The Volokh Conspiracy

Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent | Est. 2002

The Volokh Conspiracy

Life Imitates the Volokh Conspiracy

UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese states that Israel has no legal right to defend itself.

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Me at the VC, February 28: "The IHL [international humanitarian law] community, writ large, had been taken over by the far left, and for a variety of interrelated ideological reasons IHL activists are hostile to Israel's very existence, and do not believe that Israel has any right to defend itself, including from Hamas terrorism. Therefore any civilian casualties caused by Israeli military action were unacceptable."

UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese: "There is no war that Israel has ever waged against the Palestinians that can ever be deemed lawful. Israel has no right to wage a war to invoke self defense against the people it maintains under occupation."

It's been obvious to me for years that critics like Albanese, pundits at Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, commentators like Glenn Greenwald, and various international law professors share the view that *any* military action by Israel is illegitimate, and simply dress up that prejudice in the language of international law, but I've never seen it acknowledged so explicitly.

Manny Klausner

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Manny, a co-founder of the Reason Foundation, an early editor of Reason, a leading libertarian lawyer, and a happy warrior for a wide range of libertarian causes, died this week. I had the pleasure of knowing Manny for over 30 years, and always much enjoyed his company and his enthusiasm. His fellow Reason Foundation co-founder Bob Poole has a very nice remembrance, and Reason's Brian Doherty has a more detailed obituary. He was a lovely man, and a key figure in the libertarian movement; he will be much missed by many, including me.

Thompson v. United States Reminds Me Of How Well Chief Justice Roberts Can Write

And another 9-0 reversal of a federal prosecution of an elected official.

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In any given term, a Supreme Court justice will write about six or seven majority opinions. Some Justices, like Thomas and Jackson, routinely write separate concurrences and dissents. By contrast, Chief Justice Roberts rarely writes a separate writing. Usually, the only time we get to see Roberts write is in a majority opinion. And invariably, Roberts assigns himself the most high-profile case. And, more often than not, Roberts is trying to keep together a fragile majority opinion, or is engaging in some act of judicial obfuscation to hide what he is actually doing. In either case, Roberts does not speak plainly, but instead uses locutions and imprecise language.

But every now and then, the Chief assigns himself a "regular" case. These low-profile matters have no obvious political valence, and often command a large majority of the Court. Here, Roberts can demonstrate why he was once the most gifted lawyer of the day. And, despite all I say about the Chief, Roberts is still the best writer on the Court. Justice Kagan used to be a close-second, but her latest opinions have leaned too much into the snark, and have become less pleasant to read. Justice Barrett is third. She can say more in a few paragraphs that others can say in many pages.

Today's decision in Thompson v. United States is a joyous Roberts opinion. He writes for the entire Court and settles the matter in less than 10 pages. This paragraph is a gem.

We start with the text. Section 1014 criminalizes "knowingly mak[ing] any false statement or report." It does not use the word "misleading." Yet false and misleading are two different things. A misleading statement can be true. See Peel v. Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Comm'n of Ill., 496 U. S. 91, 102 (1990) (noting that a "statement, even if true, could be misleading"). And a true statement is obviously not false. See Victor v. Nebraska, 511 U. S. 1, 10 (1994) ("[T]o suppose that the same proposition is both true and false . . . is manifestly absurd." (quoting 1 Works of James Wilson 519 (J. Andrews ed. 1896))). So basic logic dictates that at least some misleading statements are not false.

Most judges would have taken a few paragraphs to convey this concept. Roberts did it flawlessly in a few sentences. Yet, I found this paragraph so bittersweet. Sweet because it shows that Roberts is capable of razor-sharp legal reasoning with tight prose; bitter because it shows how far Roberts falls when he engages into flimsy alternative dispute resolution. If only Roberts could have said "established by the state" means "established by the state." Basic logic so dictates.

And this passage makes me see the Solicitor General holding a dictionary in one hand a thesaurus in another.

The Government wisely agrees that "false" means "not true." Brief for United States 14. But, dictionary in hand, the Government notes that "false" can also mean "deceitful." Id., at 15 (quoting Black's Law Dictionary 748 (3d ed. 1933); alterations omitted). And, thesaurus in the other hand, the Government adds that "false and misleading have long been considered synonyms." Brief for United States 26 (citing Webster's Dictionary of Synonyms 327,549–550 (1942)). Absent from the Government's account, however, is the fact that some misleading statements are not false, as the Government acknowledged at oral argument.

