[00:01:07] Speaker ?: The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit is now in session. [00:01:20] Speaker 10: Please be seated. [00:01:20] Speaker 10: Good afternoon. [00:01:21] Speaker 10: Welcome all to our Richard H. Chambers Courthouse here in Pasadena. [00:01:28] Speaker 10: This is the time set for the case of Kim Rhodes. [00:01:32] Speaker 10: at all versus Rob Bonta in his official capacity as attorney general of the state of California. [00:01:40] Speaker 10: If counsel are ready to proceed, you may come forward. [00:01:49] Speaker 05: Good afternoon, your honors, and may it please the court. [00:01:52] Speaker 05: Helen Hong for the attorney general. [00:01:54] Speaker 05: With the court's permission, I'd like to reserve five minutes for rebuttal. [00:01:58] Speaker 05: The Supreme Court has recognized that states may implement laws to ensure that those keeping and bearing arms in a jurisdiction are authorized to do so. [00:02:06] Speaker 05: The court has emphasized that shall-issue licensing regimes, which often require applicants to undergo background checks, are constitutionally permissible under the Second Amendment. [00:02:18] Speaker 05: In 2016, California enacted such a regime, designed to ensure only that those purchasing ammunition in the state are authorized to do so. [00:02:28] Speaker 05: The law channels ammunition transactions to licensed ammunition vendors and requires those vendors to conduct background checks and face to face transactions before transferring ammunition to a consumer. [00:02:41] Speaker 05: Those checks impose little delay for minor fees. [00:02:45] Speaker 05: and authorize consumers to purchase an unlimited quantity of ammunition. [00:02:49] Speaker 09: The footnote says that you can't have such systems if they're abusive. [00:02:54] Speaker 09: What are the legal criteria we are to apply in determining whether a system is abusive? [00:03:00] Speaker 05: Your Honor, footnote nine itself provided some direction and guidance on that question and suggested that regimes that have unreasonable delays or exorbitant fees may be abusive. [00:03:12] Speaker 05: Justice Kavanaugh suggested that these are as applied challenges when the system is working is not working as intended. [00:03:19] Speaker 05: If licensing regime is designed to ensure only that those purchasing or acquiring ammunition or arms are authorized to do so. [00:03:28] Speaker 05: and the delays are attendant to that task, then I don't think that it would be abusive within the meaning of footnote nine, no matter how long the delay may be. [00:03:38] Speaker 05: In this case, because that delay is just mere minutes, and the record reflects that the vast majority, nearly 90% of ammunition transactions are. [00:03:50] Speaker 09: For 11%, it's not minutes, correct? [00:03:53] Speaker 09: You deny the transaction without any affirmative proof that the person is ineligible to have ammunition or is legally disqualified under the Second Amendment? [00:04:06] Speaker 05: They're not denied from purchasing ammunition, Your Honor. [00:04:08] Speaker 05: Those individuals may try to figure out what the mismatch or the problem with the entry in the automated firearm system may be. [00:04:17] Speaker 05: It could be something like an individual has moved since that firearm was registered with the state that would just require a self service option to update the address in the automated firearm system. [00:04:32] Speaker 05: But individuals who would like to purchase ammunition and not go through the process of updating their records in the system. [00:04:40] Speaker 05: of course, are also authorized to purchase after completing a background check under the basic check system, Your Honor. [00:04:48] Speaker 05: That basic check system is a comprehensive background check. [00:04:52] Speaker 05: So it operates like the background checks that are described in footnote night of Bruin. [00:04:57] Speaker 05: It's one where Department of Justice Bureau firearms personnel are going through four different. [00:05:03] Speaker 02: That costs how much? [00:05:05] Speaker 05: That one's $19, Your Honor. [00:05:06] Speaker 02: And how long does it take? [00:05:07] Speaker 05: on average five to six days, Your Honor. [00:05:09] Speaker 02: How much does a box of ammunition cost? [00:05:12] Speaker 05: I think it depends, Your Honor. [00:05:13] Speaker 05: $13 to $20, something like that? [00:05:18] Speaker 05: Again, it depends. [00:05:19] Speaker 05: I accompanied a friend to purchase ammunition this weekend. [00:05:23] Speaker 05: There were boxes of ammunition, nine millimeter, that were on sale for $12 a box. [00:05:30] Speaker 05: 22 CCIs were a little bit more. [00:05:33] Speaker 02: But I think on that... So if you avail yourself of... [00:05:38] Speaker 02: Faster one for five dollars doesn't work. [00:05:39] Speaker 02: You have to pay more for the background check and for the box of ammunition