| Have Gun, Can't Travel New York City’s arbitrary restrictions on  transporting firearms give SCOTUS a chance to curtail rampant disrespect  for the Second Amendment. 			 		 Jacob Sullum  | January 30, 2019
 
 The first time the Supreme Court defended the Second Amendment, it  overturned  a Washington, D.C., law that made it a crime to keep any sort of  accessible and operable firearm in the home for self-defense. Two years  later, the Court  struck down a Chicago law that went almost as far, banning possession of handguns within the city limits.
 
 Last week the Court  accepted  a case involving another extreme example of gun control: a law that  prohibits New Yorkers from taking their legally owned handguns with them  when they travel outside the city. This is only the third time in more  than a decade that the justices have grappled with the question of which  firearm restrictions are consistent with the Second Amendment, and the  history of the case shows why that reckoning is overdue.
 
 Most New York City residents can legally own handguns only by  obtaining a license that requires them to keep the weapons at home. The  sole exception is for trips to one of the seven target shooting ranges  within the city, when the firearms have to be unloaded and locked in a  container separate from the ammunition.
 
 Three New Yorkers, joined by the New York State Rifle and Pistol Association, are  challenging  that rule, which they say unconstitutionally interferes with their  right to keep guns for self-defense and to hone the skills required for  that purpose. One of the plaintiffs would like to take his handgun to a  second home in Delaware County, and all three want the freedom to bring  their firearms to ranges and shooting competitions outside the city.
 
 The only public safety rationale the city has offered for stopping  them is that they might be tempted to use the guns in "stressful  situations." As the gun owners  note  in their brief seeking Supreme Court review, "the City put forth no  empirical evidence that transporting an unloaded handgun, locked in a  container separate from its ammunition, poses a meaningful risk to  public safety."
 
 Even if it did, New York's restrictions tend to magnify the supposed  danger by forcing gun owners to use ranges within the city when  alternatives in other jurisdictions are closer and more accessible. They  therefore spend more time traveling with their guns on New York's  streets than they otherwise would.
 
 The government's half-baked excuse nevertheless was enough to persuade a  federal judge and the  U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit  that the ban on taking handguns out of the city is consistent with the  constitutional right to keep and bear arms. Both concluded that New  York's transparently irrational restrictions survived "intermediate  scrutiny," meaning they are "substantially related to the achievement of  an important governmental interest."
 
 That sort of reasoning epitomizes the inappropriately deferential  approach that many federal courts continue to take in Second Amendment  cases. If the government can articulate a reason for restricting gun  rights, no matter how implausible, that is usually enough to sustain the  law.
 
 "The City's transport ban lacks even a rational basis, much less the  heightened showing necessary to justify burdens on constitutional  rights," the plaintiffs note. The need to curtail this rampant  disrespect for the Second Amendment is the reason this case is  important, even though it involves a law that the plaintiffs describe as  "an extreme outlier" and a "one-of-a-kind prohibition."
 
 For too long the Supreme Court has tolerated a form of casual  judicial review in gun cases that would never fly in the context of  other constitutional rights. The justices have  passed up  one opportunity after another to clarify the level of scrutiny that  should be applied to gun control laws, the constitutionality of bans on  arbitrary categories of firearms or magazines, and the extent to which  the Second Amendment applies outside the home.
 
 This case will not resolve all of those issues. But it is a first  step toward enforcing the Court's belated recognition that the Second  Amendment imposes meaningful limits on legislators.
 
 reason.com
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