Gun-Rights Group Files Five New Lawsuits Against ‘Assault Weapon,’ Magazine Bans
The floodgates have opened up for new “assault weapon” and magazine ban legal challenges.
The floodgates have opened up for new “assault weapon” and magazine ban legal challenges.
A federal judge may have allowed New York’s Concealed Carry Improvement Act (CCIA) to take effect, but that doesn’t mean the law is constitutional.
Prospective gun carriers in the Golden State are breathing a sigh of relief Thursday morning.
For the second time in as many months, a federal judge has blocked a Colorado locality from enforcing an “assault weapon” and ammuntion magazine ban ordinance.
Federal courts have already begun to trend toward recognizing the gun rights of under-21-year-olds. But that trend is starting to buck up against another one: public opinion souring on gun-rights protections for young adults.
Young adults in the Lone Star State may soon be able to carry a firearm for self-defense.
New York’s new concealed carry law will use social media to determine if a person has become “radicalized” before granting them a permit.
Yet another poll has identified a sizable jump in the number of people who report having a gun in the home.
With lower courts now under a new mandate for reviewing gun cases from the Supreme Court, the rationale behind preemption repeals is no longer as viable.
New attempts by the Golden State to crack down firearm sales at gun shows have drawn a fresh legal challenge from a gun show producer and several gun rights advocates.
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