Judge calls for SCOTUS ‘benchslaps’ on Second Amendment cases

Judge calls for SCOTUS ‘benchslaps’ on Second Amendment cases

Spread the love

(Legal Newsline) – A conservative federal appeals court judge has teed off once again on his left-wing judicial colleagues on the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals over what he described as their commitment to eschewing Second Amendment rights and to ensuring that any “weapons restriction that a liberal State can dream up” will somehow never contradict the Constitution.

And, in that filing, Ninth Circuit Judge Lawrence Van Dyke went further still, openly calling on the U.S. Supreme Court to step in and “benchslap” the Ninth Circuit for repeatedly sidestepping, if not outright defying, the Supreme Court’s mandates concerning Second Amendment rights in a “consistent, long-term, demonstrated refusal to follow the law.”

“By now it’s clear enough that, especially with regard to the Second Amendment, our court has fully adopted the operating principle of our former colleague Judge (Stephen) Reinhardt: the Supreme Court ‘can’t catch ’em all,'” Van Dyke wrote. “In the real world, no boss would tolerate nearly two decades of repeated defiance from a subordinate.

“… So, what to do? I have a suggestion. The Supreme Court should consider summarily reversing some of our wayward Second Amendment decisions. To put it more colloquially, it’s time for some benchslaps,” Van Dyke said.

Van Dyke’s filing landed as a solo dissent to a decision from the full Ninth Circuit to refuse to review an earlier appellate ruling from a three-judge panel upholding as constitutional yet another California law prohibiting either the possession or carry of certain kinds of weapons. This time, the challenged law banned switchblade knives.

This particular court challenge dated back to 2023, when a coalition of plaintiffs, including weapons owners and advocacy organizations, including Knife Rights, sued the state of California over the ban.

In the lawsuit, the plaintiffs asserted the law unconstitutionally violated the Second Amendment.

In federal district court, U.S. District Judge James E. Simmons sided with the state, agreeing the state was free to ban the knives because the state considered them “dangerous and unusual,” and thus not protected by the Second Amendment.

The Second Amendment rights advocates appealed. But their appeal also failed, when a three-judge panel — which included two appointees of former President Bill Clinton and another appointed by former President Joe Biden — agreed with California that the state was free to ban the knives.

They cited to 19th Century laws that banned the carry of Bowie knives in certain situations to justify their position that the current state restrictions fit within America’s “historical traditions” of limits on the Second Amendment.

Those Bowie knife laws have been used by left-wing states, lawyers and judges throughout the country to uphold a raft of constitutionally questionable laws restricting access to weapons, including laws outright banning the ownership of AR-15s and other semiautomatic firearms.

In the coming months, the Supreme Court could decide if those Bowie knife laws are valid historical analogs for such bans on weapons ownership and carry, as it considers cases challenging so-called “assault weapons” bans.

However, in the meantime, the Ninth Circuit has joined its colleagues in relying heavily on such laws to support bans by California and other Democrat-dominated states.

Following the switchblade appellate ruling, Knife Rights asked the full Ninth Circuit to reverse the three-judge panel’s ruling under a so-called en banc proceeding, in which the case is head anew by a larger, 11-judge panel.

However, in a new order, that en banc petition was denied by the full court.

In the majority opinion, Wardlaw blamed the plaintiffs themselves for the negative outcome. She and her colleagues asserted the plaintiffs overreached, as they “swung for the fences” by asking the courts to strike down California’s knife-carry regulations “in full” — and missed.

Wardlaw and the majority said, under the 1987 Supreme Court ruling in U.S. v Salerno, the plaintiffs needed to show that California’s knife law failed completely under the Second Amendment and that “no set of circumstances exists under which the regulation would be valid.”

In this case, Wardlaw said, it was enough that the state said the nation’s “historical tradition” included the ban on the concealed carry of Bowie knives, thus meaning the state could also ban the concealed carry of switchblade knives. And that, Wardlaw said, means the state’s switchblade ban survives the so-called “facial challenge” mounted by the plaintiffs.

Eight judges in all dissented from the order denying en banc review.

In the primary dissent, Judge Lawrence Tung said the majority’s take is wrong.

“In sustaining California’s total ban on public carry, the panel invoked a historical tradition of laws banning the carrying of concealed weapons (including firearms and knives) while ignoring that those same laws also allowed for the open carrying of those weapons,” Tung wrote.

