The Supreme Court occupies a challenge for Hawaii’s restrictions on hidden pistols
Washington agreed – The Supreme Court approved on Friday to take a new new case for weapons rights that focus on the recent measures in Hawaii and that restrict the place where people with a license to carry a hidden pistol can bring their weapons.
In the case, they are the provisions of a law that requires persons who suffer from hidden pregnancy permits, asking for permission to bring their weapons to special real estate open to the public unless the owner already allows this. The law, which was yearned in 2023, also restricts arms owners to possess their firearms in some “sensitive places”, including beaches, gardens and bars.
This procedure was challenged by three weapons owners with hidden pregnancy licenses, Jasson Wolford, Alison Wolford, and ATOM KASPRZYACKI, as well as the Hawaiian firearms alliance, a group of weapons rights.
A federal judge prevented the rulings, but the San Francisco -based Appeals Court, based in San Francisco, rules in favor of the state in the aspects of the law in the rule of September 2024, which also dealt with a similar action in California.
The Supreme Court sought weapons rights in a major ruling in 2022, which was first found that the right to carry weapons according to the second amendment to the constitution extends outside the home. But the court of arms owners thwarted by refusing to address cases that would expand in this ruling even because states such as Hawaii, California and New York have enacted new arms restrictions in the wake of the decision.
In 2008, the court found the first time that people had an individual right to carry weapons for self -defense in their homes.
In a separate case of 2024, which is disappointed by weapons rights groups, the court upheld a federal law prohibiting persons who are subject to orders to manufacture domestic violence from firearms.
Hawaii case, One of five The judges took on Friday, and it will be discussed and decided in the period of the new court, which begins on Monday and ends in June next year.