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A Practical Guide To Race And Gun Control by Jim March
A Practical Guide To Race And
Gun Control
by Jim March
jmarch@prodigy.net
March 1, 2002
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Introduction
In
1995, the Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy published historian Clayton
Cramer’s groundbreaking work, “The Racist Roots Of Gun Control” (http://www.law.ukans.edu/jrnl/cramer.htm).
TRROGC opened many people’s eyes to the historical injustices that led to the
majority of the gun control laws in the US, and the possibility that not all of
the racism in gun control is “history” — some of it could be decidedly
contemporary.
Yet as of this writing, what Cramer discovered hasn’t
made any significant “mainstream impact”, either in court or in the court of
public opinion.
I think that needs to change.
I believe there are two different areas of law that can
be affected by a study of US racism in gun control. These are:
1. The debate surrounding the 14th
Amendment “privileges and immunities” clause and its impact on the Bill Of
Rights (including the 2nd Amendment).
2. Overturning state gun control laws
that were enacted with racist intent, and are having a current racially
disparate impact despite that impact being (possibly) accidental in modern
times — in other words, use of the 14th Amendment “equal protection clause”.
Part One: The 14th Amendment Privileges And
Immunities Clause And The RKBA
CASES
(Note: URLs are to a free, non-subscription area of
Findlaw.)
Dred Scott vs. Stanford, 60 U.S. 393 (1856) http://laws.findlaw.com/us/60/393.html
United States v. Cruikshank, 92 U.S. 542, 553
(1875) http://laws.findlaw.com/us/92/542.html
LAW REVIEW ARTICLES
Personal
Security, Personal Liberty, and The Constitutional Right to Bear Arms: Visions
of the Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment — Stephen Halbrook Ph.D.,
Seton Hall Constitutional Journal (1995) — http://www.constitution.org/2ll/2ndschol/35halv.pdf
— (Adobe Acrobat format, download free Acrobat reader at http://www.adobe.com
as needed.)
The Fourteenth
Amendment and the Right to Keep and Bear Arms: The Intent of the Framers,
Stephen Halbrook Ph.D., Senate Report (1982) — This report summarizes the
“privileges and immunities” argument in 13 highly readable pages. His
arguments have now been adopted by Yale prof. Akhil Reed Amar (1998 “The
Bill Of Rights”) and a number of other scholars such as Aynes, below. http://www.constitution.org/2ll/2ndschol/42senh.pdf
— (Adobe Acrobat format, download free Acrobat reader at http://www.adobe.com
as needed.)
ON MISREADING JOHN BINGHAM AND THE FOURTEENTH
AMENDMENT — Richard L. Aynes, Yale Law Journal, October 1993, Page 57 — http://www.saf.org/LawReviews/Aynes1.html
The Second
Amendment: Toward an Afro-Americanist Reconsideration — Robert J.
Cottrol and Raymond T. Diamond, 1991 Georgetown Law Journal, 80 Geo. L.J.
1991, 309-361 — http://www.guncite.com/journals/cd-recon.html
DISCUSSION
The opening paragraph of the 14th Amendment, effective
in 1868, states:
Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the
United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the
United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or
enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens
of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life,
liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person
within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
Within the span of a few decades of this amendment’s
establishment, the two provisions highlighted above in bold were gutted
by the US Supreme Court.
We’ve mostly got the equal protection part (second
bolded chunk) back, starting in 1954 (Brown vs. Board of Education and
the subsequent civil rights battles).
But the “Privileges And Immunities Clause” remains
“damaged goods”, gutted since approximately 1876 and the Cruikshank
decision. The court in Cruikshank said of the 2nd Amendment:
"This is one of the amendments that has no other
effect than to restrict the powers of the National government."
The court found that a Klan group with state gov’t
links that ran around stripping blacks of arms couldn’t be sued under Federal
law. We’ll go into more detail on the racist history of the USSC in the second
portion of this document, on equal protection (Williams vs. State of
Mississippi 1898 cited in part two, or the infamous Plessy vs. Ferguson
(legalizing “separate but equal” in the same period as Williams)).
