My confusion was increased because sometimes the experts are talking about “assault weapons” and sometimes about number of rounds and it all just got me mixed up.
In addition, I managed to make more than my normal number of wrong and/or missing words plus it looks like my copy and paste lost the first character in some of the quotes.
My apology. The only changes to this article are within this section.
B.L.U.F. Final article analyzing the Rupp v. Bonta case currently before Judge Josephine L. Staton, U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. If this case is appealed, it will go up to the Ninth Circuit court, again.
Status of Case
This case was opened, argued in district court, the district court found for the defendants under intermediate scrutiny, the case was then appealed to the Ninth Circuit. While at the Ninth Circuit the Supreme Court agreed to hear Bruen at which point the plaintiffs(good guys) and defendants(bad guys, state) asked for the case to be held pending Bruen. After Bruen the Ninth Circuit Court vacated and remanded the case back to the district court, where it is now proceeding.
The case is expected to be heard some time after 2023-05-26. This is not set in stone. The date might move due to other reasons or either party might coincide.
The state could then pass a different magazine ban and that ban would have to be challenged. This could go on for an extend period of time. As those cases were heard in district courts, those courts that were anti-gun would cite back to this case and then rule the same way.
If the state thinks the Ninth Circuit will rule for them, they know that the plaintiffs will appeal to the Supreme Court and if the Supreme Court grants cert. they will lose and all magazine bans around the country are gone. If the Supreme Court does not grant cert. then the magazine ban will stay in place and will apply to 15 different districts across 11 different states and territories.
The Question
The case restarts within the district court with a statement of the question to be answered as understood by the plaintiffs and the defendants.
Plaintiffs are California residents who filed suit alleging that California’s Assault Weapon Control Act (“AWCA”) violates their Second Amendment right to bear arms for self-defense because it prohibits the possession of arms that they contend fall squarely within the Second Amendment’s text, being arms typically possessed by law-abiding citizens for lawful purposes and are thus protected under the Second Amendment, and there is no relevant historical tradition that would justify the AWCA’s banning of such arms.
— Revised Joint Rule 26(f) Report
Defendant Rob Bonta, in his official capacity as the California Attorney General, contends that the AWCA does not violate the Second Amendment. Under Bruen’s text-and-history standard, the AWCA does not burden conduct protected by the plain text of the Second Amendment, because the firearms and features regulated under the AWCA are not protected “Arms,” and the AWCA’s restrictions are historically justified.
— Id.
The State’s Argument
The state’s position is that “assault weapons” are not “arms” within the scope of the Second Amendment and even if they were within the scope of the Second Amendment that there are “relevantly similar” ranges within the history and tradition of gun regulations during the period of the ratification of the Second and Fourteenth Amendments.
One of the things said in Heller is that it is the history and tradition around the ratification of the Second Amendment. Regulations from that time period can be supported by regulations from the time of the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment but not new regulations.
This means that if they were to find a law banning “unicorn muskets” in 1795 and then found a law in 1870 that also banned “unicorn rifles” that the “unicorn rifles” law would support the longstanding tradition of banning “unicorn muskets”. If on the other hand they found only the law in 1970 banning “unicorn rifles” that would not be longstanding tradition. It is a one way ratchet.
From here the state argues that the “new” standard under Bruen requires the use of experts to determine what cases are “relevantly similar” to the AWCA. This is a nasty argument for a few reasons.
First, it flips the match. Consider the state getting 18 months to get all the expert opinions into place and then losing. All of that expert opinion is only applicable to the AWCA. It doesn’t apply to the magazine ban. The state can then argue they need another 18 months on that case before…
Second, lawyers and judges are expected to be able to do research into case law. Case law IS historical research within the context of the law. They are trained in how to apply case law and how to argue case law. They are the experts in this.
If the state can manage to get the court to agree that there needs to be “expert opinions” heard then this case, and future cases, devolve into dueling experts. The state will always have the backing of all the standard gun infringing groups with all of their experts on tap. Each time one of those experts testifies in court their reputation goes up.