to get a box You know, I don't know if you I'm sure you listened to the arguments yesterday and you could talk to you And it seemed like a little bit little unclear but it seemed like the state's position there which understands not California's Hawaii Was that abusive it was? [00:05:59] Speaker 02: The abuse have turned on how a state was applying its rules, but that the rules themselves could never be so egregious so as to be abusive. [00:06:09] Speaker 02: Do you understand? [00:06:11] Speaker 02: What's California's position on, can a system be abusive within the meaning of footnote nine if it's based on super high fees or is it only if the state is somehow applying it in a way that makes it abusive? [00:06:26] Speaker 05: Yeah, so I don't want to speak for my colleagues from Hawaii. [00:06:30] Speaker 05: I think there are, maybe if I put it this way, a licensing scheme that imposes high fees and include delays that are not tied to the intrinsic task of determining whether someone is authorized to purchase arms, that might not even fit the definition of a shell issue licensing scheme as contemplated in Bruin itself. [00:06:55] Speaker 05: So a state couldn't slap a label of licensing scheme and say this is a shall issue licensing regime. [00:07:02] Speaker 05: It is per se constitutional or presumptively constitutional and only as applied abusive challenges may arise. [00:07:10] Speaker 02: But I think that in the content to be accurate to say that your position is that. [00:07:14] Speaker 02: If it wouldn't pass something like rational basis review, then it would be abusive? [00:07:20] Speaker 05: No, Your Honor. [00:07:21] Speaker 05: If the system itself is not designed to ensure only that those possessing or keeping arms in a jurisdiction are authorized to do so. [00:07:29] Speaker 05: So if the state were to come up with a regime and called it a licensing scheme, but imposed delays of, let's say, a year. [00:07:38] Speaker 05: And that delay was not at all tied to the state's task. [00:07:41] Speaker 02: Isn't there evidence that [00:07:43] Speaker 02: About 11% of people, 50,000 people didn't get ammunition. [00:07:48] Speaker 02: You said they weren't denied. [00:07:49] Speaker 02: I guess if they're not denied, they're just being delayed. [00:07:51] Speaker 02: So it might be accurate to call that being delayed. [00:07:54] Speaker 02: And I think there's something about a significant number, maybe a majority of those still had not gotten any ammunition within six months. [00:08:00] Speaker 02: So you said a year just now. [00:08:02] Speaker 02: Does six months count or has it got to be a year? [00:08:04] Speaker 05: Well, of course, it was 60% more able to actually acquire ammunition within six months after initial rejection from [00:08:11] Speaker 05: The standard check 60 or 16 60 your honor. [00:08:16] Speaker 05: So a majority of individuals who are the 11% correct. [00:08:21] Speaker 02: That leaves about 5% I'm doing my math right that couldn't get it and you know what percentage of the 5% actually were prohibited for some objective reason. [00:08:31] Speaker 05: No, we know your honor. [00:08:32] Speaker 02: We don't have so like 20 if I'm doing my math right. [00:08:35] Speaker 02: That's over 20,000 people. [00:08:38] Speaker 05: Your Honor, millions have been able to successfully acquire ammunition in the state under the standard check. [00:08:43] Speaker 02: That's a little bit like, if this is a constitutional right, that's a little bit like saying millions of people have been able to speak. [00:08:47] Speaker 02: We're only saying that like these particular group of people can't speak. [00:08:51] Speaker 02: You know, that doesn't seem to help. [00:08:52] Speaker 05: And certainly anyone who is denied the opportunity to acquire ammunition after trying the standard check, perhaps not [00:09:00] Speaker 05: you know, going through the basic check in the five to six days that it takes for the state to run through the databases. [00:09:06] Speaker 05: If an individual is still unable to acquire ammunition, [00:09:10] Speaker 05: and can demonstrate that they're not otherwise prohibited from doing so, then as applied, challenges remain for those individuals to challenge the system. [00:09:20] Speaker 05: But the system itself is designed to ensure only that those purchasing ammunition in the states are authorized to do so. [00:09:27] Speaker 05: And the system is designed to use a database that is connected to what is the protected act of acquiring ammunition or the portion of the act that is protected, which is [00:09:39] Speaker 05: requiring ammunition to make their arms operable. [00:09:42] Speaker 05: In the state of California, the individuals that have arms are, for the large part, in the database that is the automated firearm system. [00:09:50] Speaker 09: Can you address the frequency and whether that's abusive? [00:09:54] Speaker 09: Because if you get one