His writing paints a perfect picture. If only the Chief could have said "with taxing power on one hand and the commerce power in the other . . . the fact that an exaction raises money does not make it a tax."

This opinion is important in another respect: yet another 9-0 reversal of a DOJ prosecution of a public official who allegedly engaged in malfeasance. DOJ's track record in this regard is not good. Yet, if you read the opinion, you would have no idea that "Patrick Thompson" was a politician. The case was styled in the cert petition as Patrick D. Thompson. The "D" stands for "Daley." Yes, that Daley--the Chicago family that has yielded many elected officials.

This Daley was the grandson and nephew of two mayors. And this Daley was an Alderman when he was indicted. Anyone doubt that the Feds placed him under a microscope because of his family lineage? And under local law, he was barred from serving as an Alderman because of his conviction. Anyone think the Feds thought it would be good to get this guy out of politics? If only he had just engaged in insurrection. Well, at least for now, Thompson may be eligible to run. But Justice Jackson's concurrence explains this freedom may be short-lived: even though the Judge erred, he seems to have given correct instructions. (Here, the former District Judge actually reads the record and jury instructions; good for her.) Thus, the Seventh Circuit will almost certainly affirm. Or Trump may find this another case of a weaponized justice system and pardon Thompson.

Curiously, the Chief's opinion omits the "D" middle initial from the caption. I wonder if Roberts wanted to keep politics out of the case, and erased how Thompson identifies himself. What, you though I would write an entire post about the Chief without at least some criticism?

Nearly Five Years Later, Justice Barrett's Memoir Has A Publication Date

"Listening to the Law: Reflections on the Court and Constitution"

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Earlier this month, I queried where Justice Barrett's book was:

Speaking of Barrett's writings, where is her book? The lucrative deal was announced in April 2021 before she had written a significant majority opinion. Four years later, the book is not on the shelf, and I cannot find a publication date anywhere. By contrast, Justice Gorsuch has already co-authored two books during his tenure, and Justice Jackson published her memoir within two years of her confirmation. Justice Kavanaugh's book deal was announced in June 2024, with a publication date in 2025 or 2026. I know people get upset when I talk about Barrett's publication record as a professor, but her productivity on the bench is much the same. She has not given any speeches of note in years, and had only a light-hearted conversation at the Federalist Society National Lawyers Convention in 2023.

Well, Penguin Random House has finally announced some details. The title is "Listening to the Law: Reflections on the Court and Constitution." And it will be published on September 9, 2025, a few weeks before the Court's OT 2026 term will begin. (I'm sure Penguin was thrilled to have the recent negative press about ACB in advance of the big announcement).

The 304-page book has this description:

From Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett, a glimpse of her journey to the Court and an account of her approach to the Constitution

Since her confirmation hearing, Americans have peppered Justice Amy Coney Barrett with questions. How has she adjusted to the Court? What is it like to be a Supreme Court justice with school-age children? Do the justices get along? What does her normal day look like? How does the Court get its cases? How does it decide them? How does she decide?

In Listening to the Law, Justice Barrett answers these questions and more. She lays out her role (and daily life) as a justice, touching on everything from her deliberation process to dealing with media scrutiny. With the warmth and clarity that made her a popular law professor, she brings to life the making of the Constitution and explains her approach to interpreting its text. Whether sharing stories of clerking for Justice Scalia or walking readers through prominent cases, she invites readers to wrestle with originalism and to embrace the rich heritage of our Constitution.

There have generally been three genres of books by Supreme Court justices. The first is the memoir: the Justice's life story. For example, Justices Thomas and Sotomayor wrote compelling memoirs about their remarkable journeys from poverty to the highest Court in the land. These books get the biggest advances. Second, there are general books about the law: Justices Gorsuch and Breyer tend to write about their particular understandings about the law. These books get far-smaller advances. Third, there are canonical reference books that everyone needs. Here, Justice Scalia owns the genre: Making your Case and Reading Law and Precedent should be on every (virtual) bookshelf. And Scalia's books will be cited for generations to come.