If the state is lucky, or good, they will be able to get to the point where the plaintiffs(good guys) will have to prove a negative.
Having agreed to allow experts to give their opinion, the state gives the statements of their experts.
The State’s Experts
Brennan Rivas
Short …the proliferation of nineteenth-century firearms restrictions…
…demonstrate a robust governmental response to the scourge of gun violence…
and …instead targeted only those weapons that posed a significant risk to public safety…
.
So he starts his history in 1836 with Colt’s first revolver patent. He then moves to the 1870’s when the revolver started using metallic cartridges. He claims this [introduced] the United States to its first experience with rampant gun violence
. He never bothers to define “gun violence” much less what made it “rampant”. He just says that there were a lot of revolvers out there that could be rapidly reloaded.
His opinion was that the violence that was happening was made all the more deadly
by the proliferation of deadly weapons
.
He claims that the Government enacted laws restricting carry. He doesn’t list any laws by reference and instead says that the Duke Center for Firearms Law has large numbers of laws listed relating to “carrying weapons”. His first actual law discussed is one from 1894 in Georgia which was a tax on gun dealers.
It is interesting to note that he acknowledges that at the item “military-grade weapons” were protected and self-defense weapons were not. From his reasoning, the fact that self-defense weapons had limits on how they could be carried translates to total bans on classes of “military-grade weapons”.
Many times the idea of a concealed carry ban was to allow the local law to lockup people that were carrying “openly”. If you were carrying in a standard belt rig and your duster happened to cover it, that would be enough to get you locked up.
It is worth noting that even the exempted army/navy pistols could not be carried concealed, or even visible within a waistband or hip holster; the only way to carry legally exempted pistols was to hold them in one’s hand.
is how he puts it.
— Id. at header
This is a huge hand wave. The Supreme Court has ruled that laws that are discriminatory are illegal. Thus all the “slave” laws and “black codes” are unconstitutional on the face of it. For these laws to be considered they would have to be considered constitutional.
On top of all of the above, the laws that he is discussing are all past the time of the ratification of the Second Amendment.
He attempts to get to that time period by getting the 1836 date into the record as soon as possible. That date is a patent date, not the date of any law supporting a tradition of gun regulation.
Col. USMC(Ret) Craig Tucker
Craig testifies that he has professional qualifications but at no point does he actually testify as to why he should be considered an expert at anything. He was in the Marines and was shot at.
He testifies that an AR-15 is an assault weapon under the definition of the law.
He testifies that because he never saw an M-16 or M-4 used in full-automatic that they are the same as AR-15s and since the military doctrine he is testifying to required military personal to use semi-automatic that an AR-15 is the same as a M-16/M-4.
— Id. at header
His opinion about the lethality and terminal ballistics of the 5.56×45 is utterly bullshit. On top of that, he gets the basic fact that the M-16/M-4 were designed to fire the 5.56×45 and not the Remington .223.
I hope this guy is the laughingstock of his next military reunion, if they will have him.
Dennis Baron
Dennis is an English and Linguistics professor who believes he is qualified to have an expert opinion linguistics of the Founding Era through Ratification.
He testifies that the Supreme Court got it wrong when they said “arms” means “arms” as defined by Webster. And that “bear” means “bear” as defined by Webster in the late 1700s.
Because he was studying language as a whole, and not language of the law, he feels he is better suited to determine what a word in the law means.
Reading these briefies and opinions it quickly becomes apparent that the language of the law is different from the language of the people.
This guys opinion isn’t worth the electrons spilled to create it.
John J. Donohue
John testifies that there is a growing problem of “public mass shootings” in the United States and that mass shootings with scary rifles causes increased injury and death.
He testifies that foreign countries passed gun bans and that those bans “helped” but, in my opinion, has nothing to really back that up.
Ok, here he goes to the extreme:
Threats to Civil Peace and to Democracy Itself
— Id. at header
“Democracy Itself”??? Good thing we live in a representative republic and not a democracy.