type of check, it's valid for 30 days, but only one purchase. [00:10:00] Speaker 09: So if you do two purchases within 30 days, [00:10:03] Speaker 09: That's out. [00:10:04] Speaker 09: And then if you did a purchase last week, you've got to do it all over again. [00:10:08] Speaker 09: And if it was a basic check that took a week, you've got to do it all over again every time. [00:10:11] Speaker 09: What is the justification for having this? [00:10:13] Speaker 09: Do people suddenly commit felonies? [00:10:16] Speaker 09: Like, you're worried they actually, like, became a felon who's no longer eligible within a week? [00:10:23] Speaker 05: Sure, I mean there are other reasons for ineligibility as well, so domestic violence restraining orders, red flag laws, mental health concerns. [00:10:30] Speaker 09: Do you have any data on how frequently people fall into those categories that you have to have this every snapshot multiple times potentially a month or a year? [00:10:41] Speaker 05: I don't have that data, Your Honor. [00:10:43] Speaker 05: But I guess stepping back, the question about the frequency and whether it makes ammunition point of sale background checks meaningfully different than the shell issue licensing regimes endorsed by the Supreme Court is both a record-based one and then a legal one. [00:10:58] Speaker 05: So the record-based one is the question that Your Honor asked is, if the frequency is such that an individual is going in to buy ammunition every day, then what does the background check accomplish? [00:11:10] Speaker 05: But plaintiffs have not established anything in this record that establishes that sort of frequency. [00:11:15] Speaker 05: And in fact, in the New York State Firearms Association versus James case out of New York that addressed New York's similar ammunition background regime, the plaintiffs there entered in a declaration that suggested that the average gun owner in America purchases about 100 rounds a year. [00:11:32] Speaker 05: That would equate to 250 round boxes. [00:11:35] Speaker 05: If there are 20 round boxes, five of them. [00:11:39] Speaker 05: That frequency is not any meaningfully different or constitutionally different, at least, than the type of licensing regimes that the Supreme Court has endorsed. [00:11:50] Speaker 10: Is there any limit on the amount of ammunition you can buy at one time? [00:11:53] Speaker 10: No, Your Honor. [00:11:55] Speaker 05: And so an individual who would want to have 100, 1000, 2000 rounds of ammunition can purchase that in one transaction after one successful completion of the background check, whether it's the standard check, basic check, [00:12:11] Speaker 05: or the other mechanisms that the state provides for getting authorization to purchase ammunition. [00:12:16] Speaker 12: You've gotten a number of questions now about how the scheme applies to different categories of purchasers. [00:12:22] Speaker 12: What is the significance of the fact that this is a facial challenge in your view? [00:12:26] Speaker 05: Your Honor, I think the significance of it is that the statistics that Judge Van Dyke had mentioned don't really bear on the facial challenge. [00:12:34] Speaker 05: The question is whether the scheme as designed is abusive, whether the scheme as designed imposes unreasonable delays or exorbitant costs. [00:12:44] Speaker 05: And we don't think that figure demonstrates anything close to the scheme itself being abusive or the scheme itself meaningfully constraining rights protected under the Second Amendment. [00:12:56] Speaker 05: If I can go back to the frequency question, there was the factual record point about how I don't think that the frequency of purchasing ammunition as a factual matter distinguishes background checks from licensing regimes. [00:13:10] Speaker 05: But I also think just as a legal matter, there isn't really a distinction or a constitutionally significant one. [00:13:16] Speaker 05: So licensing regimes, as Footnote 9 describes them, are those designed to ensure that those possessing arms are authorized to do so. [00:13:25] Speaker 05: That is what background checks accomplish as well. [00:13:28] Speaker 09: If someone in California acquires a firearm, goes through a background check, how long do they get to hold that firearm before they need to show their status again to the state of California? [00:13:42] Speaker 05: For carrying licenses, Your Honor, or for the, there is a background check regime that governs the purchase of and acquisition of firearms. [00:13:52] Speaker 05: In many material respects, it is similar and modeled, or the ammunition background check regime is modeled after that. [00:13:59] Speaker 09: So that one, they just buy it and they have it at the home for home protection. [00:14:03] Speaker 09: Would they, at what point do, if any, do they go back to the state for a re-up? [00:14:09] Speaker 05: I don't think there is a re-up in that circumstance. [00:14:15] Speaker 