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Free Speech

Chicago Public Defender's Claim Over Displaying Photo with Israeli Flag and Gun Can Go Forward

Office leadership allegedly "told Gassman's supervisors that the photo was 'comparable to a Nazi swastika.'"

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From today's decision by Judge Joan Lefkow (N.D. Ill.) in Gassman v. Cook County; as usual on a motion to dismiss, the factual recitation consists of the allegations from plaintiff's Complaint (not any factual findings by a judge or jury):

Debra Gassman is an Assistant Public Defender for the Public Defender of Cook County, Illinois. She has been employed as a lawyer by the Public Defender since 1997 …. Gassman is Jewish and "devoted to Israel."

In 2002, Gassman volunteered for the Israel Defense Forces ("IDF"). In December of 2002, during her volunteer stint, Gassman took a photograph of herself holding a gun in front of an Israeli flag ("the photo"). The photo was taken in Tel HaShomer, an army base near Tel Aviv. The photo is approximately 11 inches tall. It is reproduced below:

When Gassman returned from Israel in 2002, she prominently displayed the photo in her shared office at the Leighton Criminal Courthouse in Chicago. The photo reminds Gassman of her time spent defending Israel and the Jewish people. To Gassman, the photo signals that the Jewish people must "stay strong" when threatened by other nations. The photo remained there, undisturbed, until she transferred to the Public Defender's office in Skokie, Illinois, in October 2020. In Skokie, Gassman again displayed the photo in her shared office "without incident."

On October 7, 2023, Hamas terrorists invaded Israel and attacked civilians. Gassman was "devastated, shocked, and scared by the October 7 attacks." She returned to work on October 10th. Upon returning, Gassman felt upset that "few seemed to care—or even were aware of"—the attack on Israel. "[T]o bring attention to the attacks that had occurred in Israel and the need to support the victims," Gassman brought the photo out of her office and placed it on top of the employee mailboxes for her coworkers to see. Gassman positioned the photo so that it faced the back of the office toward the staff; it was not visible to the public. Public Defender employees regularly display items such as holiday decorations, photographs, art, and cards in the same area.

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Immigration

Two Audio Interviews About the Alien Enemies Act Litigation

Links to audios of a Cato Institute podcast and an interview with ABC News (Australia).

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I recently did interviews about the currently ongoing Alien Enemies Act litigation for a Cato Institute podcast, and for ABC News (Australia). Here is the audio for the Cato podcast:

The audio of the ABC News Australia interview is available here.

I have previously written about issues related to this case here, here, here, and here.

Some Questions About An Autodidactic Autopen

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In the abstract, the use of an autopen is not problematic. But in practice, there may be serious problems. Consider a few scenarios.

First, imagine the President has a stroke, and is unable to move any parts of his body. He cannot even pick up a pen. But the President retains all of his mental faculties and can communicate instructions orally. The President instructs his trusted aide to use an autopen to sign a bill, pardon, or executive order. Would anyone think that use of an autopen is problematic? I suppose an argument could be made that the enfeebled President is unable to discharge his duties, and should be removed under the 25th Amendment, but I am doubtful that step is necessary.

Second, imagine that the President is about to take an international trip, and he knows that Congress is about to pass an important bill that must go into effect right away. The President instructs his trusted aide to use an autopen to sign the bill as soon as it arrives at the White House. Would anyone think that use of an autopen is problematic? There was once the thought that the President should not leave the country. And in some states, when the Governor leaves the state, the Lieutenant Governor can exercise the powers of the Governor. But under our Constitution, the President can, and indeed is expected to engage in foreign diplomacy, and will often be away from the Capital when important bills are passed. Why should important legislation remain un-enacted because the bill cannot be brought to the President quickly enough?

Third, imagine that the President is about to take an international trip, and Congress is debating a key provision of an important bill. It is unclear how the final bill will be structured. The President instructs his aide to make a judgment: if the aide thinks the final bill is consistent with the President's preferences, he should use the autopen to sign bill; if the aide thinks the final bill is inconsistent with the President's preferences, he should use the autopen to veto the bill. This example strikes me as problematic, as the President is delegating to an aide the  discretion to sign or veto a bill. Here, there are no clear instructions, but rather a judgment call--a call the President has to make.

