BY NATE RAYMOND AND BARBARA GOLDBERG
A federal appeals court on Monday upheld parts of New York and
Connecticut gun control laws banning semiautomatic assault rifles and
large-capacity magazines, ruling the measures passed after a 2012 school
massacre did not violate the Constitution.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York upheld
the bans on semiautomatic weapons and large-capacity magazines, but struck down
a New York provision barring gun owners from loading more than seven bullets in
a clip and a Connecticut prohibition on the non-semiautomatic Remington 7615.
New York and Connecticut's gun control measures, among the strictest in
the nation, were signed into law after a gunman killed 26 children and staff at
the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, in December 2012.
The Newtown shooting revived a national debate on gun control. At the
time, President Barack Obama launched an aggressive gun control push but his
efforts largely failed in Congress.
The appeals court, in upholding the provisions, ruled against coalitions
that included firearms dealers, sports shooters and gun owners who claimed the
mandates infringed on their constitutional right to possess firearms.
"The core prohibitions by New York and
Connecticut of assault weapons and large-capacity magazines do not violate the
Second Amendment," ruled the court in a decision written by Circuit Judge
Jose Cabranes.
Legal experts said the ruling would have
more of a symbolic than practical effect.
"All this says is that if you pass
such a law, it will be constitutional," said James Jacobs, who teaches at
New York University School of Law.
"The states with the strongest gun
control politics have already banned them. I don't see other states running to
do it because it's constitutional," Jacobs said.
Timothy Lytton, who teaches at Georgia
State University College of Law and authored "Suing the Gun
Industry," said it was doubtful the ruling alone would sway Congress or
individual states.
"Court opinions like this are not
likely to move legislatures," Lytton said.
"The federal government has been at a
stalemate over gun control legislation for well over a decade. If Sandy Hook
could not move Congress to action, nothing is likely to," he added.
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