Was the teenage Kenosha shooting suspect’s possession of a gun protected by the Constitution?

Yahoo News

One item really sticks out on the list of charges against Kyle Rittenhouse, the 17-year-old from Illinois arrested after two people were shot and killed during protests over the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

Along with five felony charges that include first-degree reckless homicide and first-degree intentional homicide, Rittenhouse was also charged with a sixth crime: possession of a dangerous weapon by a person under 18. And that will give rise to an interesting defense by his lawyer — one that is not likely to succeed. 

Rittenhouse’s attorney, John Pierce of Pierce Bainbridge, plans to fight the underage weapons possession charge, arguing that at 17, his client could be part of the “well regulated Militia” mentioned in the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Put another way, Pierce will likely argue that Wisconsin’s ban on firearms possession by 17-year-olds is unconstitutional because a 17-year-old minor is on the same Second Amendment footing as an adult.

Therefore, the argument goes, the Wisconsin law unconstitutionally restricts Second Amendment-protected firearms possession. Pierce will likely add that the American colonies expected, and sometimes required, citizens under 18 to have and bear arms.

That will be a reach, for several reasons. In the 2008 Supreme Court case District of Columbia v. Heller, Justice Antonin Scalia expressly stated that “Like most rights, the right secured by the Second Amendment is not unlimited.” Up through the 19th century, “commentators and courts routinely explained that the right was not a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose,” he added.

Scalia’s opinion listed examples of valid, “longstanding prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill, or laws forbidding the carrying of firearms in sensitive places such as schools and government buildings, or laws imposing conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of arms.”

Underage possession of firearms was not specifically mentioned on that list, but the court added that this “list does not purport to be exhaustive.”

In other cases on gun rights since the Supreme Court ruled on Heller, federal courts have held that modern “under 21” restrictions on handgun purchases are “firmly historically rooted” and that the “right to keep arms in the founding period did not extend to juveniles.”

It is true that many colonies permitted, and sometimes mandated, firearms possession by minors for purposes of militia service. However, as the Illinois Supreme Court has put it, “nothing like a right for minors to own and possess firearms has existed at any time in this nation’s history.”

Even if the framers and the colonists approved of mandatory firearms possession by juveniles, this does not translate to an immutable right to own or possess them. According to the courts, and the Constitution, juveniles like Rittenhouse apparently have less Second Amendment rights to carry assault rifles than adults do.

https://news.yahoo.com/teenage-kenosha-shooting-suspects-possession-213257875.html

5 thoughts on “Was the teenage Kenosha shooting suspect’s possession of a gun protected by the Constitution?

  1. Here we go more of the same fkn BS man.

    Absolute rights are absolute. It means no cockskr homo in a black robe or any other SOB or group of SOBs can even have a discussion about such rights outside the Due process of our common law people’s courts.

    Oh right we don’t have those no more! Well I guess we muss be atz war den..!!

    Vial dreck, there are no caveats in the bill of rights…

  2. It’s definitely covered under our Bill of Rights

    And y’all better set him free , because the target your painting on your backs holding him ,is about to dry out

  3. Trying to set precedents under admiralty law yet again as they do with every new case. Their goal has always been taking the guns away & they are trying every little thing they can to chip, chip, chip away…

  4. I would argue that he is not “well regulated militia” but rather he is “the people” under the second amendment. But…..
    Under the militia act of 1903 he is unorganized militia which states all able bodied men of age 17 and older.
    If you don’t believe that was codified law due to the fact the Federal government of The united States of America had been dissolved prior than…

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