Louis Klarevas
- Mass shootings are a growing threat to public safety
- The Use of Assault Weapons Is a Major Factor in the Rise of Mass Shooting Violence
- Double-Digit Fatality Mass Shootings Are a Post-World War II Phenomenon in American History And They Often Involve Assault Weapons
- Restrictions on Assault Weapons Reduce the Incidence of Gun Massacres, Resulting in Lives Saved
Emotional blackmail is not grounds for infringing on core civil rights.
Lucy P. Allen
You don’t need more than 10 rounds in a magazine because we did a study and found that …it is rare for a person, when using a firearm in self-defense, to fire more than ten rounds.
I wonder if she would be willing to walk through the darker parts of New York City wearing a short skirt because it is rare for a woman to be raped…
I will submit that needing to defend yourself in a physical situation is rare. I will submit that it is even rarer to that deadly force is legal in those cases. I will submit that it is even rarer still to need more than 10 rounds.
You don’t get to tell me how many rounds is reasonable. If I feel that 18 rounds in the gun and three reasonable for me, you don’t get to say that 72 rounds is to much and I should only have less than 40.
— Lucy P. Allen Profile at NERA
So her expertise is in how much people should get in tort cases. I don’t see anything in there about how much of an expert she is in self-defense.
Michael Vorenberg
I’ll just give you his summary of opinions. The gist is that only the Military used lever action rifles and they were very uncommon in civilian hands.
— Id. in header
So there you have it, because of his opinion of who owned guns post-Civil War you should be banned from owning magazines with more than ten rounds.
Randolph Roth
He gives his expert opinion on the history of homicides and mass murders in the United States. He is going to focus on the role that technologies have played in shaping the character and incidence
of such murders.
It is a good thing that the history of murders has nothing to do with the text, history and tradition of the Second Amendment.
Robert Spitzer
This is one of the most polished opinions given. His Supplemental Expert Report runs to 255 pages.
He gives the history of regulation of machine guns including bans on magazine sizes starting in 1920s.
He then opines that the existence of repeating arms in 1791 doesn’t mean anything because they were not adopted for military use. Except that they were, per his own testimony, but they weren’t reliable enough so the military stopped using them.
He misses that the entire rebuttal argument of these repeating weapons wasn’t to say they were popular, common, or in military use. The rebuttal argument is that the founding fathers knew about them when the Second Amendment was ratified.
Having established that there is a history of machine gun regulation and magazine regulation in the 20th-century, he then tries to tie that back to restrictions on the way certain knives, clubs and pistols were carried and restrictions on the use of booby-traps with guns.
So he can’t point to laws restricting the possession of classes of ammunition or ammunition holding devices prior to the 20th-century. He can’t point to laws restricting the possession of arms. The closest he can come is restrictions on how to carry arms of certain classes and setting booby-traps.
Ryan Busse
Paraphrase:
I use to work for Kimber doing my best to sell guns, then I had a come to Jesus moment and since then I’ve been doing my best to sell gun-right infringements for Giffords.
He testifies that the AR-15 qualifies at an assault weapon and that in his experience a firearm does not need any of the devices, accessories, or configurations listed in the AWCA to operate as intended, and they are not necessary to use a firearm effectively for self-defense or other sporting purpose, like hunting.
Good thing it is a bill of rights and not a bill of needs.
Saul Cornell
Saul is here to tell you that it requires a sophisticate grasp of historical context
in order to understand the scope of the Second Amendment. In his opinion, the people of the founding era were well versed and educated and intended for American Law to include the English law that supports gun right infringements.
Thus, from its outset the Second Amendment recognizes both the right to keep and bear arms and the right of the people to regulate arms to promote the goals of preserving a free state. An exclusive focus on rights and a disparagement of regulation is thus antithetical to the plain meaning of the text of the Second Amendment. Although rights and regulation are often cast as antithetical in the modern gun debate, the Founding generation saw the two goals as complimentary.
— Id. from header
This is a new argument for me. Saul is arguing that shall not be infringed
actually means that the government can place any regulations it wants on the right to keep and bear arms.