09: But basically, you're saying you could do that because if you can do this for ammunition, you could do that then for possession. [00:14:22] Speaker 09: You could make them come in every month. [00:14:24] Speaker 09: And let's do another one. [00:14:25] Speaker 09: Let's see if you have a domestic restraining order now. [00:14:28] Speaker 09: I mean, the same analogy would apply. [00:14:30] Speaker 05: Right. [00:14:31] Speaker 09: Well, so there's a separate… You just said they were equivalent. [00:14:34] Speaker 05: Well, that's for the point of sale purchase of arms. [00:14:38] Speaker 05: There are other licensing regimes that shall issue licensing schemes that govern the carriage of firearms. [00:14:43] Speaker 09: But if you're correct, you can do this on ammunition purchases, then I take it you could also decide to do background checks. [00:14:52] Speaker 09: Every month, you got to come in and do another background check, and we're going to take your gun away. [00:14:57] Speaker 05: Well, there is an armed prohibited person database that is updated by the state to alert law enforcement to instances in which someone who possesses an arm is no longer authorized to do so. [00:15:08] Speaker 09: But I think that there are other- They won't do that for ammunition. [00:15:11] Speaker 09: They purchase ammunition, and if you could approve them, and then if you find out that there's a problem, you could then flag them as a prohibited person, and they would be caught in the standard check. [00:15:24] Speaker 05: Right, but there's no difference in terms of the frequency with respect to purchase. [00:15:28] Speaker 05: So every time you purchase a firearm, you have to establish eligibility and go through a background check, point of sale background check. [00:15:35] Speaker 05: when you purchase a firearm in the same way that you do with ammunition. [00:15:38] Speaker 02: Let me see if I can use a hypothetical that will help. [00:15:43] Speaker 02: Shooting, let's say somebody, let's say California have a licensing regime that says, I know you got a gun, you wouldn't got a license to get that, you wouldn't got a background check to get your ammunition, but we want to make sure that you haven't become a felon or a domestic abuser in between the time you did all that. [00:15:58] Speaker 02: Because who knows, you might have a thousand rounds sitting at your house or something. [00:16:01] Speaker 02: So before you go and shoot at a range or anywhere, you have to get a background check. [00:16:07] Speaker 02: So it's just like getting ammo. [00:16:10] Speaker 02: And so if you did that, I think your argument would be that that somehow also would fall within footnote nine, right? [00:16:17] Speaker 02: Because it's a background check, just like firing a firearm is a background check. [00:16:20] Speaker 02: So suddenly, [00:16:21] Speaker 02: That's part of the shall issue regime. [00:16:24] Speaker 02: I'm trying to figure out, it starts to feel like everything is in footnote nine. [00:16:28] Speaker 02: Now instead of the historical, you just have this footnote nine that can grab everything as long as you tie it to a background check. [00:16:34] Speaker 02: Is that, am I missing something or is that basically where your argument leads to? [00:16:39] Speaker 05: I don't think so. [00:16:40] Speaker 05: I think the premise of the question of whether anything can be called a licensing scheme, I would disagree with. [00:16:46] Speaker 02: What about licensing to shoot your firearm? [00:16:48] Speaker 02: You know, you've got a license to own your firearm, you've got a license to have ammunition, but California decides that it's helpful to have people licensed before they go shoot their firearm, because that's when the bad stuff happens, is when you shoot it. [00:17:00] Speaker 05: Right. [00:17:01] Speaker 05: So, I mean, my understanding is if any individual walks into a range or target shooting facility, there is a mechanism for ensuring that you are over age, that you are authorized to shoot. [00:17:14] Speaker 02: If there were an additional... No, but if someone said that you have to get a background check, so the range will just run the background check for you and charge you $5 to $20 in addition to the range fee. [00:17:24] Speaker 02: If they did that, would that fall in footnote nine? [00:17:27] Speaker 05: I don't know if, you know, the question would be, and I think this is the analytical route that Footnote 9 asks, the question would be- I hesitate to ask the question because I don't want to give California ideas, but like, you know, like, if you did that, like, would it fall in Footnote 9? [00:17:43] Speaker 02: I mean, it seems like it would under your rationale. [00:17:47] Speaker 05: Perhaps. [00:17:48] Speaker 05: I mean, if it were a license, if the question is- Sounds funny because you have this label shall issue. [00:17:54] Speaker 02: Right. [00:17:55] Speaker 