What the courts finally did in the 20th Century was “selective incorporation”
to restore state respect to only those parts of the Bill Of Rights they were
comfortable with at any one time — and the right to arms remains “unincorporated”
at present, along with the Grand Jury requirement for indictment.
To understand the Privileges And Immunities clause, we
have to look at the infamous Dred Scott decision of 1856, and it’s
post-civil-war implications.
The court in Dred Scott decided that since the US
had been a racist nation since it’s inception, a racist law in 1856 could not
be challenged by a black gent, since he lacked the “privileges and immunities
of US Citizenship” as held by the group “the people” mentioned in the
Constitution.
The court used the complete phrase “privileges and
immunities” over 30 times, and exhaustively defined it. To the court in Dred
Scott, the “privileges and immunities of US citizenship” included the
entire Bill Of Rights just for starters. The court hypothesized what would
happen if such “privileges and immunities” were declared held by blacks:
For if they were so received, and entitled to the
privileges and immunities of citizens, it would exempt them [blacks] from
the operation of the special laws and from the police regulations which they
considered to be necessary for their own safety. It would give to persons of
the negro race, who were recognized as citizens in any one State of the Union,
the right to enter every other State whenever they pleased, singly or in
companies, without pass or passport, and without obstruction, to sojourn there
as long as they pleased, to go where they pleased at every hour of the day or
night without molestation, unless they committed some violation of law for
which a white man would be punished; and it would give them the full liberty
of speech in public and in private upon all subjects upon which its own
citizens might speak; to hold public meetings upon political affairs, and
to keep and carry arms wherever they went. [emphasis added]
It is critical to understand that the ruling in Dred
Scott was not invalidated by the Civil War 1861-1865 and the deaths
of over 500,000. Indeed, the slaves may have been freed by Lincoln’s order and
then the 13th Amendment, but the court’s holding on racist laws being in
harmony with the Founder’s intent still stood.
Hence the South began writing specifically racist laws,
the infamous “Black Codes”...virtually all of which contained special
race-specific restrictions on arms:
1. That it shall not be lawful for any
freedman, mulatto, or free person of color in this State, to own fire-arms, or
carry about his person a pistol or other deadly weapon.
2. That after the 20th day of January,
1866, any person thus offending may be arrested upon the warrant of any acting
justice of the peace, and upon conviction fined any sum not exceeding $100 or
imprisoned in the county jail, or put to labor on the public works of any
county, incorporated town, city, or village, for any term not exceeding three
months.
3. That if any gun, pistol or other
deadly weapon be found in the possession of any freedman, mulatto or free
person of color, the same may by any justice of the peace, sheriff, or
constable be taken from such freedman, mulatto, or free person of color; and
if such person is proved to be the owner thereof, the same shall, upon an
order of any justice of the peace, be sold, and the proceeds thereof paid over
to such freedman, mulatto, or person of color owning the same. [Ed. note: the
off-duty fashion choices of “justices of the peace, sheriffs, or constables”
at that time tended toward an ensemble of basic white bedsheets with
eyeholes...especially at night.]
4. That it shall not be lawful for any
person to sell, give, or lend fire-arms or ammunition of any description
whatever, to any freedman, free negro or mulatto; and any person so violating
the provisions of this act shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon
conviction thereof, shall be fined in the sum of not less than fifty nor more
than one hundred dollars, at the discretion of the jury trying the case.
Alabama statute of 1865, from “The Second Amendment:
Towards An African-Americanist Reconsideration”, footnote 178 — two more
state-level examples precede that one.
Per Dred Scott, this was perfectly acceptable.
The only way the 1868 legislature could fix that was to
overturn the US Supreme Court — which meant a Constitutional Amendment, the
14th.
