Network TodayNetwork Today
    What's Hot

    DeSantis targets Biden in swing state Pennsylvania, says Democratic Party ‘dead’ in Florida

    April 1, 2023

    How Iowa Ended South Carolina’s Storied Perfect Season

    April 1, 2023

    US Iraq War veteran ‘held his insides with his hands’ after 2003 fragging among 16 who ‘deserve Purple Heart’

    April 1, 2023
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    • About
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Contact
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Saturday, April 1
    Network TodayNetwork Today
    • Home
    • News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Energy
    • Technology
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Sports
    Network TodayNetwork Today
    Home » Illinois Passed a Sweeping Ban on High-Powered Guns. Now Come the Lawsuits.

    Illinois Passed a Sweeping Ban on High-Powered Guns. Now Come the Lawsuits.

    January 21, 20235 Mins Read News
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    CHICAGO — When Illinois legislators passed a far-reaching ban last week on selling certain high-powered guns and high-capacity magazines, the Democrats who run the state celebrated it as a lifesaving law that would help prevent mass violence. But on Friday, in the law’s first judicial test, a state judge in Effingham County temporarily blocked it from being enforced against hundreds of people and several gun dealers who sued.

    That ruling, a preliminary step and one of several legal tests the law is likely to face, came amid broad uncertainty about whether sweeping gun controls like those in Illinois can withstand judicial scrutiny following a Supreme Court decision in a New York case last year.

    Within days of Gov. J.B. Pritzker signing the Illinois legislation, at least three lawsuits were filed challenging it in state and federal courts. Though the case in Effingham County, a conservative area east of St. Louis, focused on claims that the law violated the Illinois Constitution, two other lawsuits, in Federal District Court in Southern Illinois and in state court in rural Crawford County, included Second Amendment arguments that invoked the Supreme Court’s New York ruling. The judge in Effingham County, Joshua Morrison, also mentioned the New York case in his ruling on Friday granting a temporary restraining order.

    “The big picture is just a lot of uncertainty and a lot of unpredictability until there is agreement on some kind of way to apply” the ruling from last year’s Supreme Court case, said Andrew Willinger, the executive director of the Center for Firearms Law at Duke University.

    In that case, New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, the court found that Americans have a broad right to arm themselves in public and struck down a New York law that placed strict limits on carrying guns outside the home. The decision, in which the court’s six conservative justices were in the majority and its three liberal justices dissented, has led to a wave of litigation and legislation nationwide. Judges and lawmakers have disagreed on how to apply the new precedent, and activists on all sides of the gun debate have strained to find where the new lines are.

    Mr. Pritzker said the ruling on Friday was disappointing but “not surprising,” and expressed confidence that the law would ultimately be upheld. The office of Attorney General Kwame Raoul said it would appeal.

    Even before its new weapon ban, Illinois had the most extensive gun restrictions in the Midwest, including a requirement that residents be licensed by the State Police to own firearms. But legislators were spurred to go further after a gunman killed seven people and wounded dozens of others with a high-powered rifle at a Fourth of July parade last year in Highland Park, a Chicago suburb that had been at the center of a court fight over its municipal ban on certain weapons.

    The new state law, which took immediate effect, made Illinois one of nine stateswith some form of what advocates call an assault weapon ban, according to the Giffords Law Center, which supports gun restrictions. Under the new Illinois rules, a long list of specific types of semiautomatic weapons, including AR-15-style rifles, are no longer allowed to be sold to residents, and people who currently own them were given a deadline to register them with law enforcement.

    Though supporters of the law acknowledged the limits of legislating weapon sales on a state-by-state basis — Illinois borders several states with loose gun laws, contributing to its long-running struggles with violence — they said the new legislation would still have an impact. Congressional Democrats have attempted to restore a national ban on assault weapons, but have been blocked by Republicans.