02: And then we've pulled in ammunition under shell issue. [00:17:58] Speaker 02: That seems so. [00:17:59] Speaker 02: So I don't know. [00:18:00] Speaker 02: It just seems like it's kind of expanding it further than maybe whatever the Supreme Court met by footnote nine, which is already somewhat opaque. [00:18:07] Speaker 05: So I think wherever the analysis would take the sort of check every time someone goes to to shoot at a range or a target facility is [00:18:17] Speaker 05: worlds apart from where we are here. [00:18:19] Speaker 05: And the suggestion that the shell issue licensing regime can't be applied to ammunition and that a more stringent constitutional analysis would be required for ammunition as opposed to arms just doesn't make constitutional sense. [00:18:33] Speaker 05: It can't be reconciled with the plain text of the Second Amendment, nor is it consistent with how this court and the Supreme Court has treated the sort of ancillary rights doctrine. [00:18:44] Speaker 05: But I think the principal question that the court asks when evaluating a regime like California's is, at least with respect to Bruin's discussion of shell issue licensing regimes, is, is it a system that is designed to ensure that those possessing arms are authorized to do so? [00:19:04] Speaker 05: I think unquestionably, California's background check system is a system designed to ensure that those purchasing ammunition are authorized to do so. [00:19:13] Speaker 05: Does it deploy objective, narrow, definite standards? [00:19:17] Speaker 05: It does. [00:19:18] Speaker 05: Is there an unreasonable delay or exorbitant fees in this circumstance or not? [00:19:23] Speaker 05: The delay is tied solely to the time it takes the state to determine that an individual is authorized to purchase arms. [00:19:31] Speaker 05: That link, whether it's necessary to be that close, it is certainly sufficient. [00:19:35] Speaker 05: And here, I would submit that when you have a background check regime where 90% of individuals [00:19:42] Speaker 05: are authorized to purchase ammunition within a minute and under a minute. [00:19:47] Speaker 05: That sort of delay is not the type of delay that's contemplated in the abusive scheme described in footnote nine. [00:19:54] Speaker 05: And then with respect to the fees, your honor, in this case, the fees are by statute tied to the cost, the administrative regulatory enforcement costs for the state to administer the scheme. [00:20:05] Speaker 05: That's in section 30370E, and that limits the amount of fees that the state may impose. [00:20:12] Speaker 05: Now, whatever an exorbitant fee may be and whether it's necessary for the link to be that close, at a minimum, it should be sufficient to establish that the fees in California's ammunition background regime are not unreasonable. [00:20:27] Speaker 05: I do think that the Supreme Court's discussion of shell issue licensing regimes is helpful in evaluating the scheme here and the conclusion that you wouldn't have to go to historical analogs to support the regime. [00:20:41] Speaker 05: As Judge Bybee put it in the panel decision below, there's a slightly different angle to address that, and I know [00:20:49] Speaker 05: As your honor mentioned, the question of meaningful constraints is something that the panel from yesterday is also grappling with. [00:20:55] Speaker 05: I'm happy to address it if the court has any other questions on the meaningful constraint standard. [00:21:00] Speaker 01: How should Justice Scalia's language in Heller inform [00:21:04] Speaker 01: our understanding of footnote nine in Bruin. [00:21:08] Speaker 01: There, Justice Scalia joined by Chief Justice Roberts, Justice Kennedy, Justice Thomas, Justice Alito said nothing in our opinion should be taken to cast doubt on long-standing prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill or laws imposing conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of firearms. [00:21:25] Speaker 01: And then footnote 26 says we identify these presumptively lawful regulatory measures only as examples our list does not purport to be exhaustive. [00:21:35] Speaker 01: How should that inform how we understand footnote 9 and Bruin? [00:21:39] Speaker 05: Your honor, I think that that language is also sort of informed by what the court said in Bruin itself. [00:21:45] Speaker 05: So in Bruin itself, the court said that the standard for applying in the Second Amendment looks first to whether the conduct is protected under the plain text of the Second Amendment. [00:21:56] Speaker 05: And if it is, then you have to go to history to understand certain laws as presumptively lawful. [00:22:02] Speaker 05: So, for example, the conditions and qualifications on commercial sales that your honor mentioned. [00:22:07] Speaker 05: I think the best reading of the way to reconcile that language with what Bruin presents as the text and history framework for the Second Amendment is