Which is why they borrowed Dred Scott’s
phrasing — they started out by making it clear blacks were citizens, and then
forbade states from violating the rights of citizens. In doing so, framers of
the 14th such as Ohio Republican John Bingham knew that they were carrying out
the court’s worst “fears”, allowing the freemen to “keep and carry arms
wherever they went” (among other things). See the Halbrook cites above —
Bingham and company made no secret of this during the debates on the 14th and
the various acts that led up to it and supported it.
So what does all this mean?
1. If the 14th “reinforced” an
individual right to arms, it strengthens the arguments for an “individual
right” interpretation (“standard model”) as recently supported by the
5th Circuit in US vs. Emerson. Even if the right to
bear arms was originally primarily to “ensure a militia” with no
“personal right” intended (which is ludicrous to anyone who studies the
Founders' writings closely), that cannot have been the case in 1868 because no
Southern state was going to voluntarily put blacks under organized arms! The
uniforms of “State Militias” in the south of that time ran toward modified
bedsheets. So we’re talking about a right to personal arms for private
defense, against both criminals and the state itself.
2. And we’re no longer talking about
flintlock muskets, are we? Revolvers were common as fleas by then, with
working models available since 1836. In fact, used specimens were affordable
to freemen. The Mormon security forces prior to their move to Utah were well
known for packing .44cal percussion revolvers with barrels chopped to 3” or
so, carried concealed. And rifles of up to 15shot capacity were available, as
were the first Gatling Guns(!) patented 1862.
3. Better yet, we see that the right to
arms is protected from STATE infringement.
4. Best of all, the framers of the 14th
would have known that for freemen to safely “bear arms wherever they went”,
the arms in question would of necessity be concealed! Anybody want to guess
what a Southern cop of 1869 would think of a melanin-enhanced gent doing
open-carry? (Last time the NYPD thought they had an armed black dude in sight,
they opened up with 41 rounds, and that was in our more “modern, enlightened
age”.) This particular “logic chain” is the only path I know of to
gaining a Constitutional right to bear CONCEALED arms that the courts may one
day adopt, once they abandon the horrific racism of Cruikshank.
Part Two: 14th Amendment Equal Protection as
a Path to Gun Control Reform
In the last section, we discussed use of one part of the
14th Amendment to affect gun control reforms. Problem is, the “privileges and
immunities” language STILL isn’t properly understood as a deliberate
reversal of Dred Scott, so you’d need to go all the way to the USSC to
win.
But the Equal Protection clause of the 14th is another
matter entirely, well supported and understood! In this section, I’ll show how
current case law can be used to overturn California’s discretionary CCW system
and an unknown number of other gun control laws.
Herein, I’ll show that this isn’t just theory, it’s
already happened at least once in People vs. Rappard.
One KEY thing: WE MUST have a MINORITY CO-PLAINTIFF TO
PULL THIS OFF!
OVERVIEW
In 1985, the US Supreme Court in Hunter vs. Underwood
ruled that a state law that was drafted for racist purposes and was having an accidental
effect on racial parity should be thrown completely off the books.
It is my intent to apply this precedent to discretionary
CCW, by going into Federal Court with at least one obviously minority
co-plaintiff and attacking Penal Code 12050’s “may issue” CCW system.
But there's one possible problem: Hunter was
about a law that involved voting rights, which has been declared a
"fundamental personal right" in a way that the 2nd Amendment hasn't. I
believe I can show here that due to later US Supreme Court precedent based on Hunter
and it's relatives and ancestors (Arlington Heights in particular), that
isn't a problem.
CASES
(Note: URLs are to a free, non-subscription area of
Findlaw. All cases are US Supreme Court unless otherwise noted.)
