Laws & Rights
Bummer: Supreme Court Refuses to Hear MD Gun Ban Case

True fact: There is an actual basketball court on the top floor of this building. The highest court in the land plays Horse.
“Remember, a right delayed is a right denied.”
Once again, we’re reminded that the Supreme Court and the nine justices that comprise it are not, in fact, a rubber stamp. It’s not really possible to predict with certainty what they’re going to do, even when there’s a well-established track record involving similar cases. Does it seem like an absolute slam-dunk that, in the wake of the Heller and Bruen decisions, that AR-15 bans enacted by individual states will be struck down? Sure. But in order for that to happen, the Supremes have to hear the case … and they’ve chosen not to.
It’s disappointing. But it’s probably not because the Supremes don’t think the case is worth hearing. It’s probably the fact that, right at the moment, the Court is dealing with so many cases related to the Trump administration’s Executive Orders that it doesn’t have time to hear the Maryland gun ban case. For all the details, we’re turning it over to the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms (CCRKBA), one of the plaintiffs in the case that SCOTUS has turned down.
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CCRKBA DISAPPOINTED AS SCOTUS DECLINES TO HEAR MD. GUN BAN CASE
The Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms is highly disappointed that at this time the U.S. Supreme Court has decided not to hear our important case challenging the ban on so-called “assault rifles” in the state of Maryland.
CCRKBA joined with the Second Amendment Foundation and others in this case, known as Snope v. Brown.
“However,” noted CCRKBA Chairman Alan Gottlieb, “it is encouraging Justice Brett Kavanaugh has signaled it is more than likely the Court will hear one of several other challenges to bans on semiautomatic rifles that are currently in the legal pipeline.
“We recognize,” Gottlieb continued, “that the court is currently inundated with a heavy case load that includes well over a hundred lawsuits filed by left wing interests, many of which are on the Court’s emergency docket, making it impossible to hear many pending cases in an orderly fashion.”
Snope v. Brown is one of the cases in which CCRKBA is directly involved as a plaintiff, Gottlieb said. He called the challenge of Maryland’s gun ban an “issue of critical national importance” because it deals with the ability of Maryland residents to purchase and own what is currently the most popular rifle in the country. It is estimated that more than 20 million such firearms are in private hands today, and more are being purchased across most of the United States every day. Only ten states and the District of Columbia have enacted some type of restrictions on this class of firearms.
“The modern semiautomatic is definitely in common use,” Gottlieb observed. “Our primary concern is that American gun owners will have to once again wait for the high court to accept a case and determine whether state level bans violate the Constitution’s Second Amendment, which we definitely believe is the case. Remember, a right delayed is a right denied.”
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