DENVER, CO. A Colorado federal district court
ruled today in favor of a Colorado man and a national gun rights group
holding that a U.S. Postal Service regulation barring firearms in its
parking lots violates their right to keep and bear arms under the
Constitution. The district court ruled, “openly carrying a firearm
outside the home is a liberty protected by the Second Amendment [and
the] parking lot adjacent to [Avon’s Post Office Building] is not a
sensitive place [such that] an absolute ban on firearms is substantially
related to [Defendants’] important public safety objective.” Tab
Bonidy, who is licensed to carry a handgun and regularly carries a
handgun for self-defense, drives several miles from his home, where mail
delivery is not available, to Avon to collect his mail. On arrival in
Avon, however, he is barred by federal regulation from carrying a
firearm, or parking his vehicle if it contains a firearm, on Postal
Service land. In July 2010, Mr. Bonidy asked that the regulation be
withdrawn; the Postal Service refused. Mr. Bonidy and the National
Association for Gun Rights filed their lawsuit in October 2010.
“We
are pleased the court struck down the Postal Service’s regulation as it
applies to the Avon parking lot,” said William Perry Pendley of
Mountain States Legal Foundation (MSLF); MSLF represents Mr. Bonidy and
the group.
In 2007, the Postal Service renewed its total ban on firearms on Postal Service property, first promulgated in 1972:
"Notwithstanding
the provisions of any other law, rule or regulation, no person while on
Postal property may carry firearms, other dangerous or deadly weapons,
or explosives, either openly or concealed, or store the same on Postal
property, except for official purposes."
39 C.F.R. § 232.1(l). This
regulatory prohibition, which carries a fine, imprisonment for 30 days,
or both, is broader than the federal statute, which prohibits private
possession of firearms in federal facilities, except those firearms
carried “incident to hunting or other lawful purposes.” 18 U.S.C.
§ 930(d)(3). This statutory exception does not apply in federal court
facilities, where a total ban is enforced. 18 U.S.C. § 930(e)(1).
The
Postal Service’s total ban on firearms possession impairs the right to
keep and bear arms as protected by the Second Amendment even when
individuals are traveling to, from, or through Postal property because
the Postal Service does not allow people to store a firearm safely in
their vehicles. Anyone with a hunting rifle or shotgun in his car, or a
handgun in his glove compartment for self-defense, violates the Postal
Service ban by driving onto Postal Service property. Thus, the ban also
denies the right to keep and bear arms everywhere a law-abiding gun
owner travels before and after visiting Postal Service property.
Mountain
States Legal Foundation, founded in 1977, is a nonprofit,
public-interest legal foundation dedicated to individual liberty, the
right to own and use property, limited and ethical government, and the
free enterprise system. Its offices are in suburban Denver, Colorado.
More about this case: Bonidy v. USPS
Read the Court's Order: MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
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