WILLIAMS v. STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, 170 U.S. 213 (1898) http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?navby=search&court=US&case=/us/170/213.html
ARLINGTON HEIGHTS v. METROPOLITAN HOUSING CORP., 429
U.S. 252 (1977)
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/cgi-bin/getcase.pl?navby=case&court=us&vol=429&invol=252
HUNTER v. UNDERWOOD, 471 U.S. 222 (1985)
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?navby=search&court=US&case=/us/471/222.html
CLEBURNE v. CLEBURNE LIVING CENTER, INC., 473 U.S. 432
(1985)
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?navby=search&court=US&case=/us/473/432.html
CASTANEDA v. PARTIDA, 430 U.S. 482 (1977)
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?navby=search&court=US&case=/us/430/482.html
EX PARTE RAMIREZ 193 Cal 633 (1924) (California
Supreme Court, not online, described in text below)
ARNETT v CALIFORNIA PERS 9815574 (9th Circuit, 1999)
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?navby=search&case=/data2/circs/9th/9815574.html
RICHARDSON v CC HONOLULU No. 9416041 (9th Circuit,
1997)
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?navby=search&case=/data2/circs/9th/9416041.html
PEOPLE v. RAPPARD , 28 Cal.App.3d 302 (Calif.
Appellate Court, 1972) (NOTE: This case overturned Ex Parte Ramirez,
and large sections of that case are quoted within Rappard — special
thanks to Clayton Cramer for finding this case!) http://www.ninehundred.com/~equalccw/rappard.txt
PUBLISHED SCHOLARSHIP
Racist Roots Of Gun Control by Clayton Cramer,
4 Kansas J. of L. & Pub. Pol. 17-25 (1995): http://www.law.ukans.edu/jrnl/cramer.htm
The Second Amendment: Toward an Afro-Americanist
Reconsideration, Robert J. Cottrol and Raymond T. Diamond, 80 Geo. L.J
1991, 309-361 (1991): http://www.guncite.com/journals/cd-recon.html
Text of Penal Code 12050-54 (California’s CCW laws,
originally enacted 1923 and mildly revised since):
http://www.ninehundred.com/~equalccw/thelaw.html
“Strict Scrutiny” vs. “Rational
Basis” Defined
In any equal protection case, the courts assume that the
government CAN indeed “discriminate”, but only if it can be justified. The
level of justification needed varies...for our purposes, between “rational
basis” and “strict scrutiny”.
If a law, government agent, policy or similar
discriminates against different people along the basis of race, religion, or
national origin, it will be subject to “strict scrutiny”, translated as “there'd
better be a damned good reason for it”. Limited racial profiling for closer
scrutiny at airports post 9/11 might pass such muster, as one example.
If the discrimination is along economic lines, such as
“favoritism to the wealthy”, then no “protected class” is involved and
the government defendant in an equal protection lawsuit must come up with a “rational
basis” for the law, policy, enforcement practice or whatever. This is a much
less stringent standard to meet.
Make no mistake: it’s not possible to win a gun case
on rational basis — the courts are too liberal, and will automatically defer
to authority, at the 9th Circuit level if not at district court. Don Kates told
me that years ago, I didn’t listen, so I got my butt handed to me on the
wooden plate that holds a Federal Judge’s gavel.
The trick to beating a gun control law on equal
protection is to get it subjected to “strict scrutiny”.
Comparing PC12050 to the Hunter vs.
Underwood Scenario
Hunter vs. Underwood involved two plaintiffs, one
black and one white. They were challenging a provision of the Alabama
Constitution enacted in 1901 that labeled certain misdemeanor crimes
"offenses of moral turpitude" and provided that those convicted of
such were to be stripped of voting rights. Among the offenses were misdemeanor
bad check passing.
The plaintiffs successfully showed that the law was
passed during a special constitutional convention in which stripping blacks of
the vote was the key goal; this constitutional amendment was one of the results.
The plaintiffs then showed that because many of the crimes involved affected
those of lower income, the law was having a racially disparate effect as planned
by the original law's authors, but NOT in a manner intended by those
administering the law today.
