Cruikshank, Gun Control, And Bad Rulings

Index to posts in this series

We’ve looked at two early cases interpreting the Reconstruction Amendments, The Slaughterhouse Cases and US v. Cruikshank. These cases are still in force, and have done massive damage, to Black people especially and others who hoped to gain their rightful freedom; to the balance of power among the three branches of government; and to our jurisprudence. Recent 2nd Amendment cases are good examples of this damage.

Gun control

Recapitulation of the old cases. In The Slaughterhouse Cases the Supreme Court analyzes §1 of the 14th Amendment (text below). The second sentence bars states from abridging the privileges or immunities of “citizens of the United States”. The Court says this provision applies only to the tiny number of privileges or immunities that attach to people solely as citizens of the US. It doesn’t apply to their rights as citizens of a specific state.

The Court says that the !4th Amendment doesn’t change the relationship between state and federal governments. 83 US 77-78. It’s a negative argument: such a monumental change must be in very clear language, and this isn’t clear enough to suit the Court.

In Cruikshank, the Court examines the rights which the defendants allegedly illegally conspired to violate. One is the right to keep and bear arms for a lawful purpose. Here is the Cruikshank Court’s entire discussion of that issue.

The right there specified is that of ‘bearing arms for a lawful purpose.’ This is not a right granted by the Constitution. Neither is it in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence. The second amendment declares that it shall not be infringed; but this, as has been seen, means no more than that it shall not be infringed by Congress. This is one of the amendments that has no other effect than to restrict the powers of the national government, leaving the people to look for their protection against any violation by their fellow-citizens of the rights it recognizes, to what is called, in The City of New York v. Miln, 11 Pet. 139, the ‘powers which relate to merely municipal legislation, or what was, perhaps, more properly called internal police,’ ‘not surrendered or restrained’ by the Constituton of the United States.

Citing several older cases, the Court says that the 2nd Amendment does not guarantee the right to keep and bear arms; all it does is bar the US from infringing on that right. It says that states can regulate the ownership of arms as part of their police power.

To summarize:
1. The 14th Amendment didn’t change the power relations between the state and federal governments.
2. Rights not specific to the Constitution are solely the domain of the states under their police power.
3. The 2nd Amendment does not grant any rights to anyone. It merely prohibits the US from infringing the right to bear arms.
4. Any important change in the laws or Constitution must be clear enough to suit the Supreme Court.

Current cases. Eventually the Supreme Court started applying the Bill of Rights to the states using the Due Process Clause. By the time Heller v. Dist. of Columbia was decided, most of the Bill of Rights had become more or less applicable to the states.

In Heller Scalia cites Cruikshank approvingly. He writes: “States, we said, were free to restrict or protect the right under their police powers.” He completely ignores the holding of Cruikshank and several older cases that the only function of the 2nd Amendment is to prohibit the US from infringing the right, as well as the holding that the right does not arise from the Constitution. He simply imposes his own textualist reading of the 2nd Amendment as if it were written today instead of 240 years ago.

A few years later in Macdonald v. City of Chicago Alito put SCOTUS in charge of controling state power over guns. The Seventh Circuit had upheld Chicago’s gun regulations, relying in part on Cruikshank. Alito says the issue is: “… whether the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms is incorporated in the concept of due process,” an issue not considered by the lower courts. Cruikshank isn’t applicable because it only considered the Privileges or Immunities Clause.

Alito gives a short history of cases applying the Due Process Clause to the Bill of Rights starting with this: “The constitutional Amendments adopted in the aftermath of the Civil War fundamentally altered our country’s federal system.” He doesn’t tell us what that change is, or how it applies to guns.

He cites Heller for the proposition that the 2nd Amendment creates a right to bear arms. Then he announces that the right to and bear arms is covered by the Due Process Clause. There isn’t really an explanation for this. Alito just says it’s, like, you know, fundamental to the concept of ordered liberty, amirite, for every American to carry a gun for “self-defense”. Like this guy.

Then in Bruen, Clarence Thomas says that the only allowable limits on the the right to keep and bear arms are those the states imposed prior to either 1789 or 1868. Whatever that right was, the states obviously regulated it under their police powers, but Thomas doen’t even mention Cruikshank and The Slaughterhouse Cases. I guess Macdonald says it was unconstitutional for states to regulate guns after the ratification of the 14th Amendment, even though they had that right under Cruikshank and used it for 130 years.

Conclusion. The end result is that we can only regulate guns if five members of the NRA Court permit it. And now we learn that Bruen didn’t slake the blood lust of Thomas, Alito, Gorsuch and Kavanaugh. They want to flood the country with ghost guns.