to understand that there are certain laws like conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of arms that do not implicate the plain text of the Second Amendment. [00:22:29] Speaker 06: And what's the shop are you saying that the acquisition of ammunition, the conduct of acquiring ammunition does not implicate the plain text of the second amendment that is at your position. [00:22:40] Speaker 05: Your honor, we don't dispute the proposition that acquiring ammunition. [00:22:44] Speaker 05: to some extent is covered by the plain text of the Second Amendment, but only to the extent necessary for an individual to exercise their Second Amendment rights. [00:22:54] Speaker 06: So if it's covered by the plain text, then we are supposed to then move to the analysis of a historical analog. [00:23:00] Speaker 05: So I think that the question in this court has not defined the precise scope of the right to acquire ammunition that falls under the Second Amendment's plain text. [00:23:10] Speaker 05: And the question presented in cases like this one and other ones where the meaningful constraint standard is applied is, is the acquisition of ammunition something that falls under the plain text of the Second Amendment? [00:23:22] Speaker 05: If I can illustrate with a hypothetical, because I think not all acts of acquiring ammunition would, I think, [00:23:28] Speaker 05: everyone would agree would not necessarily fall under the plain text of the Second Amendment. [00:23:33] Speaker 05: So if you had, for example, law that required or prohibited purchasers of ammunition that acquired it as collectors or for us wanted to melt it down for the brass and the commodity, the ammunition is not for any Second Amendment purpose. [00:23:53] Speaker 05: I don't think that [00:23:54] Speaker 05: the Second Amendment's plain text would cover that act of acquiring ammunition. [00:23:58] Speaker 06: You're tying it to the language that the conduct at issue is self-defense, the right to keep and bear arms for self-defense. [00:24:07] Speaker 06: So if a person is acquiring ammunition for a firearm for self-defense, then it should be implicated by the plain text of the Second Amendment. [00:24:15] Speaker 05: Right. [00:24:15] Speaker 05: The hypothetical is just meant to illustrate that there are certain acts of acquisition that fall under the scope of the Second Amendment and some that don't. [00:24:23] Speaker 05: And so at least with respect to the plain text. [00:24:26] Speaker 06: If a conduct falls within the plain text of the Second Amendment and there is no historical analog that rebutts the presumption of constitutionality, excuse me, I'm saying this wrong. [00:24:42] Speaker 06: If it falls within the plain text of the Second Amendment and there is no historical analog, you would agree that the regulation at issue is unconstitutional? [00:24:50] Speaker 05: Yes, your honor. [00:24:51] Speaker 06: I mean, I think you would reach that conclusion without doing an as applied facial challenge. [00:24:55] Speaker 06: That would just be the end of the analysis. [00:24:58] Speaker 05: No, the historical analysis would determine whether the state had the authority to issue that regulation. [00:25:03] Speaker 05: And if it's inconsistent with the second amendment and the authority that the state has to encumber or infringe second amendment rights. [00:25:10] Speaker 05: And I don't think there would be a separate player. [00:25:12] Speaker 05: I mean, of course. [00:25:13] Speaker 06: Well, so in Rahimi and Justice Gorsuch's concurrence, he said that the facial analysis, whether the regulation was facially invalid, occurred at the second step. [00:25:25] Speaker 06: It occurred when you're analyzing the historical record and looking for a historical analog. [00:25:29] Speaker 06: Do you agree with that or do you think this this analysis occurs somewhere else? [00:25:33] Speaker 05: Right. [00:25:33] Speaker 05: I mean, in Rahimi itself, there was no question that the conduct was protected by the plain text of the Second Amendment. [00:25:39] Speaker 05: So the court didn't have occasion to address how to determine whether something falls within or outside of the plain text of the Second Amendment. [00:25:47] Speaker 05: So in the context of that case, it made sense to do the facial analysis with respect to the power of the government to disarm certain prohibited persons. [00:25:55] Speaker 05: What the question is in this case is, is the act of ammunition without a background check something that the plain text [00:26:02] Speaker 05: of the Second Amendment covers. [00:26:05] Speaker 05: And if you, I thought Judge Bay's Yukitaki dissent was incredibly helpful in going through the first principles analysis, but the ancillary rights doctrine doesn't protect that act. [00:26:15] Speaker 05: And so the question is, what acts are protected so that they are considered to fall under the plain text? [00:26:22] Speaker 