Nevertheless, the law was junked by the courts. Because
there was a black co-plaintiff involved that could raise the racial question,
strict scrutiny was applied and the law didn't survive such. The law also had an
effect on lower-income whites, but if the only plaintiff(s) had been white, it
would have been a "rational basis" test at best and the law would have
probably survived.
Hunter (1985) didn't happen all of a sudden; the
exact same criteria for junking a law (racist intent when enacted, racist effect
in enforcement even when accidental) was described in Arlington Heights
(1977) although in that case, the plaintiffs weren't able to prove a racist
origin of a local zoning ordinance.
Specific black disarmament codes were common in
the South prior to the Civil War, sometimes taking the form of a discretionary
permit needed if you were black, and more often a blanket ban (for both free
blacks and slaves) - see also this partial list of statutes provided by the NRA:
http://www.webnexus.com/users/pactive/library/racial.txt.
In the post-civil-war period of 1865-1868, numerous Southern states
passed "black codes" that included specific disarmament via
discretionary gun permits; these were ended in forms that specifically named
blacks by the 14th Amendment of 1868. The Diamond/Cottrol paper at footnotes
176-178 includes three such codes, from Louisiana, Alabama and this Mississippi
statute of 1865:
"[N]o freedman, free negro or mulatto, not in the
military service of the United States government, and not licensed so to do by
the board of police of his or her county, shall keep or carry fire-arms of any
kind, or any ammunition, dirk or bowie knife, and on conviction thereof in the
county court shall be punished by fine, not exceeding ten dollars, and pay the
cost of such proceedings, and all such arms or ammunition shall be forfeited
to the informer; and it shall be the duty of every civil and military officer
to arrest any freedman, free negro, or mulatto found with any such arms or
ammunition, and cause him or her to be committed to trial in default of
bail."
In 1893, Florida was among several Southern states that
enacted this type of code, for racist reasons, but deleted the explicit racial
language so that on paper, it looked like it applied to the entire population. Cramer found a 1941 Florida Supreme Court reference by Justice Buford speaking
for the majority while releasing a white gent for packing sans permit that shows
what was really going on:
"I know something of the history of this
legislation. The original Act of 1893 was passed when there was a great influx
of negro laborers in this State drawn here for the purpose of working in
turpentine and lumber camps. The same condition existed when the Act was
amended in 1901 and the Act was passed for the purpose of disarming the negro
laborers and to thereby reduce the unlawful homicides that were prevalent in
turpentine and saw-mill camps and to give the white citizens in sparsely
settled areas a better feeling of security. The statute was never intended to
be applied to the white population and in practice has never been so
applied." — Watson v. Stone, 4 So.2d 700, 703 (Fla. 1941) from Clayton
Cramer’s “Racist Roots Of Gun Control”
What really seals the intent chain was that by 1898,
Mississippi took the idea of discretionary permits and extended it to voting
rights — the code which stripped approximately 190,000 blacks of the vote (and
a tiny number of whites) was extensively described (and supported) by the US
Supreme Court in Williams vs. Mississippi 1898. And like the Florida 1893
and California 1923 discretionary gun permit laws, the Mississippi voting permit
system was "facially race-neutral", so we can see a direct evolution
in Mississippi of discretionary permit systems for racist purposes, from
specifically naming blacks as needing the permit to dropping that language to
"slip beneath Fed scrutiny" under the 14th.
California adopted Florida-style discretion in 1923, at
the height of "Jim Crow". Cramer has identified a 1923 newspaper
article wherein an officer in a Sacramento area gun club affiliated with the NRA
praised the new carry permit law as necessary "to control violence by Asian
and Latino gangs". California's racial climate during this period was
horrendous, with bans on ownership of land by Asian immigrants, Asians still
stripped of the ability to testify against whites in court, and a host of other
ills.
But that's not the only evidence of racial purpose
behind California's CCW system.
