En banc Third Circuit to reconsider constitutionality of § 922(g)(1)’s felon-in-possession gun prohibition after Bruen
In this post two months ago, I noted the lengthy per curiam Third Circuit panel opinion in Range v. Garland, No. 21-2835 (3d Cir. Nov. 16, 2022) (available here), which concluded that a person convicted of state welfare fraud was “outside the class of people traditionally entitled to Second Amendment rights” and upheld felon disarmament under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) against a Second Amendment challenge. This Range opinion was the first big circuit opinion addressing felon gun dispossession under federal law after the landmark Supreme Court Bruen ruling changes Second Amendment jurisprudence.
But Second Amendment law is Range free: via this order entered this past Friday, the full Third Circuit decided that this panel opinion in Range is to be vacated as the case will be reheard en banc (with oral argument scheduled for February 15, 2023). I do not know enough about the particulars of all the Third Circuit judges to make confident predictions about how Range will be resolved after en banc reconsideration. But, generally speaking, full circuits do not take up issues en banc when most of the judges are generally content with the panel outcome. Consequently, I can confidently predict this case is one worth watching closely and one that might make for some notable new Second Amendment law.
Some (of many) prior recent related posts:
- By 6-3 vote, SCOTUS expands Second Amendment rights by striking down NY public-carry licensing requirements
- Are all broad felon-in-possession criminal gun statutes now constitutionally suspect after Bruen?
- Spotlighting notable (and constitutionally suspect?) aspects of federal firearm prohibition enforcement
- District Court declares § 922(n), which criminalizes a person under indictment from receiving a firearm, to be unconstitutional
- Notable new district court opinion strikes down federal serial number law but upholds felon possession ban applying Bruen
- Federal judge orders briefing on whether to appoint historian to resolve challenge to federal felon gun possession ban after Bruen
- New district court opinion “holds that § 922(g)(8) is unconstitutional under Bruen‘s framework”
- Another district court finds § 922(n), which criminalizes a person under indictment from receiving a firearm, to be unconstitutional
- Third Circuit panel upholds constitutionality § 922(g)(1)’s felon-in-possession gun prohibition after Bruen
- Justice Department tells federal district judge “it is unnecessary … to appoint an historian to assist” in resolving defendant’s Second Amendment claim