Fourth, imagine that the President tells his Pardon Attorney to grant any pardons that the Pardon Attorney thinks are consistent with the President's preferences, and authorizes the Pardon Attorney to use the autopen to sign the pardon. The President never even sees the pardon applications. (I thank my colleague Seth Barrett Tillman for this example.)  I do not think the pardon power is delegable in this context. The President must make the individualized determination for each pardon. Now it might be the case that an aide simply puts a piece of paper in front of the President, and the President signs it without reading it--perhaps based on an aide's summary. But that signature is prima facie evidence that the President intended to grant the pardon. With an autopen, by contrast, that prima facie evidence the President intended to grant the pardon is not present. In my hypothetical, the instruction given to the Pardon Attorney rebuts any presumption of presidential determination.

Fifth, imagine that the President is clearly suffering from senility. He is capable of reading from a script, and can sign a paper placed in front of him, but he has no capacity to know what he is doing. Imagine further that his cabinet is unwilling to invoke the 25th Amendment for various reasons. Given these facts, a number of documents are released from the White House signed with an autopen, including statutes, pardons, and executive orders. There is no clear record of whether the President instructed aides to use the autopen on any particular document. The President never made personally any public statements about whether the authorized the signing of any particular document. There may be some press statements attributed to the President, but it is not clear the President authorized such statements. Would this use of the autopen be valid? Is there something like an enrolled bill rule, where a bill that has the President's signature is presumed valid? Or could we consider the President's underlying senility?

Sixth, imagine that the President suffers from a stroke, and the status of his medical condition is kept secret from the public. Given these facts, a number of documents are released from the White House signed with an autopen, including statutes, pardons, and executive orders. We later learn that the President may have been in a coma when some of these documents were signed, and his wife (let's call her Edith Wilson) instructed aides to use an autopen to sign those documents. Would those bills, pardons, or executive orders be valid? Could they be collaterally challenged?

I think the use of the autopen raises some very difficult questions.

Immigration

National Constitution Center Podcast on the Alien Enemies Act and Mahmoud Khalil Immigration Cases [Updated]

The participants were Adam Cox (NYU) and myself.

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NCC
(NCC)

The National Constitution Center recently recorded a podcast on the currently ongoing Alien Enemies Act litigation, and the Mahmoud Khalil deportation/free speech case. The participants were Prof. Adam Cox (NYU), a leading expert on the constitutional law of immigration, and myself. National Constitution Center President Jeffrey Rosen moderated. You can listen to the podcast here or here.

UPDATE: The podcast is now embedded below:

The National Constitution Center compiled this helpful list of links to our writing about these issues, plus a couple cases mentioned in the discussion:

Free Speech

Lawsuit Over Binghamton University's Alleged Suppression of Lecture by Economist Arthur Laffer Can Go Forward

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From Judge Lawrence Kahn's opinion yesterday in Young America's Found. v. Stenger (N.D.N.Y.):

On the morning of the Laffer Event [at a lecture hall in Binghatom], the University's Senior Director of Media and Public Relations forwarded to UPD [University Police Department], [Brian Rose, University VP for Student Affairs], and other members of the University an email from the College Progressives and an online post ostensibly written on behalf of the College Progressives, PLOT [Progressive Leaders of Tomorrow], and other groups, saying that they "will be taking away … the College Republicans' space by disrupting their event." On the afternoon of the Laffer Event, UPD saw a social media post by PLOT promoting the disruption of the Laffer Event.

[UPD Chief John] Pelletier decided to personally meet Dr. Laffer at the airport when he arrived on November 18, 2019, to inform him that his lecture may be protested. In his deposition for this action, Dr. Laffer stated that Pelletier told him the University "did not want [him] to come," asked him to cancel the event, and "intimated" that he should return to his plane.

At the Laffer Event that evening, there were about nine UPD officers, including Pelletier, inside the lecture hall and fourteen officers in the surrounding hallways. YAF and the College Republicans chose for the Laffer Event to be open to the public and not ticketed because they wanted to attract as many people as possible. A large crowd entered the lecture hall. Dr. Laffer entered through a private entrance with his security team and UPD Investigator Joseph Gallagher. College Republicans president John Restuccia introduced Dr. Laffer and told the audience that if they had any disagreements, they should reserve their questions to the end of the lecture.

