œ[I]ndividual rights isnโ€™t nullified on public property,โ€ he wrote.

Further, he added that the court found that the Second Amendment only โ€œprotects against governmentalโ€”not privateโ€”intrusion on rights and liberties.โ€

His ruling applies only to four named plaintiffs in the case, meaning that it did not strike down the gun ban in public transit in the state.

The lawsuit was brought by three Chicago-area residents and one individual from DeKalb County who hold concealed carry licenses, according to court papers.

The defendants in the case are Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul, DeKalb County Stateโ€™s Attorney Rick Amato, DuPage County Stateโ€™s Attorney Robert Berlin, Cook County Stateโ€™s Attorney Kimberly Foxx, and Lake County Stateโ€™s Attorney Eric Rinehart.

In their 2022 filing, the plaintiffs argued that โ€œbecause the public transportation carry ban prohibits persons from carrying a firearm while accessing public transportation, the ban severely restricts plaintiffs from exercising their right to self-defense outside of the home.โ€

โ€œThis directly violates the Second and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution as held by the U.S. Supreme Courtโ€ in the Bruen and other ruling, they wrote.

Raoul had responded earlier this year in court papers saying that the plaintiffs did not sufficiently establish that restrictions on their ability to carry firearms on public transportation infringed on their Second Amendment rights. He also argued that the law is needed to protect public safety.

โ€œAll this suit would achieve is shifting the nature of the criminal charge from one statute to another; the desired conduct would still be unlawful,โ€ his office wrote.

The Epoch Times has contacted David Sigale, the plaintiffsโ€™ attorney, as well as Raoulโ€™s office for comment on the ruling. Itโ€™s not clear whether Raoul, Foxx, or the other defendants are planning an appeal of Johnstonโ€™s decision.

Over the past few years, several legal challenges have been filed against Illinoisโ€™ gun laws, including a law that was signed by Gov. JB Pritzker in January 2023 that banned what he describes as โ€œassault weaponsโ€ such as AR-15-style rifles and a number of other semiautomatic firearms. In July, the Supreme Court decided not to take up a challenge to the law.


Wed, 09/04/2024 โ€“ 12:10

Source: ZeroHedge News

Disclaimer: TruthPuke LLC hereby clarifies that the editors, in numerous instances, are not accountable for the origination of news posts. Furthermore, the expression of opinions within exclusives authored by TruthPuke Editors does not automatically reflect the viewpoints or convictions held by TruthPuke Management.


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