When enacted in 1923, the new law also included the
penalties for packing without the new permits. As is the case today, packing
without a prior criminal record isn't a major problem but if a felon packs, it's
a serious charge. The difference is, back in '23 when the law was new, legal
alien residents were always penalized to the same degree a violent felon
would be, even if the alien resident had no priors.
Worse yet, legal alien residents were barred from even
seeking the permit, OR EVEN OWNING A HANDGUN. These elements of the statute were
supported by the California Supreme Court in Ex Parte Ramirez (1924) —
and Mr. Ramirez did five years hard time for packing sans permit despite a clean
record.
Both of these provisions were obviously enacted for
racial purposes. Given the rest of the racial history behind the discretionary
element, and the two other racial bits already identified by the courts in the
law, a racial intent behind discretion is a slam dunk.
The holding in Ramirez restricting the right to
arms to resident aliens was dismantled by a California Appellate court in People
vs. Rappard (1972), which held that the provisions limiting alien resident
gun rights could not be supported under "rational basis" and that they
were enacted for racist reasons. There was one dissenter who showed particular
stupidity in mentioning that at the same period, there were restrictions on
alien ownership of land. The two majority justices rebutted thus:
FN 2. In this connection we note that our dissenting
colleague includes in his first quotation from Rameriz the following
statement: "If rights in land may be denied to aliens by the state there
would seem no reason why in the exercise of its police power it might not also
protect itself against the ownership, traffic in and use of firearms by
aliens." Yet, our alien land law, referred to in the quotation, was
declared unconstitutional by our Supreme Court as violative of the equal
protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution over 20 years ago on a rationale essentially identical to that we
rely upon here. (See Sei Fujii v. State of California, 38 Cal.2d 718 http://login.findlaw.com/scripts/callaw?dest=ca/cal2d/38/718.html,
728 [242 P.2d 617].)
In other words, the majority in Rappard was
judging the legislative intent of the law in question in a fashion entirely
consistent with the later Hunter! And the law being judged as racist was
the SAME law in 1923 that created California's discretionary CCW system. Best of
all, the majority was applying a "racial purpose test" and junking
part of the law even though they recognized that it wasn't a fundamental right
at play, they raised the matter to "strict scrutiny" because of the
racism:
The People and our dissenting colleague rely,
nevertheless, upon In re Rameriz, 193 Cal. 633 [226 P. 914, 34 A.L.R.
51], a 1924 California Supreme Court decision which upheld this same statute
against an equal protection challenge. This case is not controlling for two
reasons. First, as the People admit, some of the grounds upon which Rameriz'
conclusion of constitutionality rested have been explicitly rejected in Raffaelli
as valid grounds for distinguishing between citizens and aliens. (Compare In
re Rameriz, supra, at p. 645 with Raffaelli v. Committee of Bar
Examiners, supra, 7 Cal.3d at pp. 296-300.) Second, recent developments in the
law of equal protection, confirmed in Takahashi v. Fish Comm'n., 334
U.S. 410 [92 L.Ed. 1478, 68 S.Ct. 1138], dictate that a stricter standard of
judicial review than the permissive rational basis test used in Rameriz
[28 Cal.App.3d 306] be applied to classifications based upon the suspect
factor of alienage. fn. 2 (See Purdy & Fitzpatrick v. State of
California, supra, 71 Cal.2d 566 http://login.findlaw.com/scripts/callaw?dest=ca/cal2d/71/566.html,
582; see also, Graham v. Richardson, supra, 403 U.S. 365; Truax v.
Raich, 239 U.S. 33 [60 L.Ed. 131, 36 S.Ct. 7]; Yick Wo v. Hopkins,
118 U.S. 356 [30 L.Ed. 220, 6 S.Ct. 1064].) Accordingly, Penal Code section
12021, as it applies to aliens, is declared unconstitutional. The judgment is
reversed.
