AMU Homeland Security

Court Rules Illegals Allowed Guns Under Second Amendment

(HSToday) People living in the United States illegally have a constitutional right to bear arms but are still barred from doing so by a separate law, a federal appeals court ruled.

The three-judge panel of the US 7th Circuit Court of Appeals issued its ruling last week in a case involving Mariano Meza-Rodriguez, whose family brought him to the United States from Mexico illegally when he was a toddler, according to the 7th Circuit ruling. Now an adult, he was arrested in 2013 after a bar fight in Milwaukee. Police found a .22-caliber bullet in his shorts pocket.second amendment illegals guns

Federal law prohibits people in the country illegally from possessing guns or ammunition. The Gun Control Act of 1968 prohibits certain people from possessing a firearm. The possession of any firearm by one of these “prohibited persons” is a felony offense. There are nine categories of persons prohibited from possessing firearms under the Gun Control Act, including, “Illegal aliens, or aliens who were admitted to the United States under a nonimmigrant visa.”

The law also prohibits ownership by, persons under indictment for, or convicted of, any crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding on year, and persons who have been convicted of a misdemeanor crime of domestic violence.

Meza-Rodriguez is arguing that the charges should be dismissed because the law infringes on his Second Amendment right to bear arms. US District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin Judge Rudolph Randa rejected that contention on the broad grounds that the Second Amendment doesn’t apply to people in the country illegally.

Meza-Rodriguez was ultimately convicted of a felony and deported.

The 7th Circuit Appeals Court, however, ruled last week that the term “the people” in the Second Amendment’s guarantee that the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed also applies to those in the country illegally. The ruling, which applies in Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin, conflicts with opinions from three federal appellate courts in recent years that found the Second Amendment doesn’t apply to people in the country illegally.

“We see no principled way to carve out the Second Amendment and say that the unauthorized (or maybe all noncitizens) are excluded,” Chief Judge Diane Wood wrote.

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