Why Not Overrule Those Old Cases?

I think one reason SCOTUS doesn’t overrule Cruikshank and The Slaughterhouse Cases is that it would change our understanding of our dual sovereignty system. In The Slaughterhouse Cases the Court said that a broad interpretation of the 14th Amendment “…would constitute this court a perpetual censor upon all legislation of the States, on the civil rights of their own citizens, with authority to nullify such as it did not approve as consistent with those rights, as they existed at the time of the adoption of this amendment.” Of course SCOTUS is already doing that, as in gun regulation cases.

But if we dropped the pretense that the states are the dominant power in deciding the rights of citizens, SCOTUS would lose one of its go-to arguments against federal laws it doesn’t like. Dobbs, for example, says that the right to abortion should be decided by the states. Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act offends the dignity of the states (no, really), according to Shelby County v. Holder. And in NFIB v. Sebelius, SCOTUS says that the US can’t pressure the states to provide Medicaid to all their citizens, who, I note, are also citizens of the US, because state dignity is so important to suffering people.

There’s another possibility. The right-wing six simply don’t care about any of the traditional pillars of jurisprudence, such as stability, deference to the other branches, institutional reputation, and procedural constraints on power. And they’re careless. They don’t even try to be coherent or to clean up the loose ends of precedent that held for 150 years, or to create workable rules. See part IIIB of Breyer’s dissent in Heller and the dangers to society created by Bruen, as in the Rahimi case.

It’s bad enough that we’re goverened by five or six unelected lawyers. It’s worse that tbese second-rate people do such shoddy work.

———————
Section 1 of the 14th Amendment

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.

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24 replies
  1. FiestyBlueBird says:

    You’ve boiled off the murky water, and made it easy to see the outline of what you’d already seen in that dirty water.

    Very well done, Ed.

  2. DoctorDoom says:

    Thank you for another enlightening history lesson. The overriding theme here is that people are incidental, while state governments deserve deference. Of course, many of the antidemocratic aspects of the Constitution were the price of getting small states to ratify. At the time, no one anticipated the population disparity between Wyoming and California.

    • Joeff53 says:

      Maybe not Wyoming-California, but they were acutely aware of population imbalances at least until the Civil War. As the Three Fifths Compromise makes unmistakably clear.

      • DoctorDoom says:

        Three fifths compromise was partly about population, but mostly about whose interests mattered IMO. It was downsizing Virginia, but not because Virginia was big, but because the slave population wasn’t deemed to carry equal weight to the free population. Odious and antidemocratic, but addressing white, property-owning men v white women and children v everyone else rather than states v people.

  3. BobBobCon says:

    I think your statement “they’re careless” gets to the heart of it.

    Fitzgerald describes Tom and Daisy in the Great Gatsby this way: “They were careless people, Tom and Daisy – they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness, or whatever it was that kept them together and let other people clean up the mess they had made.”

    Tim Buchanan wasn’t just a monster in his personality, either. Fitzgerald pointedly described him as a political reactionary, misogynist Yale man who was obsessed with racial purity and crushing supposed disorder, and he’s an eerie precursor to Brett Kavanaugh.

    • Ginevra diBenci says:

      Tom Buchanan. Fitzgerald was obsessive about the names he gave his characters. Thomas means “the twin,” and Buchanan’s barely concealed dual nature (animal/man for you high-schoolers dealing with the Great Conflicts) gives rise to the plot’s dramatic climax.

      • BobBobCon says:

        Partial credit? I didn’t fat finger Tom’s name the first time at least.

        But I agree that Fitzgerald was a careful writer, which was often hidden in how effortless his prose seemed.

        • Ginevra diBenci says:

          Full credit! For the synopsis of Buchanan’s character, certainly. And if you were one of my smartass former students, you’d claim you were referring to Tom’s twin–Tim.

          (No extra credit for that.)

  4. Joeff53 says:

    Wow, that was impressive.
    We’re not likely to lose Brother Clarence anytime soon, either, cos the minute he were to step down, all his remarkably generous old friends would vanish into thin air.

  5. wasD4v1d says:

    One place where arms are well-regulated, where this supposed personal right is explicitly infringed by the government, is on a military base. You will only see a weapon upon a person authorized (well-regulated) to bear that weapon such as an on-duty member of the M.P. despite the base being public property. (On base family housing is exempt, but not barracks.)

  6. Jeffrey Dege says:

    If you’re going to defend Cruikshank, you should explain what Cruikshank was about.