Finally, in 1927 Michigan copied our system specifically
to prevent lawful self defense by blacks against lynch mobs, and the legislation
was lobbied for by the KKK following an acquittal on self defense grounds in
1925 of members of a black family who shot up a lynch mob — see also:
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/sweet/sweet.html
— unfortunately, the page showing the causative link between the Sweet
incident and the 1927 CCW law that basically copied California's has dropped off the
web. I'll do more research on that point.
Broad Applicability of Hunter
The case that really saves our bacon is the US Supreme
Court case Cleburne (1985), decided only months after Hunter.
In Cleburne, the plaintiffs wanted to open up a
group home for the mentally retarded, apparently people with no violent or
criminal past. The local zoning board blocked them. The US Supreme Court began
by denying the plaintiff's attempt to use the mental status of the affected
people to raise the issue to "strict scrutiny" the same way race or
religion would. In other words, the Supremes specifically said that the case
should be decided on a rational basis test.
They then noted that the zoning ordinance dating to the
1920's talked about controlling zoning for "hospitals for the
feeble-minded" and that the term itself was offensive. The original
ordinance was therefore viewed as stemming from non-rational historical
discrimination against the retarded, and due to that discriminatory past, the
ordinance should not control this situation. The Plaintiffs won.
Justices Marshall, Blackmon and Brennon joined a
concurring opinion in which they agreed with the majority as to the results, but
discussed in more detail the "why" of the decision — and they cited Hunter
vs. Underwood extensively in footnote 17 and especially 25.
That suggests that Hunter can apply in a case
where the rights involved are NOT "fundamental" the way the First
Amendment has been ruled to be, and where “rational basis” otherwise
dominates. It can apparently even apply to stenchful past legislation that
wasn't racially nauseating.
It gets better. As we've seen, Arlington Heights
was a direct ancestor of Hunter. In 1999, the 9th Circuit in Arnett
vs. California Pers. decided that a situation whereby two cops injured on
the job after the same brief service period could not receive different pension
amounts based on their biological ages (23 versus 45) — and they cited Arlington
Heights to determine whether the intent behind the pension plans mattered
(it did). If I'm not mistaken, this particular age situation (with no racial
issue involved) wasn't a "strict scrutiny case", so this meshes
perfectly with the views of Marshall, Blackmon and Brennon in Cleburne.
In short, we see here multiple cases that use
Arlington Heights as precedent to mean that laws must be scrutinized to make
sure that their original intent was fair-minded, as opposed to being crafted
with bigotry or bias not currently supported by our society, or laws. We would
NEVER today call anything a "hospital for the feeble-minded", nor
should we arbitrarily discriminate by age. California's CCW laws were not
crafted with fairness in mind...and that matters.
In upholding a rent control ordinance, the 9th Circuit
in Richardson held that challenging the ordinance on racial grounds would
require analyzing the intent of the ordinance:
[15] The Ordinance applies to condominiums regardless
of whether the owner is Native Hawaiian or non-Hawaiian. It thus does not on
its face draw a distinction on the basis of a suspect classification.
Nonetheless, the landowners assert that the Ordinance is unconstitutional due
to its discriminatory effects. To prevail, however, the Bishop Estate must
show not only a discriminatory effect, but also discriminatory intent. Village
of Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing Dev. Co., 429 U.S. 252265,
(1977).
The landowners failed...but I believe we can meet that
challenge where discretionary CCW is concerned, in California or elsewhere.
Remember, we have a major advantage over the Hunter
situation: we have in Contra
Costa County a situation where the Sheriff discriminates against those towns
with a higher minority population. That in turn suggests that the modern racial
inequity in overall county issuance could be deliberate, versus
"accidental" as in Hunter. To win
reforms in California's pathetic and highly-abused discretionary CCW laws and
methodologies, we only need to prove that:
1. racial inequity is
happening accidentally in modern times, and
2. that the law was enacted
with racist intent.
I firmly believe we've got the ammo
to do that.
