Doug Fiedor
Emerson & The Second Amendment
(Newsletter #272 - A Weekly View from the Middle of an Asphalt Jungle)
Quite a number of us have been following the U.S. v. Emerson case
pertaining to the Second Amendment. Therein, the federal trial court
judge wrote one of the finest decisions ever to come out of a federal
criminal court -- which tracked perfectly with the original intent of
all of the Founding Fathers when they approved the Constitution and
later the Bill of Rights.
However, the decision was appealed.
Alas, although the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals agreed with the
lower court that the Second Amendment protects an individual right of
the people to keep and bear arms, they reversed that part of the
lower court’s decision which benefited Emerson.(1) So, Emerson
appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Supreme Court is now
considering if it will hear the case.
Lawyers speak to the Court through their briefs and last May 6 was
the deadline for filing them. In a nutshell, attorneys for Emerson
are petitioning the Court to hear the case. Attorneys representing
the federal government do not want the Court to hear it.
Last year, in a letter to National Rifle Association, Attorney
General John Ashcroft said that the Second Amendment confers the
right to "keep and bear arms" to private citizens, and not just to
the "well-regulated militia" mentioned in the Amendment’s preamble.
"While some have argued that the Second Amendment guarantees only a
’collective’ right of the states to maintain militias, I believe the
amendment’s plain meaning and original intent prove otherwise,"
Ashcroft wrote.
It would be kind of hard to support our Constitution and the
intent of the Founding Fathers without agreeing with that. So,
Ashcroft’s letter got a lot of hopes up around the country. But
"saying" it and actually enforcing it are two different things. So,
we waited. Meanwhile, people were still being arrested around the
country for unconstitutional and archaic gun laws.
Finally, last week, the Attorney General, via two U.S. Supreme
Court briefs filed by Solicitor General Theodore B. Olson, tied
actions to his words. Sort of, anyway.
As Linda Greenhouse reported in The New York Times May 7: "The
Justice Department, reversing decades of official government policy
on the meaning of the Second Amendment, told the Supreme Court for
the first time late Monday that the Constitution ’broadly protects
the rights of individuals’ to own firearms.
"The position, expressed in a footnote in each of two briefs filed
by Solicitor General Theodore B. Olson, incorporated the view that
Attorney General John Ashcroft expressed a year ago in a letter to
the National Rifle Association. Mr. Ashcroft said that in contrast to
the view that the amendment protected only a collective right of the
states to organize and maintain militias, he ’unequivocally’ believed
that ’the text and the original intent of the Second Amendment
clearly protect the right of individuals to keep and bear
firearms.’"
Linda Greenhouse was exactly correct. That is what was filed in
both Emerson and another case. Unfortunately, "unequivocally" is not
exactly what Ashcroft or Olsen intended. Unequivocal would mean that
they support the words "shall not be infringed" in the Second
Amendment with "no doubt or misunderstanding" and the meaning is
"clear and unambiguous."
The words "shall not be infringed" are unequivocal to many of us.
"Shall not" is rather clear and needs no explanation to anyone
outside of a government office. However, public officials want tight
control over the people. Therefore, the Justice Department does not
think of our right to keep and bear arms as a "right." Rather, to
them it is an inconvenient "privilege" that must be strictly
regulated by capricious bureaucrats.
Justice does not want Emerson to be heard by the Supreme Court
simply because they know the Court is going to take a very dim view
of many gun laws and may wipe our hundreds in one opinion. One only
need read Justice Thomas’s opinion concurring with the majority in
the 1995 U.S. v. Lopez(2) case for a hint. We are sure the Justice
Department knows Lopez quite well. Congress tried to regulate guns
via the Commerce Clause. But, the Supreme Court did not buy it.
Justice Thomas wrote: "While the principal dissent concedes that
there are limits to federal power, the sweeping nature of our current
test enables the dissent to argue that Congress can regulate gun
possession. But it seems to me that the power to regulate ’commerce’
can by no means encompass authority over mere gun possession, any
more than it empowers the Federal Government to regulate marriage,
littering, or cruelty to animals, throughout the 50 States. Our
Constitution quite properly leaves such matters to the individual
States, notwithstanding these activities’ effects on interstate
commerce. Any interpretation of the Commerce Clause that even
suggests that Congress could regulate such matters is in need of
reexamination."
With that in mind, let’s examine some of the Solicitor General’s
argument filed in Emerson:
"In its brief to the court of appeals, the government argued that
the Second Amendment protects only such acts of firearm possession as
are reasonably related to the preservation or efficiency of the
militia. The current position of the United States, however, is that
the Second Amendment more broadly protects the rights of individuals,
including persons who are not members of any militia or engaged in
active military service or training, to possess and bear their own
firearms, subject to reasonable restrictions designed to prevent
possession by unfit persons or to restrict the possession of types of
firearms that are particularly suited to criminal misuse."
That’s ten steps in the correct direction, to be sure. But, it
most certainly is not "unequivocal" support of the Second Amendment.
The Amendment clearly says "shall not." That is greatly different
than restricting "possession of types of firearms" as the government
wants to continue.
So, saying that the Emerson Appeals Court decision reflected the
kind of narrowly tailored restrictions by which that right could
reasonably be limited, the Solicitor General requested the Supreme
Court to turn down the appeal.
If the government keeps control over our "right" to keep and bear
arms, that right, then, becomes degraded to but a privilege.
It was the intent of the Founding Fathers that the American people
shall have the unequivocal right to keep and bear arms and that
government "shall not" interfere with that right. That intent was for
personal arms one may "bear." Not cannon, howitzers, Apache
helicopters, or tanks. Small arms only. Therefore, for small arms
made to carry, there should be no restriction by government
whatsoever.
To do otherwise is to violate the Constitution, as written.
Because, restrictions would violate what Ashcroft called "the
amendment’s plain meaning and original intent" of the Founding
Fathers. What the words "shall not" mean is that the right to keep
and bear arms is an absolute right that government may not violate
for any reason. As inconvenient as that may seem to our socialist
tainted minds nowadays, that was the intent.
The Justice Department wants to have it both ways. That is why we
expect the Supreme Court to seriously consider hearing Emerson -- and
we hope they do.
Doug Fiedor