    “It does matter to have these laws in place, to have restrictions in place,” said Ari Freilich, the state policy director at Giffords, who said the Illinois law would put gun sellers on notice and help lessen the risk of high-casualty mass shootings.

    Gun rights supporters, however, were incensed, calling the law an unconstitutional overreach that exposed responsible gun owners to criminal charges and banned the sale of common firearms.

    “The boot heel of government has been placed squarely on the neck of freedom-loving Illinois citizens,” Richard Pearson, the executive director of the Illinois State Rifle Association, said in a statement. His organization is a plaintiff in the federal lawsuit, which has been assigned to a judge who was appointed by President Donald J. Trump.

    Though Democrats control state government in Illinois, thanks largely to their dominance around Chicago, conservative Republicans run local governments throughout much of the state. Many Illinois sheriffs said they would not prioritize enforcing the law’s gun registration rules and did not plan to arrest people solely for violating that requirement.

    Sheila Simon, a law professor at Southern Illinois University who once served as the state’s Democratic lieutenant governor, said those statements underscored the geographic and political divides within Illinois.

    “A county cannot opt out of state laws,” Ms. Simon said. “So when sheriffs say they’re not going to enforce a state law, I hope that what they mean by that is that they’re going to be part of a lawsuit to challenge the law.”

    Farrah Anderson contributed reporting.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    US Iraq War veteran ‘held his insides with his hands’ after 2003 fragging among 16 who ‘deserve Purple Heart’

    April 1, 2023

    Pennsylvania chocolate factory worker thought she would die in fiery explosion, then the miraculous happened

    April 1, 2023

    Second child dies under care of Florida grandmother, police say

    April 1, 2023

    Ukraine asks court to put Orthodox leader under house arrest

    April 1, 2023

    Green Savior or Deadly Menace? Paris Votes on E-Scooter Ban

    April 1, 2023

    Severe weather outbreak forecast to continue Saturday, bringing damaging winds

    April 1, 2023
    Trending

    DeSantis targets Biden in swing state Pennsylvania, says Democratic Party ‘dead’ in Florida

    April 1, 2023

    How Iowa Ended South Carolina’s Storied Perfect Season

    April 1, 2023

    US Iraq War veteran ‘held his insides with his hands’ after 2003 fragging among 16 who ‘deserve Purple Heart’

    April 1, 2023

    House Republicans accuse NIH of ‘stonewalling’ on ‘supercharged monkeypox experiment’

    April 1, 2023
    Latest News

    Wisconsin alleged fraudster arrested after string of thefts

    February 3, 2023

    Cuban state visit to Russia demonstrates importance of Havana for Putin’s anti-American agenda

    November 22, 2022

    Skechers Says It Escorted Kanye West From Its Offices After Unannounced Visit

    October 27, 2022

    What’s in it: House GOP rules package aims to curb trillions in yearly heaps of new debt

    January 9, 2023

    Does Social Media Make Teens Unhappy? It May Depend on Their Age.

    March 28, 2022

    Sacramento Savors Its Underdog Moment

    August 8, 2022

    Network Today is one of the biggest English news portal, we provide the latest news from all around the world.

    We're social. Connect with us:

    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest YouTube
    Recent

    DeSantis targets Biden in swing state Pennsylvania, says Democratic Party ‘dead’ in Florida

    April 1, 2023

    How Iowa Ended South Carolina’s Storied Perfect Season

    April 1, 2023

    US Iraq War veteran ‘held his insides with his hands’ after 2003 fragging among 16 who ‘deserve Purple Heart’

    April 1, 2023
    Featured

    How These Sign Language Experts Are Bringing More Diversity to Theater

    January 7, 2023

    Here Are the People Iran Sentenced to Death in Its Protest Crackdown

    January 6, 2023

    Tim Ryan and J.D. Vance to Face Off Monday in Second Debate

    October 17, 2022
    Copyright ©️ All rights reserved | Network Today
    • About
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Contact

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.