Supreme Court to consider drug user gun possession case
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed on Monday to hear a case regarding whether regular drug users can possess firearms.
The case, United States v. Hemani, challenges whether federal statutes barring a person who “is an unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance” violates the Second Amendment.
The case centers on a Texas man who was charged with a felony when FBI agents found a pistol, marijuana and cocaine in his home after obtaining a search warrant, a petition to the court read.
The Trump administration petitioned the high court to hear the case after a lower court struck down the law barring people who use drugs such as marijuana from possessing firearms.
The Trump administration argued that regular drug users can simply stop their use to regain access to firearms under the law.
“By disqualifying only habitual users of illegal drugs from possessing firearms, the statute imposes a limited, inherently temporary restriction—one which the individual can remove at any time simply by ceasing his unlawful drug use,” the Trump administration’s petition reads.
Latest News Stories
New North Carolina law, question on facts pivotal to Mosley appeal
Illinois lawmakers grill diversity commission over lack of progress
Goble’s 12 Strikeouts, Early Run Support Lift Casey-Westfield Past Arthur-Okaw Christian 7-4
U.S. House vote on spy powers extension delayed due to bipartisan pushback
Auditors praise Trump anti-fraud healthcare proposal
WATCH: Gun owners rally at Illinois Statehouse against more gun regulations
GOP seeks probe of $180B in fraud with taxpayers’ money
Bill advances to prevent local governments from clearing homeless camps
Bonta’s anti-Exxon emails may have run afoul of CA corruption law: Claim
Expulsion votes for two members of Congress could happen next week, Luna says
NAACP sues xAI over air pollution near Memphis data center
Trump says he’s ready to nominate up to three Supreme Court justices