A federal judge has upheld the State of Connecticut’s sweeping gun
control laws enacted last year in response to the Sandy Hook “gun-free
zone” shootings, the Associated Press reported Thursday. United States District Court Judge Alfred Covello at Hartford issued a 47-page ruling in the case of Shew v. Malloy
admitting “While the act burdens the plaintiffs' Second Amendment
rights," but then claiming "it is substantially related to the important
governmental interest of public safety and crime control.”
Judge Covello,
a George H.W. Bush nominee, reasoned the law should stand because “the
legislation here does not amount to a complete prohibition on firearms
for self-defense in the home.
“Indeed, the legislation does not prohibit possession of the weapon
cited as the ‘quintessential self - defense weapon’ in Heller, i.e., the
handgun. In other words, ‘the prohibition of [assault weapons] and
large - capacity magazines does not effectively disarm individuals or
substantially affect their ability to defend themselves,’” Covello
elaborated, leaving the Constitutional mandate “shall not be infringed”
unacknowledged.
“Brian Stapleton, the lawyer for a group of Connecticut organizations
that support gun rights, pistol permit holders and gun sellers, said he
will appeal,” the AP report advised, and another attorney has
elaborated on those plans.
“Today's ruling from the U.S. District Court of Connecticut in the
2nd Amendment challenge to Connecticut's new firearms law was expected,”
lawyer Martha Dean told her followers on Facebook.
“As the legal team for the plaintiffs warned from the outset, the
federal courts in this region of the U.S. are generally hostile to 2nd
Amendment rights. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals is the next step,
but the prospects for a more favorable decision are as bleak there as
they were in the lower federal court in Hartford.
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