This article was reported by New Jersey Monitor, a nonprofit publishing partner of NJ Spotlight News.
Gun-rights advocates again are urging federal judges to strike down New Jersey’s ban on firearms in sensitive places, saying two U.S. Supreme Court rulings last month overturning similar restrictions in Hawaii and Texas prove the law here is unconstitutional and cannot stand.
In those decisions, the nation’s top court said government cannot ban guns on private property open to the public — places like gas stations and grocery stores — or disarm pot smokers and other users of drugs treated as illegal by federal law.
Those rulings are fatal to New Jersey’s contested 2022 law, which prohibits guns on private property open to the public and bars firearms at places where alcohol is served under the presumption that all substance users are dangerous, the advocates argued in briefs filed Wednesday.
Attorney David D. Jensen, who represents the Second Amendment Foundation and the Firearms Policy Coalition, argued that the justices “flatly rejected creative efforts to legislate around the requirements of Bruen.” Bruen is the 2022 Supreme Court decision that struck down requirements by New Jersey and other states that gun owners show a particular need before carrying a handgun outside the home or workplace.
In the Hawaii case, the justices cited New Jersey’s law as problematic, Jensen noted.
While the Supreme Court didn’t directly address the constitutionality of more than 20 other places that New Jersey deems sensitive, its “framing makes clear that they should be treated with extreme skepticism. After all, even if most New Jerseyans, like ‘most Hawaiians might prefer that no one carry firearms in public places, a majority’s opposition to a constitutional right is not a permissible basis for restricting it,’” he wrote, citing the Hawaii ruling.
New Jersey Attorney General Jen Davenport, though, countered that the law here is rooted in traditions that existed when the Second Amendment was written, as Bruen requires.
“A wealth of diverse history proves States can regulate firearms in places where particularly dense crowds gather to engage in democratic governance, recreation, and transportation; where vulnerable people like children congregate; or where firearms mix dangerously with alcohol,” Davenport wrote.
The Supreme Court also has said attorneys need not identify a “dead ringer” or “historical twin” in American traditions for a law or restriction to pass constitutional muster, she added.
Because historical evidence is not a straitjacket, she wrote, “freezing our laws in ‘amber,’ courts must identify traditions at a level of generality sufficient to ensure modern legislatures could address ‘circumstances beyond those the Founders specifically anticipated.”
The Third Circuit Court of Appeals had solicited the state’s and gun owners’ opinions on what impact they think the Hawaii and Texas rulings have on New Jersey’s law, as the full bench mulls whether to affirm or reverse a three-judge panel’s September decision rejecting the gun owners’ challenge.
The full bench heard arguments in the case in February in Philadelphia and delayed its decision in anticipation of the Supreme Court rulings. It’s not known how long that decision may take.