He said this conclusion “runs directly counter” to the Supreme Court’s rulings concerning the carry and ownership of weapons in its landmark decisions in Heller v District of Columbia and New York Rifle and Pistol Association v Bruen.

“Here, California bans both concealed and open carry of switchblades, and hence it is not proper for the panel to invoke laws that ban only concealed carry as historical support for a ban on public carry altogether,” Tung wrote.

Tung further noted the Ninth Circuit’s findings also ignore the ruling of at least one state Supreme Court, as the Massachusetts Supreme Court in 2024 struck down as unconstitutional that state’s law prohibiting people from carrying switchblades.

“The panel’s reasoning is not just wrong. It should set off alarm bells,” Tung wrote. “If accepted, it would upend Bruen and essentially shield from constitutional scrutiny any law that categorically and totally bans the carrying of arms.

“Never would our court have tolerated, with respect to any other constitutional right, the sort of analytical move that the panel made here.”

While endorsing Tung’s dissent in full, Van Dyke went further, blasting his colleagues for continuing the Ninth Circuit’s well-established pattern of rejecting nearly every challenge to gun controls or other weapons restrictions imposed in California or any other state in the circuit.

He noted that, under Supreme Court precedents affirming the right to keep and bear arms, any restrictions on weapons ownership and carry should be considered “presumptively unconstitutional” by the courts.

Instead, Van Dyke said, the Ninth Circuit reverses that presumption when it comes to Second Amendment cases.

“Consequently, in our circuit, the line between hard and easy cases doesn’t exist,” Van Dyke said. “Every Second Amendment case turns into a hard one.

“… It’s always complicated. There’s always so much arduous analysis. And the final result is always the same: the arms restriction must win,” Van Dyke added.

He said the Ninth Circuit’s liberal judges have become “a crucial part of a broad and energetic campaign to deliberately overcomplicate Bruen,” despite the Supreme Court’s repeated findings that the constitutional questions are not actually difficult.

Van Dyke pointed particularly to the most recent gun control case at the Supreme Court, when the high court slapped down the Ninth Circuit’s decision to uphold a Hawaii state law that banned virtually concealed carry throughout that state, by declaring gun owners would violate the law by carrying their weapons onto any property, private or public, unless the property owner explicitly gave them permission to do so.

The Supreme Court’s majority said the case was not a close call, and the Hawaii law was blatantly unconstitutional under the Second Amendment.

“As with any constitutional right, no doubt there are going to be some hard Second Amendment questions,” Van Dyke wrote. “But there is an obvious disconnect when Justices of the Supreme Court emphasize that Second Amendment questions it just reviewed ‘are not hard,’ —indeed, are so easy that the government’s arguments ‘cannot be taken seriously’ —while our court, considering the same issues, murdered a small forest of trees with myriad pages of dense and opaque analysis before ‘taking a step back’ from its final ‘analysis’ and acknowledging its conclusion …’ is hard to explain in ordinary terms,’” Van Dyke wrote.

In the dissent, Van Dyke said the Ninth Circuit’s overall, “glaring track record” of antipathy to the Second Amendment shows the court will not change unless the Supreme Court itself takes firm and consistent corrective action.

For his part, Van Dyke recommended the Supreme Court begin issuing “summary reversals” of Ninth Circuit rulings related to the Second Amendment, perhaps including the switchblade case. The judge said this will mean swift correction of what Van Dyke described as the Ninth Circuit’s “Second Amendment recalcitrance” without the need for long formal appeals, petitions and hearings.

“My point … is that when it comes to the Second Amendment (at the Ninth Circuit), the ‘exceptions’ always win, which can only be explained by an underlying bias against the Second Amendment,” Van Dyke said. “And because of that, we’ll continue discovering and creating as many new ‘exceptions’ as we need to ensure that doesn’t change.

“… At some point our court’s cover-up will stop working. I’m asking the Supreme Court to help in that regard.”