    In 1872 a mob of former Confederate soldiers and KKK members seized the Grant Parish courthouse, in Colfax Louisiana, taking prisoner hundreds of Black freedmen. Who were then killed after having surrendered.

    A number of the perpetrators were sued in federal court for violating the victims’ civil rights, and a deeply racist Supreme Court ruled that the victims had no standing to sue.

    After Dred Scott v. Sandford, Cruikshank is probably the second most egregious case of racist discrimination in our judicial history.

    If you want to argue that there is still value in preserving the precedents it established, fine. But be honest about what you’re preserving.

    • Rayne says:

      Save your pedantic scolding. You did not read the very first line of the very first paragraph of this post carefully, nor did you read Ed Walker’s previous post about U.S. v. Cruikshank.

      Note to Ed Walker: le commentaire précédent est ce que les femmes françaises appellent “mecspliquer.” LOL

        • Ginevra diBenci says:

          “Penispliquer”? Quel mot extraordinaire! Je dois l’employer conversationellement au moins dix fois pour le rendre mon propre.

        • Rayne says:

          Je préfère la variante française plutôt que la variante québécoise bien que pour certains auteurs, la force brutale rendue avec cette dernière puisse être nécessaire.

        • earlofhuntingdon says:

          Have either of you a favorite recipe for poutine, because otherwise, I’ll stick with kapsalon, whose inventor sadly passed this year.

          [Hold that thought for a Trash Talk thread this weekend. We need to prep for tailgate season! /~Rayne]

        • earlofhuntingdon says:

          Thanks. Absolutely. The Premier League season has already begun. I suspect we’ll need a steady supply of comfort food this fall.

  7. rvhishere says:

    “… the !4th Amendment …”

    I see what you’ve done there but am unsure whether you are trying to emphasis the subject or capitalize upon it.

    [Thanks for updating your username to meet the 8 letter minimum. /~Rayne]

  8. Ginevra diBenci says:

    Ed, thank you for peeling away the layers of this rotten onion with such clarity. We are living under the Alito court, and its second-worst feature is the sheer mediocrity of the lawyering done under this aegis. I’m glad you have done the yeoman’s work of showing how that mediocrity goes hand in glove with its worst feature, the autocratic subsuming of rights.

    I apologize for even attempting to use my French with the pros here.

  9. Attygmgm says:

    I always appreciate Ed’s big picture articles. This one made me think of a way to turn Bruen’s standard to work in favor of gun regulation.

    In Bruen, the Supreme Court created its historical filter for burdening gun ownership: “the government must demonstrate that the regulation is consistent with this Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.” The plan apparently being to never meet a regulation the Court couldn’t squint at and decide wasn’t right.

    But there might be a way to use Bruen in favor of gun regulation, by approaching gun regulation from a different starting point, and a different “historical tradition of firearm regulation”— the 1792 Militia Act.

    The Bill of Rights was ratified December 15, 1791. The 1792 Militia Act was first proposed in December 1790 and was enacted in March 1792. (And it wasn’t repealed until 1903). It is a contemporary of the Second Amendment. The Militia Act imposed tremendous burdens on “each and every free able-bodied white male citizen” in that each was REQUIRED to purchase a “a good musket or firelock” as well as a whole series of other equipment, and was compelled to “be enrolled in the militia,” Congress to set parameters for those Militias to be trained.

    Congress could get a handle on both guns and the persons who possess them by exercising its Militia Powers in Article 1 using this proposition: if you possess a gun, congratulations! You are in the militia! And now some responsibilities accompany your right.

    Using the 1792 Militia Act as the “historical tradition of firearm regulation” would support extensive gun safety measures and could impose periodic burdens on anyone who possessed a gun. Imagine having to bring every weapon one possesses to a weekend of Militia Duty every so often so as to demonstrate your competence: both as to handling each gun and as to handling yourself.

    And for those of our citizens who own hundreds of guns? Well, that periodic service might take a while if one had to bring every gun possessed.

    Don’t like the inconvenience? There should be a buy-back provision.

    Americans don’t tolerate inconvenience. The Militia Power could be used to create strong incentives to reduce the prevalence of guns and to assess and monitor the competence of those who possess them.

    Eventually gun atrocities may spread the regrettable pain so broadly that a consensus for more robust gun safety measures could exist. Any manner of gun safety measures could be loaded into this concept.

    And when challenged in court, it wouldn’t be only the Second Amendment in play, opposed to the measures. Any such measures would be supported against Second Amendment attack by the explicit grant of the Militia Powers in Article 1 and the Necessary and Proper Clause. An explicit grant of Congressional power combined with a strong “historical tradition of firearm regulation” from the exact era in which the Second Amendment was enacted.

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