Seconds after Dr. Laffer began his lecture, a man in the audience stood up and started reading a speech off his phone about economics, racial oppression, President Trump, and the justice system. Someone from the audience gave the disrupter a megaphone. During the disruption, College Republicans walked in front of Dr. Laffer's podium and held up "free speech" signs.

Over a minute into the disruption, UPD officers began to slowly approach the disrupter. As they were approaching, approximately ten to fifteen audience members surrounded the disrupter, forming a human barrier to prevent the officers from reaching him. Gallagher asked Dr. Laffer how he was doing, to which Dr. Laffer replied something to the effect of, "Let's give it ten minutes."

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Warrantless Home Searches Under the Alien Enemies Act?

Trying to figure out a reported new legal argument.

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In the New York Times, Devlin Barrett reports that "Trump administration lawyers have determined that an 18th-century wartime law the president has invoked to deport suspected members of a Venezuelan gang allows federal agents to enter homes without a warrant, according to people familiar with internal discussions."

From the story:

The disclosure reflects the Trump administration's aggressive view of presidential power, including setting aside a key provision of the Fourth Amendment that requires a court order to search someone's home. * * * *

Last week, Mr. Trump quietly signed a proclamation invoking the law, known as the Alien Enemies Act of 1798. It grants him the authority to remove from the United States foreign citizens he has designated as "alien enemies" in the cases of war or an invasion.

His order took aim at Venezuelan citizens 14 or older who belong to the Tren de Aragua gang, and who are not naturalized or lawful permanent residents. "All such alien enemies, wherever found within any territory subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, are subject to summary apprehension," the proclamation said.

Senior lawyers at the Justice Department view that language, combined with the historical use of the law, to mean that the government does not need a warrant to enter a home or premises to search for people believed to be members of that gang, according to two officials familiar with the new policy. * * *

The curious part of the story is that it's hard to tell  what the government's legal theory is.  What specifically do they think suspends the usual Fourth Amendment warrant requirement?

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Second Amendment Roundup: 18 to 20 Age Ban Cases Coming to a Head

Both sides agree the Supreme Court should grant cert.

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On March 10, the respondents in the successful challenge to Minnesota's ban on issuance of pistol carry permits to persons aged 18 to 20, Jacobson v. Worth, agreed with the state petitioner that the Supreme Court should grant certiorari in the case.  The Commissioner of the Department of Public Safety, the petitioner, asked the Court to grant, vacate, and remand (GVR) the case and in the alternative to resolve it on the merits.  I previously analyzed the Eighth Circuit's reasoning in finding the exclusion of persons in the 18-20 age group to violate the Second Amendment here.

Days later, on March 14, the Eleventh Circuit issued its long-awaited en banc decision in National Rifle Association v. Bondi, upholding Florida's prohibition on purchase of a firearm by persons aged 18 to 20.  That followed the Fifth Circuit's holding in Reese v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives on January 30 that the federal restriction on handgun sales to persons under 21 violates the Second Amendment (see my post here).  On the same date, that same issue was also argued in the Fourth Circuit in Brown v. ATF.

The Eighth Circuit in Jacobson was the first federal court of appeals to resolve a Second Amendment case following the Supreme Court's decision in Rahimi, which upheld the federal ban on possession of firearms by a person subject to a court order finding him to be a credible threat to the physical safety of an intimate partner.  The court held that Minnesota failed to support its claim that 18 to 20-year-olds are a danger to the public. Contrast that with Rahimi, which repeatedly emphasized that the law at issue "applies only once a court has found that the defendant 'represents a credible threat to the physical safety' of another." The statistics applicable to the subject age group did not show that an 18-year-old, in Rahimi's words, "poses a clear threat of physical violence to another." Unlike the Minnesota law, the statute in Rahimi did "not broadly restrict arms use by the public generally."