Beecher Weather Full forecast →
⚠️ Air Quality Alert issued July 17 at 2:22PM CDT by NWS Chicago IL
⚠️ Air Quality Alert issued July 17 at 11:14AM CDT by NWS Chicago IL
⚠️ Air Quality Alert issued July 17 at 4:12AM CDT by NWS Chicago IL
⚠️ Air Quality Alert issued July 16 at 1:28PM CDT by NWS Chicago IL
Fri Jul 17
Mostly Sunny then Showers And Thunderstorms Likely
89° 64°

Mostly Sunny then Showers And Thunderstorms Likely

💨 10 to 15 mph 💧 70%

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.17.47 PM

County Landfill Meeting Briefs

Landfill Minutes Approved: The landfill committee unanimously approved minutes from its February 11, 2025 meeting. All committee members were present, including Hickey, Brooks, Bulock, Logan, Newquest, Pretzel, and Dean Schlotman....
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.17.47 PM

Geological Features Central to Landfill Expansion Plans

Geological characteristics that were formed thousands of years ago make Prairie View an ideal location for landfill operations, according to the geologist leading expansion plans for the facility. During Wednesday's...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.17.47 PM

County Considers Two Options for Prairie View Landfill Expansion

Prairie View landfill could extend its lifespan by up to 35 additional years under expansion plans presented to the county's landfill committee on Wednesday. Consultant Marty Fallon outlined two potential...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.24.10 PM

Health Department Faces Funding Cuts, Reviews Options for Programs

The Will County Health Department is assessing its options after being notified of the termination of a $1 million federal grant for respiratory disease surveillance and outbreak response, officials told...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.24.10 PM

County Health News Briefs

Sunny Hill Nursing Home Reports Full Capacity: The county-owned Sunny Hill Nursing Home is operating at 100% capacity with all 156 beds filled and a waiting list, Administrator Maggie McDall...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.24.10 PM

Substance Use Initiative Reports Early 2025 Overdose Data, Outreach Efforts

Will County has recorded eight fatal overdoses and seven overdose reversals so far in 2025, according to data presented to the county health committee on Wednesday. Connie Dewal, program manager...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.24.10 PM

County Food Access Program Reports Progress on ARPA-Funded Initiatives

Four community organizations are expanding food assistance services across Will County through nearly $80,000 in federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds administered by the county's food access collaborative. Caitlyn...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.24.10 PM

Sunny Hill Nursing Home Reaches Full Capacity, Completes Bed Upgrades

Will County's Sunny Hill Nursing Home is operating at 100% capacity with a waiting list for admissions, prompting officials to consider reinstating a policy that would prioritize county residents, Administrator...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.08.10 PM

Will County Land Use and Development Briefs: Minor Subdivision, Extension Approved, Tiny Homes Advocate Returns

Committee Approves Minor Subdivision to Correct Illegal Land Division: The Land Use and Development Committee unanimously approved a minor subdivision plat for the Crown Holm Family Trust in Lockport Township,...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.08.10 PM

Will County Considers Relaxing Size Restrictions on Accessory Dwelling Units

JOLIET — Will County officials are considering revisions to zoning regulations that would allow larger accessory dwelling units (ADUs), potentially expanding housing options in the county while addressing concerns about...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.08.10 PM

Resident Urges County to Restrict Residential Motocross Tracks After Neighborhood Dispute

JOLIET — A Will County resident appeared before the Land Use and Development Committee Thursday urging officials to modify zoning codes to prohibit motocross tracks in residential neighborhoods, citing an...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.08.10 PM

Committee Approves Truck Terminal Special Use Permit After Safety Modifications

JOLIET — The Will County Land Use and Development Committee voted Thursday to approve a special use permit for a truck terminal in New Lenox Township, after the applicant made...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 2.08.10 PM

County Committee Approves Two Solar Energy Projects Despite Farmland Concerns

JOLIET — The Will County Land Use and Development Committee approved two commercial solar energy projects Thursday, advancing the proposals to the full county board for final consideration despite concerns...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 3.03.49 PM

Will County Approves Vision Zero Initiative to Reduce Traffic Fatalities

Will County has officially adopted Vision Zero, a data-driven safety initiative aimed at eliminating traffic fatalities throughout the county. The Public Works and Transportation Committee unanimously approved the resolution, which...
Screenshot 2025-05-04 at 3.03.49 PM

County’s First Roundabout Planned for Exchange Street and Beecher Road Intersection

Will County's first roundabout is advancing to the final public meeting phase, with construction tentatively scheduled for 2027. County Engineer Jeff Ronaldson announced that the Department of Transportation will hold...