“Kafkaesque” Gun Background Check Delays May Violate Second Amendment
From Judge Trevor McFadden’s opinion last week in Sedita v. U.S. (D.D.C.):
“Where was the Judge whom he had never seen? Where was the High Court, to which he had never penetrated?” Franz Kafka, The Trial. Like Kafka’s Joseph K., Plaintiff Giuseppe Sedita alleges he has been adjudged by a muddled and garbled governmental process that flouts his rights and offers no effectual remedy when he complains. Three times, he has been given the run-around when trying to buy a firearm. Each time, the Government has refused to greenlight his gun purchase. And each time, Sedita has walked away empty-handed. Although Sedita has repeatedly tried to set the record straight through the Government’s administrative process, remedy has eluded him; the Government has rebuffed Sedita’s attempts to clear himself through silence and nonresponsive form letters….
Sedita sued, claiming this violated his Second Amendment rights, and the court allowed the claim to go forward. The court began by holding that buying a gun “is covered by the clear prescription of the Second Amendment” (since keeping and bearing requires a pathway to buying), and goes on to reason thus:
[T]he Federal Officers [then] bear the burden of “demonstrat[ing] that the regulation is consistent with this Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.” Bruen footnote nine acknowledges that “definite” and “objective” background checks fall comfortably within that tradition. But when a particular licensing regime diverges from that tradition—perhaps by becoming “abusive”—it infringes on the Second Amendment.
“Following Bruen, the Supreme Court has not explained what constitutes ‘abusive ends’ in the context of firearm regulations, aside from its discussion of ‘shall issue’ licensing regimes.” … In the context of Sedita’s challenge, the Court finds a seemingly permissible background check regime could become abusive if riddled with inaccuracies but bereft of an effective method to correct those inaccuracies, leading to perpetual and inevitable delays on firearm purchases.
Article from Reason.com
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