Despite the Jacobson court's extensive analysis of Rahimi, the cert petition asks the Supreme Court to GVR the case because "instead of inviting supplemental briefing regarding the impact of Rahimi or remanding to the district court to conduct that analysis, the Eighth Circuit simply added Rahimi ornamentation to the Bruen-based opinion it had drafted."  It argues that the Court should treat Jacobson the same as the several others that it GVRed for reconsideration in light of Rahimi.  But all of those cases were decided before Rahimi.  And again, Jacobson took full account of Rahimi.

Alternatively, the cert petition argues that the circuit conflict warrants the Court's plenary review.  It claims that the "robust evidentiary record of historical principles and empirical data supports the constitutionality" of the statute based on two expert reports.  Both turn out to be two of the most prominent suspects in anti-Second Amendment litigation.

The first expert is Professor Saul Cornell, touted to be a historian on "early American history on guns and people under 21."  He's one and the same partisan who characterized the Court's decisions in Heller, McDonald, and Bruen as "the Federalist Society's latest intellectual scam," calling Bruen in particular "an ideological fantasy" and "an illustration of the current Supreme Court's new interpretive model: 'Fiction, Fantasy, and Mythology.'"

The second expert is Professor John J. Donohue, who opined on "the risks of gun violence from 18-to20-year-olds."   Another partisan, Donohue repeated Justice Stevens' statement that Heller was "the worst decision [written by Justice Scalia] during his 34 years on the Supreme Court" and added that "Bruen has created an unworkable and largely nonsensical standard for evaluating gun regulations based on history when the history has very little to say about wise policy today."

As the cert petition notes, the challengers "submitted no expert reports on any issue or rebuttal facts on these issues."  That's because, just as in Heller and Bruen, pure questions of law are the only issues.

The Jacobson respondents agree that the Court should grant cert and decide the merits, but should not GVR the case given that the Eighth Circuit already considered the issue in light of Rahimi.

As noted, the en banc Eleventh Circuit in NRA v. Bondi upheld Florida's ban on purchase of a firearm by a person in the 18-20 age group.  The majority decision was written by Chief Judge William Pryor, who ironically won a high award from the NRA when he was the Alabama Attorney General, and whose Eleventh Circuit nomination was opposed in part for his supposed status as an "opponent of gun control legislation."

The panel decision had unabashedly ruled that "Historical sources from the Reconstruction Era are more probative of the Second Amendment's scope than those from the Founding Era."  Everytown Law has been citing that conclusion in all of its briefs, even after the petition for rehearing was granted and the decision was vacated.

Chief Judge Pryor wrote to the contrary that "the Founding era is the primary period against which we compare the Florida law."  Not only has the Supreme Court "warned against the overuse of history from Reconstruction," but also its interpretation of other amendments "reflect the preeminence of Founding-era sources to the meaning of the Bill of Rights."  However, "we may look to historical practice from the mid-to-late nineteenth century at least to confirm the Founding-era understanding of the Second Amendment."

Fair enough.  But the problem is that there are no Founding-era analogues for Florida's criminalization of the purchase of a firearm to a person who is in the 18-20 age group.  Instead, the majority relies primarily on the fact that at the Founding, a contract with a person under 21 was revocable, and thus it was more difficult for such person to purchase a firearm on credit.  That was because minors were not considered reliable, which is also the reason for Florida's law, thus satisfying Bruen's "why" component.  As to "how" the right was burdened, at the Founding minors may have found it difficult to purchase firearms because they "lacked cash and the capacity to contract," whereas the Florida law imposes up to five years in the penitentiary for purchase of a firearm.  The court doesn't say it that way, but that's the reality.  To call that a valid analogue for the Florida law seems incredible.

For the majority, that premise opened the floodgates to out-of-bounds, post-enactment history: "The laws from the mid-to-late nineteenth century make explicit what was implicit at the Founding: laws may regulate the purchase of firearms by minors."  But even then, the court concedes that the state laws of that period (for the states that had any such laws) only regulated sale of concealable weapons, not rifles or shotguns.

Moreover, the court adds, "some of these laws permitted women to purchase arms at 18 years of age instead of 21."  That's the only use of the word "women" in the majority opinion or any of the concurrences.  Florida purported to ban firearm purchases because of the higher rate of violence of "people" in the affected age group, but that rate is largely limited to males.  What was the justification for banning purchases by females?

