Supreme Court to Hear Second Amendment Case on Gun Ownership and Marijuana Use

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Supreme Court to Hear Second Amendment Case on Gun Ownership and Marijuana Use
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The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in United States v. Hemani, a case concerning a Texas man charged with possessing a firearm while also using marijuana. The case challenges a federal statute that prohibits firearm possession by those using controlled substances, potentially reshaping gun ownership laws and background check enforcement.

WASHINGTON - The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear arguments in United States v. Hemani, a 2nd Amendment case that could reshape how federal law treats gun ownership. Ali Danial Hemani, a Texas man, was indicted after authorities searched his home and reportedly found a Glock 19 pistol, marijuana, and a small amount of cocaine.

Prosecutors charged him under 18 U.S.C. § 922, a federal statute that makes it a felony for anyone who is an “unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance” to possess a firearm. A conviction can carry up to 15 years in prison. Lower courts dismissed the charge but the Justice Department appealed to the Supreme Court, asking justices to reinstate the charge against Hemani and clarify whether § 922 is constitutional as applied to regular marijuana users. Gun-control advocates backing the government warn that overturning or narrowing the statute could undercut firearm eligibility rules and complicate enforcement, including background checks. “The background check system must be able to work easily, and practically, you have to have very clear lines, said Douglas Letter, chief legal officer with Brady United. “The whole point is to keep guns away from people Congress have decided are some kind of danger and should not have guns.” However, the government’s stance has drawn opposition from group’s across the ideological spectrum from the NRA to the ACLU, and many others. “ a blanket law, it doesn’t matter what the controlled substance is. What that means is, if the government considers someone to be habitual marijuana use for example, they don’t have second amendment rights,” said Matthew Cavedon with the CATO Institute’s Project on Criminal Justice. Cavedon argues the government had other avenues to charge Hemani but instead chose to use his case to target others. “The government needs real evidence that somebody is an irresponsible drug user. That they’re abusing substances in a way that makes them a danger to other people,” he said. Oral arguments are scheduled for Monday, March 2. A decision is expected later in the Court’s term, with implications for gun owners nationwide - especially in states where marijuana is legal under state law but remains illegal federally3 Monroe County women indicted for voter fraud, court documents revealMPD: Victim dies after being struck by vehicle on Old Shell Road ‘My mom is only human’: Daughter of missing woman who was found ‘alive and well’ 24 years later breaks her silenceBill Clinton says he ‘did nothing wrong’ with Epstein as he faces grilling over their relationshipMan, 81, sends in tryout video with dream of playing for Savannah Bananas

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