Whether the Second Amendment Secures an Individual Right

CourtDepartment of Justice Office of Legal Counsel
DecidedAugust 24, 2004
StatusPublished

This text of Whether the Second Amendment Secures an Individual Right (Whether the Second Amendment Secures an Individual Right) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Whether the Second Amendment Secures an Individual Right, (olc 2004).

Opinion

Whether the Second Amendment Secures an Individual Right The Second Amendment secures a right of individuals generally, not a right of states or a right restricted to persons serving in militias.

August 24, 2004

MEMORANDUM OPINION FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERAL

I. The Unsettled Legal Landscape ....................................................................... 128 II. Textual and Structural Analysis...................................................................... 136 A. “The Right of the People”....................................................................... 136 B. “To Keep and Bear Arms” ...................................................................... 139 1. “To Keep . . . Arms” ......................................................................... 140 2. “To . . . Bear Arms” .......................................................................... 142 C. “A Well Regulated Militia, Being Necessary to the Security of a Free State” ...................................................................................................... 144 1. The Limits of Prefatory Language .................................................... 145 2. The “Militia” ..................................................................................... 149 3. The “Well Regulated” Militia ........................................................... 154 4. The “Security of a Free State” .......................................................... 157 D. Structural Considerations ........................................................................ 161 1. The Bill of Rights ............................................................................. 161 2. The Militia Powers............................................................................ 163 III. The Original Understanding of the Right to Keep and Bear Arms ............... 165 A. The Right Inherited From England ......................................................... 166 B. The Right in America Before the Framing .............................................. 174 1. The Experience of the Revolution .................................................... 174 2. Early Constitutional Recognition of the Right .................................. 179 C. The Development of the Second Amendment ......................................... 185 1. Recommendations From the Ratification of the Original Constitution ...................................................................................... 186 2. The Drafting and Ratification of the Second Amendment ................ 193 IV. The Early Interpretations .............................................................................. 203 A. The First Commentators .......................................................................... 204 B. The First Cases ........................................................................................ 210 1. Cases Before 1840 ............................................................................ 210 2. Cases From 1840 to the Civil War .................................................... 213 C. Reconstruction ......................................................................................... 223 D. Beyond Reconstruction ........................................................................... 226 V. Conclusion...................................................................................................... 230

126 Whether the Second Amendment Secures an Individual Right

The Second Amendment of the Constitution provides: “A well regulated Mili- tia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.” You have asked for the opinion of this Office on one aspect of the right secured by this Amendment. Specifically, you have asked us to address the question whether the right secured by the Second Amendment belongs only to the states, only to persons serving in state-organized militia units like the National Guard, or to individuals generally. This memoran- dum memorializes and expands upon advice that this Office provided to you on this question in 2001. As relevant to the question addressed herein, courts and commentators have relied on three different interpretations of the Second Amendment. Under the “individual right” view, the Second Amendment secures to individuals a personal right to keep and to bear arms, whether or not they are members of any militia or engaged in military service or training. According to this view, individuals may bring claims or raise challenges based on a violation of their rights under the Second Amendment just as they do to vindicate individual rights secured by other provisions of the Bill of Rights.1 Under the “collective right” view, the Second Amendment is a federalism provision that provides to states a prerogative to establish and maintain armed and organized militia units akin to the National Guard, and only states may assert this prerogative.2 Finally, there is a range of intermediate views according to which the Amendment secures a right only to select persons to keep and bear arms in connection with their service in an organized state militia such as the National Guard. Under one typical formulation, individuals may keep arms only if they are “members of a functioning, organized state militia” and the state has not provided the necessary arms, and they may bear arms only “while and as a part of actively participating in” that militia’s activities.3 In essence, such a view would allow a private cause of action (or defense) to some persons to vindicate a state’s power to establish and maintain an armed and organized militia such as the National Guard.4 We therefore label this group of intermediate positions the “quasi-collective right” view. The Supreme Court has not decided among these three potential interpretations, and the federal circuits are split. The Executive Branch has taken different views over the years. Most recently, in a 2001 memorandum to U.S. Attorneys, you endorsed the view that the Second Amendment protects a “‘right of individuals, including those not then actually a member of any militia or engaged in active military service or training, to privately possess and bear their own firearms’” but allows for “reasonable restrictions” designed “to prevent unfit persons from

1 See, e.g., United States v. Emerson, 270 F.3d 203, 220, 260 (5th Cir. 2001). 2 See, e.g., Silveira v. Lockyer, 312 F.3d 1052, 1060–61, 1086–87 (9th Cir. 2002). 3 Emerson, 270 F.3d at 219 (describing intermediate view); see also, e.g., Cases v. United States, 131 F.2d 916, 923 (1st Cir. 1942). 4 See, e.g., United States v. Parker, 362 F.3d 1279, 1283 (10th Cir. 2004).

127 Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 28

possessing firearms or to restrict possession of firearms particularly suited to criminal misuse.”5 As developed in the analysis below, we conclude that the Second Amendment secures a personal right of individuals, not a collective right that may only be invoked by a state or a quasi-collective right restricted to those persons who serve in organized militia units. Our conclusion is based on the Amendment’s text, as commonly understood at the time of its adoption and interpreted in light of other provisions of the Constitution and the Amendment’s historical antecedents. Our analysis is limited to determining whether the Amendment secures an individual, collective, or quasi-collective right. We do not consider the substance of that right, including its contours or the nature or type of governmental interests that would justify restrictions on its exercise, and nothing in this memorandum is intended to address or call into question the constitutionality, under the Second Amendment, of any particular limitations on owning, carrying, or using firearms.

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