ACRU recently filed two amicus briefs with the Supreme Court questioning whether lifetime bans on firearm ownership in cases where citizens were convicted of non-violent crimes is constitutional as applied. In separate cases, a woman convicted of tax fraud in 2011 and a man convicted of misdemeanor DUI in 2005 were blocked from firearm purchases after they satisfied their sentences and have been law-abiding since. In both cases, ACRU argues these convictions should not block the right of these Americans to exercise their Second Amendment rights.
Read No. 20-782, Raymond Holloway, Jr., v. Jeffrey A. Rosen, Acting Attorney General, et al.
Read No. 20-812, Lisa M. Folajtar, v. Jeffrey A. Rosen, Acting Attorney General, et al.
ACRU files two SCOTUS briefs upholding Second Amendment rights
ACRU Staff
January 21, 2021
ACRU recently filed two amicus briefs with the Supreme Court questioning whether lifetime bans on firearm ownership in cases where citizens were convicted of non-violent crimes is constitutional as applied. In separate cases, a woman convicted of tax fraud in 2011 and a man convicted of misdemeanor DUI in 2005 were blocked from firearm purchases after they satisfied their sentences and have been law-abiding since. In both cases, ACRU argues these convictions should not block the right of these Americans to exercise their Second Amendment rights.
Read No. 20-782, Raymond Holloway, Jr., v. Jeffrey A. Rosen, Acting Attorney General, et al.
Read No. 20-812, Lisa M. Folajtar, v. Jeffrey A. Rosen, Acting Attorney General, et al.
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