U.S. District Court Judge Anthony Ishi struck down a portion of the law in 2014 after it was challenged by a pair of California residents and two non-profit Second Amendment advocacy groups, the Calguns Foundation, Inc. and the Second Amendment Foundation, Inc. In his ruling, Judge Ishi determined the “10-day waiting periods impermissibly violate the Second Amendment” for gun purchasers who previously passed background checks or had permits to carrying concealed weapons.
At the heart of the plaintiffs’ challenge to the law is the claim that they have a right to possession of the firearm as soon as the required background check is completed. In other words, they are essentially saying there is no need to wait 10-days to take possession of the gun if the background check is completed beforehand.
The State of California appealed the ruling and a three-judge panel from the Ninth Circuit heard oral argument on the matter earlier this year. Nearly ten months later, the Ninth Circuit handed down its opinion on Wednesday, overturning Judge Ishi’s ruling and reinstating the 10-day “cooling off” period for all gun purchasers in the state.
The Ninth Circuit held that “the 10-day waiting period is a reasonable safety precaution for all purchasers of firearms” and it did not need to be suspended for buyers who had previously purchased firearms and passed the required background checks before the expiration of the 10-day waiting period.
“Applying intermediate scrutiny analysis, we hold that the law does not violate the Second Amendment rights of these Plaintiffs, because the ten day wait is a reasonable precaution for the purchase of a second or third weapon, as well as for a first purchase,” the majority opinion states.
Intermediate scrutiny analysis test requires the state to prove the law “promotes a substantial government interest that would be achieved less effectively absent the regulation.”
The Ninth Circuit found there is “nothing new in having to wait for the delivery of a weapon” because “[b]efore the age of superstores and superhighways, most folks could not expect to take possession of a firearm immediately upon deciding to purchase one.” Therefore, they determined the 10-day waiting period was not a substantial burden in one’s Second Amendment rights.
Additionally, the Ninth Circuit took issue with the lower court’s determination that the cooling off period could not be justified as an effective crime deterrent when applied to those who already owned guns and passed background checks. In essence, the lower court reasoned that if a gun owner wanted to go act impulsively, they already had the means to do so and did not need to go buy another gun to accomplish the task.
The Ninth Circuit rejecting that reasoning, writing:
The district court’s assumption is not warranted. An individual who already owns a hunting rifle, for example, may want to purchase a larger capacity weapon that will do more damage when fired into a crowd. A 10-day cooling-off period would serve to discourage such conduct and would impose no serious burden on the core Second Amendment right of defense of the home identified in Heller.
Ultimately, the Ninth Circuit found the law did not violate the Second Amendment because “there is a reasonable fit between important safety objectives and the application [of the waiting period] to the Plaintiffs in this case” because it “provides time not only for a background check, but also for a cooling-off period to deter violence resulting from impulsive purchases of firearms.”
[image via DmyTo/shutterstock]