Miscellaneous Cases In Equal Protection
Castaneda involved grand jury selection
procedures in Texas which are discretionary in a fashion very similar to
California's CCW system, right down to a "good character" requirement
along with a literacy test. The result was 39% Latino grand juries in a
majority-Latino county.
"It is also clear from the cases dealing with
racial discrimination in the selection of juries that the systematic exclusion
of Negroes is itself such an `unequal application of the law . . . as to show
intentional discrimination.' . . . A prima facie case of discriminatory
purpose may be proved as well by the absence of Negroes on a particular jury
combined with the failure of the jury commissioners to be informed of eligible
Negro jurors in a community, [430 U.S. 482, 494]. . . or with racially
non-neutral selection procedures . . . . With a prima facie case made out,
`the burden of proof shifts to the State to rebut the presumption of
unconstitutional action by showing that permissible racially neutral selection
criteria and procedures have produced the monochromatic result.' Alexander
[v. Louisiana, 405 U.S.,] at 632." 426 U.S., at 241
Significantly, this was a post-Arlington Heights
case, and the court mentioned Arlington in their ruling. The court in Casteneda
basically said that the racial disparity was so obvious, it didn't need analysis
as to racist origins of the grand jury selection system.
This suggests a "backup plan" whereby we note
that so far as we can tell, there's one black permitholder under
Rupf out of about 200 permits, and the county is somewhere around 30% black.
We can confirm low minority issuance rates via deposition. If the court doesn't
buy the "racial origins" data on PC12050 (and it's 1923 ancestor),
fine, we have here prima facie evidence of wild disparity and we have the
Sheriff's own policy manual fully explaining how much of the disparity happened
(town discrimination). Let HIM try and defend this mess — note the
"burden shifts to the state" language in the Castaneda quote
above! And the racial inequity statistics in Contra Costa and other counties
will make Castaneda pale in comparison, pardon the pun — Fresno County
is over 50% Latino, but has a 3% Latino surname rate among permitholders.
Note: I've gone through the first 50 US Supremes
cases that cite Arlington Heights, and all those that cite Hunter,
plus all of the 9th Circuit cases that cite those two. Those that seem relevant
are mentioned so far and discussed above. I'll finish the rest of the US Supreme
Court cases citing Arlington soon.
Possible Remedies
The court in Rappard gutted a portion of the
original 1923 gun law that included discretionary CCW, alien disarmament and
stricter penalties for alien gun ownership or carry. The court in Hunter
stripped an entire section of the Alabama Constitution, and various courts such
as in Arlington Heights and Richardson threatened to strip out a
bad zoning decision and a rent control law, respectively (except that the
"racial origin" aspect wasn't proven in those two). So the remedies,
and the laws being controlled by Hunter and Arlington vary all
over the map. Few are as complex as the 1923 California gun control law.
If we follow the Rappard gameplan, we can
"gut the bad bit" (read: discretion) which has migrated to PC12050
over the years. That leaves the background check, training and similar.
The alternative is to scrap everything left of the 1923
code, which is the permit system and the penalties for packing sans permit.
Which would at least briefly throw us into "Vermont carry"...until
Sacramento panics and either bans carry completely, or puts in a shall-issue
system.
The Democrats cannot kill off CCW completely without
angering the ~40,000 current permitholders, which as a group has BIG money that
they won't want to see diverted to the GOP.
Additional Research in Other Circuits
It might be useful to see how Arlington Heights
and Hunter have been interpreted in your circuit.
To see a list of Circuit Court decisions based on Hunter,
click
here.
The same list for Arlington Heights:
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/casesearch.pl?court=circs&CiRestriction=429+U.S.+252&
The lists show which circuit each case is in as part of
the URL.
Go through these looking for uses of the cases in your
circuit — you want uses (where possible) that don't involve the 1st Amendment
or other recognized fundamental rights, but rather "basic fairness
issues".
Related Reading
From Jim March
On Gun Control Racism
http://www.KeepAndBearArms.com/Racism
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