The following was published by the Firearms Policy Coallition
HARRISBURG, PA (May 31, 2019) --
Today, the Pennsylvania State Supreme Court issued a significant 53-page
majority opinion in the criminal appeal of Commonwealth v. Hicks.
Firearms Policy Coalition (FPC) and Firearms Policy Foundation (FPF)
filed an important coalition amicus brief cited by the Court supporting
Hicks in December of 2017, alongside Firearms Owners Against Crime
(FOAC) and seven Members of Pennsylvania’s General Assembly. The Court’s
decision, concurring opinions, and the FPC/FPF amicus brief can be
viewed at www.firearmspolicy.org/legal.
At
issue was whether someone’s carrying of a firearm could be used as
reasonable suspicion of criminal conduct, and thus justification for
police to conduct a “stop-and-frisk” of the gun owner. The court ruled
in Hicks that such searches and seizures, in the absence of other evidence are completely unlawful.
The coalition’s brief, which was
relied on heavily in the majority opinion, argued that the Pennsylvania
and federal constitutions prohibit searches and seizures based on a
suspicion of criminal activity due to carrying a firearm. According to
the brief, “As protected by the Second and Fourth Amendments to the
United States Constitution and [] the Pennsylvania Constitution . . .
the mere open or conceal carrying of a firearm cannot establish
reasonable articulable suspicion of criminal conduct, in the absence of
additional indicia of unlawful activity.”
The Court agreed, noting “that the
government may not target and seize specific individuals without any
particular suspicion of wrongdoing, then force them to prove that they
are not committing crimes.”
“Hicks’ position is supported by several amici curiae,
including Members of the Pennsylvania General Assembly, Firearms Owners
Against Crime, the Firearms Policy Coalition, and the Firearms Policy
Foundation. Hicks’ amici argue that the Robinson rule is
contrary to this Court’s precedent and to the general teachings of the
Supreme Court of the United States’ Fourth Amendment jurisprudence. Amici
further point to numerous decisions of the courts of other states and
federal appellate courts that have addressed the specific question at
issue here, and which have held that mere possession of a concealed
firearm provides no basis for an investigative detention,” Supreme Court
Justice Wecht wrote for the majority.
FPC President and FPF Chairman
Brandon Combs hailed the decision. “Stop-and-frisk practices that harass
gun owners who carry for lawful purposes including self-defense, like
the one at the core of this case, are unconstitutional, bad public
policy, and dangerous,” explained Combs. “We are thrilled that the
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania agreed with these fundamental principles
and issued such an incredibly positive decision in favor of
constitutional rights.”
Kim Stolfer, president of FOAC, was
also delighted with the ruling. “We are thrilled to have participated in
this case. The Commonwealth’s position, that the ‘mere sight’ of a
firearm, with no criminal act, ‘justifies’ arrest and detention at
gunpoint, is constitutionally repugnant and unjustified. Today the Court
rightly held as much.”
Joshua Prince, author of the
coalition’s brief, said that “the Court, in dismissing the
Commonwealth’s position, declared that to permit investigative detention
solely to determine whether someone is properly licensed is ‘ultimately
untenable, because it would allow a manifestly unacceptable range of
ordinary activity to, by itself, justify Terry stops.’”
“This ruling rightly puts an end to
abusive, non-justifiable searches of law-abiding gun owners, and it
should be relished by all those who support the fundamental rights
enshrined in our Constitution,” Prince concluded.
Firearms Policy Coalition
(www.firearmspolicy.org) is a 501(c)4 grassroots nonprofit
organization. FPC’s mission is to protect and defend the Constitution of
the United States, especially the fundamental, individual Second
Amendment right to keep and bear arms.
Firearms Policy Foundation (www.firearmsfoundation.org)
is a 501(c)3 grassroots nonprofit organization. FPF’s mission is to
defend the Constitution of the United States and the People’s rights,
privileges and immunities deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and
tradition, especially the inalienable, fundamental, and individual right
to keep and bear arms.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Spammers: You are wasting your time. Irrelevant comments will not be published