Unwittingly, the majority opinion likely would support banning married women from buying guns, since like minors at the Founding, they too lacked contract rights under the doctrine of coverture. This highlights the majority's "law trapped in amber" problem—even if it were true that 18-to-20-year-olds and married women may have had difficulty acquiring a firearm at the Founding because of limitations on their right to contract, that would not support limitations on those groups today because 18-to-20-year-olds now are generally considered adults and we have repudiated the doctrine of coverture. And there is no historical principle that would support banning gun sales to any group of adults on account of their age or sex.

Three judges joined in Judge Brasher's dissenting opinion, two of which also wrote their own dissents.  Today, 18 is the age of majority, and not just for contract rights.  The Commissioner of the Department of Law Enforcement (the nominal defendant) conceded that such persons are part of "the people" under the Second Amendment.  Further:

The Commissioner concedes that young adults at the Founding could purchase guns with money up front; the very thing they are prohibited from doing by Florida's ban. He concedes that they could even purchase guns on credit as long as the seller was willing to bear the risk that the contract might be voided, and the gun returned.

As in all of these age cases, the elephant in the kitchen is that males 18 and over were required, most prominently by the federal Militia Act of 1792, to obtain their own arms and bring them to militia musters.  (The majority wrote this off because some parents bought the arms for their children in this age group.)  Further, as the Georgia Supreme Court wrote in Nunn v. State (1846), the Second Amendment protects the "right of the whole people, old and young, men, women and boys, and not militia only, to keep and bear arms."

No question exists that a cert petition will be filed in NRA v. Bondi.  It will be interesting to see how Attorney General Pam Bondi's Department of Justice will respond.  At any rate, the circuit court decisions are split and have now percolated to the boiling point, and so the Supreme Court may as well grant cert in Jacobson v. Worth and resolve the issue.

Guns

Our Guest-Blogger Prof. Robert Leider (George Mason) Is New ATF Chief Counsel/Assistant Director

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So reports the ATF page. Prof. Leider is a noted scholar of criminal law, the law of self-defense, and gun control (among other topics), and a former clerk for Justice Thomas.

You can read Prof. Leider's guest posts, which stemmed from his article The Modern Common Law of Crime, here; we've also quoted him extensively in other posts, such as Guns, Background Checks, Administrative Law, and the Sixth Circuit Michigan CaseAre Parents Responsible for School Shootings Committed by their Children?; and Military Federalism and State Sovereign Immunity. He's also the coauthor, with our own Will Baude, of The General-Law Right to Bear Arms.

Religion and the Law

Justice Gorsuch's Dissent in Death Penalty / Religious Objection Case

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In Tuesday's Hoffman v. Westcott, the Court denied a stay of execution; Justices Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson would have granted a stay, but didn't write an opinion; and Justice Gorsuch dissented, for himself:

The State of Louisiana plans to execute Jessie Hoffman tonight. Mr. Hoffman is a Buddhist. And he argues that the State's chosen method of execution—nitrogen hypoxia—violates his rights under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000. Nitrogen hypoxia will, he says, substantially burden his religious exercise by interfering with his meditative breathing as he dies. No one has questioned the sincerity of Mr. Hoffman's religious beliefs. Yet the district court rejected his RLUIPA claim anyway based on its own "find[ing]" about the kind of breathing Mr. Hoffman's faith requires.

That finding contravened the fundamental principle that courts have "no license to declare … whether an adherent has 'correctly perceived' the commands of his religion." The Court of Appeals failed to confront the district court's apparent legal error—or even to mention the RLUIPA claim Mr. Hoffman pressed on appeal. Perhaps that claim ultimately lacks merit. But the Fifth Circuit's unexplained omission leaves this Court poorly positioned to assess it. I would therefore grant the stay application and petition for writ of certiorari, vacate the judgment of the Fifth Circuit, and remand for that court to address Mr. Hoffman's RLUIPA claim in the first instance.

Note that Justice Gorsuch was speaking only about the district court's decision to interpret for itself what Buddhism demands (which is indeed something secular courts aren't allowed to do under First Amendment precedent), not the ultimate bottom line question of whether this form of execution could indeed be applied to Hoffman.

Here, by the way, is what seems to be the relevant passage from the district court decision:

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