The Plaintiff’s Rebuttal Experts
Ashley Hlebinsky
Ms. Hlebinsky is the former Curator-in-Charge at the Cody Firearms Museum. This is the museum that took all of the Winchester museum when the Winchester company decided to allow for a public display. Forgotten Weapons has a number of episodes filmed at the Cody Firearms Museum.
Her rebuttal talks extensively about the history of repeating firearms prior to 1791, iterating that the founding fathers were well aware of repeating firearms and that they were aware that there would be technical progress in firearm technology.
Then she blows Michael Vorenberg’s testimony about lever action rifles only being used by the military and being unusual. See previous quote.
— Id. from header
Here she just evesorates Mike. Every one of her statements is footnoted with a link back to primary sources. The numbers she talks about for the 1800’s are nearly at the 200,000 that is the current lower limit of “in common use”.
All in all, very powerful testimony.
Clayton Cramer
Mr Cramer is here to rebut that guns increase violence, murder and homicides. His words are better than mine:
— Id. from Header
This seems to be a detailed take down of Roth’s opinion. Since Roth’s opinion is irrelevant to the question of constitutionality of a magazine ban I don’t really care that his opinion is bogus.
Gary Kleck
Mr. Kleck’s rebuttal takes on Lucy Allen’s claim that banning magazines that hold more than 10 rounds will have substantial benefit.
He starts with a strong declarative that Few Mass Shootings Involve Large-Capacity Magazines
He attacks her claim that most self-defense uses of firearms use less than 10 rounds by pointing out that the number of self defense uses far out numbers the number of times “LCMs” have been used in mass shootings.
He rightfully points out that Lucy has no way of knowing what would have happened if a mass shooter used different weapons or magazines. She is guessing.
It has been stated that the asshole that shot up the Stoneman Douglas High School didn’t use any “LCMs” but instead magazines holding 10 or fewer. I have no primary source for this claim.
He goes on to attack Klareva’s expert report.
If a short description was required, Mr Kleck’s rebuttal takes on the unsupported assertions and hyperbole of the states’ experts.
J Buford Boone, III
This guy is and expert on terminal ballistics in flesh. This take down of Col. USMC(Ret) Tucker is worth repeating
His claim that a single small arms projectile is capable of “severing the upper body from the lower body, or decapitation” is so ridiculous that it should, and actually does, cast doubt on his qualifications as an expert in the field of firearms, particularly as it relates to wound ballistics.
Additionally, there is an inconsistency in his opinion in that, at one point, he states that stabilizing attributes (pistol grips) are inappropriate for self-defense while in the next point he says an attribute (folding stock) is inappropriate for self-defense because it is destabilizing.
— Id. from header
In Mr Boone’s previous submission in his first rebuttal to Col. USMC(Ret.) Tucker he explained where he believes the myth of catastrophic injury from 5.56×45 rounds come from.
Mark Hanish
Here are his own words on what he is doing
— Id. from header
State’s Rebuttal to the Rebuttals
This is just a bunch of “experts” arguing that the other expert is wrong.
This is exactly why we don’t want experts telling us what the Second Amendment means or opining on which laws are similar to the infringements the state wants to impose.
Most of this really should just be thrown out of court.
Conclusion
The state is attempting emotional blackmail in order to get the Court to include something outside of the bounds of the Bruen opinion.
Unlink Judge Benitez, who focused on history and tradition, this Judge is allowing huge amounts of spurious testimony to be entered. We’ll have to wait to see how she rules to know if she is going to obey the Supreme Court’s instructions to the inferior courts, including hers.
Comments
2 responses to “Rupp v. Bonta — Part 3 – UPDATED”
Cornell and his associates deliberately lied to SCOTUS in their amici brief in Heller. https://onsecondopinion.blogspot.com/2009/03/challenge-to-supporters-of-heller.html
Spitzer was shown to also be misleading in his papers by selectively truncating quotes to alter their meaning as well as leaving out key facets of ‘gun control’ laws like the fact they were designed for racist purposes and only enforced against undesirables.
Thank you for the link.