Supreme Court declines to hear challenge to Illinois public transport gun ban
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to decide whether individuals can carry firearms on public transportation.
The court declined to take up Schoenthal v. Raoul, which challenges an Illinois law banning citizens from carrying firearms on public transportation. Three Illinois residents challenged the ban, arguing it violates the Second and Fourteenth Amendment rights.
“There is no historical tradition of banning law-abiding citizens from possessing firearms in crowded public locations where they may be more vulnerable,” lawyers wrote in a petition to the court.
Illinois requires gun owners to acquire a Firearm Owner’s Identification Card and a concealed carry license in order to carry a firearm in public. However, the state bans individuals from carrying a loaded or unsecured firearm onto buses, trains or any other type of public transportation that is paid for in part or whole by public funds.
Kwame Raoul, Illinois’ attorney general, argued the prohibition on guns in public transportation is consistent with the nation’s historical tradition limiting firearms in sensitive places, like court rooms, schools and polling places.
“Like historical sensitive places, public transit features ‘confined areas with a high density of people,’ making firearms ‘exceptionally dangerous,’” Raoul wrote.
Latest News Stories
Constitutional tests await IL Dems’ race-based district plan
State House OKs access to abortion medication at colleges
Nonprofit hospitals called out for prioritizing politics over patients
Illinois quick hits: Appeals court upholds Madigan corruption conviction
Pritzker pushes housing plan described as ‘all stick,’ no carrot
Convenience store advocate: Swipe fee ruling is ‘one step’ in the process
Deferred maintenance blamed in I-64 bridge hole
Illinois quick hits: Convicted felon suspected of shooting two officers; Chicago Mayor orders up to $900,000 for additional peacekeepers; Belleville man faces attempted murder charge
Beecher Uses Six-Run Sixth Inning to Put Away St. Joseph-Ogden 10-5
Will County Passes Comprehensive Adult Entertainment Ordinance
Beecher Parents Protest “Silent Lunches” and Mass Recess Punishments; Elementary Principal Vows Changes
Correspondents’ dinner attacker detained with multiple weapons