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The
Bush Administration and DC Gun Ownership
by
John R. Lott, Jr.
by John R. Lott, Jr.
DIGG THIS
A lot of Americans
who believe in the right to own guns were very disappointed this
weekend. On Friday, the Bush administrations Justice Department
entered into the fray over the District of Columbias 1976
handgun ban by filing a brief to the Supreme Court that effectively
supports the ban. The administration pays lip service to the notion
that the Second Amendment protects gun ownership as an individual
right, but their brief leaves the term essentially meaningless.
Quotes by the
two sides lawyers say it all. The Districts acting attorney
general, Peter Nickles, happily noted that the Justice Departments
brief was a somewhat surprising and very favorable development.
Alan Gura, the attorney who will be representing those challenging
the ban before the Supreme Court, accused the Bush administration
of basically siding with the District of Columbia and
said that This is definitely hostile to our position.
As the lead to an article in the Los Angeles Times said Sunday,
gun-control advocates never expected to get a boost from the
Bush administration.
As probably
the most prominent Second Amendment law professor in the country
privately confided in me, If the Supreme Court accepts the
solicitor generals interpretation, the chances of getting
the D.C. gun ban struck down are bleak.
The Department
of Justice argument can be boiled down pretty easily. Its lawyers
claim that since the government bans machine guns, it should also
be able to ban handguns. After all, they reason, people can still
own rifles and shotguns for protection, even if they have to be
stored locked up. The Justice Department even seems to accept that
trigger locks are not really that much of a burden, and that the
locks can properly be interpreted as not interfering
with using guns for self-protection. Yet, even if gun locks do interfere
with self-defense, DOJ believes the regulations should be allowed,
as long as the District of Columbia government thinks it has a good
reason.
Factually,
there are many mistakes in the DOJs reasoning: As soon as
a rifle or shotgun is unlocked, it becomes illegal in D.C., and
there has never been a federal ban on machine guns. But these are
relatively minor points. Nor does it really matter that the only
academic research on the impact of trigger locks on crime finds
that states that require guns be locked up and unloaded face a five-percent
increase in murder and a 12-percent increase in rape. Criminals
are more likely to attack people in their homes, and those attacks
are more likely to be successful. Since the potential of armed victims
deters criminals, storing a gun locked and unloaded actually encourages
crime.
The biggest
problem is the standard used for evaluating the constitutionality
of regulations. The DOJ is asking that a different, much weaker
standard be used for the Second Amendment than the courts demands
for other individual rights such as speech, unreasonable
searches and seizures, imprisonment without trial, and drawing and
quartering people.
If one accepts
the notion that gun ownership is an individual right, what does
the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be
infringed mean? What would the drafters of the Bill of Rights
have had to write if they really meant the right shall not
be infringed? Does the phrase the right of the people
provide a different level of protection in the Second Amendment
than in the First and Fourth?
But
the total elimination of gun control is not under consideration
by the Supreme Court. The question is what constitutes reasonable
regulation. The DOJ brief argues that if the DC government says
gun control is important for public safety, it should be allowed
by the courts. What the appeals court argued is that gun regulations
not only need to be reasonable, they need to withstand strict
scrutiny a test that ensures the regulations are narrowly
tailored to achieve the desired goal.
Perhaps
the Justice Departments position isnt too surprising.
Like any other government agency, it has a hard time giving up its
authority. The Justice Departments bias can been seen in that
it finds it necessary to raise the specter of machine guns 10 times
when evaluating a law that bans handguns. Nor does the brief even
acknowledge that after the ban, D.C.s murder rate only once
fell below what it was in 1976.
Worried
about the possibility that a Supreme Court decision supporting the
Second Amendment as an individual right could cast doubt on
the constitutionality of existing federal legislation, the
Department of Justice felt it necessary to head off any restrictions
on government power right at the beginning.
But all is
not lost. The Supreme Court can of course ignore the Bush administrations
advice, but the brief does carry significant weight. President Bush
has the power to fix this by ordering that the solicitor general
brief be withdrawn or significantly amended. Unfortunately, it may
take an uprising by voters to rein in the Justice Department.
This article
was originally published at National Review Online.
January
15, 2008
John
Lott [send him mail] is the
author of Freedomnomics:
Why the Free Market Works and Other Half-Baked Theories Don’t
and The
Bias Against Guns (Regnery 2003).
Copyright
© 2008 John Lott
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Lott Archives
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