Supreme Court to decide if domestic abusers can own guns this fall

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Supreme Court to decide if domestic abusers can own guns this fall
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The Supreme Courts is expected to hear a case in October, centered around an Arlington man, about whether those under a domestic violence restraining order can carry a gun.

, the Supreme Court announced this week the cases they will take up in October.

Earlier this year an appeals court undid Rahimi’s conviction, ruling it was unconstitutional because of the Second Amendment Rahimi and his girlfriend had an argument in 2019, according to federal prosecutors, and he knocked her to the ground and dragged her to his car, banging her head. He then shot at a bystander who witnessed the assault and later threatened to shoot his girlfriend if she told anyone, according to court documents

The three judges — two appointed by former President Donald Trump and the third by President Ronald Reagan — based their ruling on a 2022 Supreme Court decision that concluded the right to carry a concealed pistol in public was a constitutional right and regulations needed to be in line with the United States’ “historical tradition of firearm regulation.”

The Biden administration attorneys also quoted Justices Samuel Alito and Brett Kavanaugh, both conservative justices, from their writings in the 2022 case to bolster their case. Alito wrote the decision “decides nothing about who may lawfully possess a firearm or the requirements that must be met to buy a gun” and Kavanagh wrote that the Second Amendment “allows a ‘variety’ of gun regulations.”

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