02: But I think, I mean, again, if the court- So just to be clear, just to try to pin down, is your position, because I thought Judge Baia said this in his shiitake sin. [00:26:30] Speaker 02: I can't remember. [00:26:31] Speaker 02: Judge Baia probably did in this case. [00:26:34] Speaker 02: The your view would be yes, acquiring ammunition can fall and require their stroke, but only if the way we are putting friction or transaction costs on acquiring the ammunition effectively eliminate your ability to acquire ammunition. [00:26:50] Speaker 02: So and up and to the point to where [00:26:52] Speaker 02: That you you we've effectively eliminated your once we effectively eliminated then I think I'm understanding correctly you would agree that that pushes you into ruin step two if you want to call is that that correct. [00:27:04] Speaker 05: Yeah, I don't know that the court has said that that is the only way to trigger historical analysis. [00:27:10] Speaker 02: I think you probably heard me ask this essay, what short of effectively eliminated, how much drag do you have to put on acquiring ammunition before suddenly, you know, another way of asking that is what counts as a meaningful constraint, right? [00:27:25] Speaker 05: So the court has not defined what is a meaningful constraint, but I think that there are two polls that the court's cases establish on the one hand, if a regulation does not impede an individual from exercising their second amendment rights at all. [00:27:38] Speaker 02: So that would be to share a B and L. Let me just ask you, practically speaking, for those 11% of people that walk in to buy ammunition and walk out with no ammunition, let's get rid of anybody that's actually prohibited, the 100 people or so that are actually prohibited out of that 50,000, [00:27:54] Speaker 02: Would you do you think they've been meaningfully constrained those 50 50,000 minus or not? [00:28:00] Speaker 05: No, I mean the meaningful constraints analysis is whether the regulation itself as a facial matter It you know it meaningfully constrains an individual's exercise of their Second Amendment rights those individuals may have it 50% of people like what if what if they just your your background check thing was flipping a coin and 50% of people [00:28:22] Speaker 02: Didn't get didn't get didn't get Would you would that be a meaningful constraint? [00:28:28] Speaker 05: Well, I think the first question to ask is in that context would be like especially if we're talking about a licensing scheme is if it's a [00:28:38] Speaker 05: coin flip, is it actually meaningfully addressing whether someone is? [00:28:41] Speaker 02: Yeah, that'd be irrational, so maybe not a coin flip, but, you know, 11% just, I guess what I'm getting at is 11% sounds like a really high error rate for most processes, you know, and so, but you're saying 11% is not high enough to be a meaningful constraint. [00:28:52] Speaker 02: I'm trying to figure out how high would it have to be to be a meaningful constraint? [00:28:56] Speaker 02: Like, would it have to be 50%? [00:29:00] Speaker 05: I don't know, but wherever that number would be, I don't think... It's somewhere north of 11 percent, isn't it? [00:29:05] Speaker 05: Well, and when you have a system that has allowed literally millions of ammunition transactions to proceed... I don't understand that argument, though, because there's... California's a very populous state. [00:29:14] Speaker 02: There's tons and tons of people here. [00:29:16] Speaker 02: So that would turn, like, Montana, if you were Montana, you wouldn't have literally millions, because Montana doesn't have literally millions of people that live in it. [00:29:24] Speaker 02: That argument seems to turn on the populist nature of California. [00:29:28] Speaker 02: Right. [00:29:28] Speaker 05: Well, even if you don't look at direct numbers, the percentage of individuals that are able to get- Is 89%. [00:29:36] Speaker 05: Right. [00:29:36] Speaker 05: Which seems kind of- There's a hyper majority of individuals are able, and that's the standard check, Your Honor. [00:29:40] Speaker 05: There is also available for individuals that are not able to go through the standard check to proceed through the basic check. [00:29:48] Speaker 05: And again, the delay there, the five to six days that it takes for the state to confirm that an individual is authorized to purchase ammunition. [00:29:55] Speaker 05: is a delay attendant to going through the four different databases and confirming an individual is authorized to do so. [00:30:02] Speaker 06: Something that I've been curious about, I'm not sure it's going to make a difference, but there was a proposition, a voter passed proposition in California, I think it was Proposition 63, that was in 2016, with this notion of the background check for ammunition [00:30:20] Speaker 06: And that proposition required a $50 fee and it provided a permit that was good for four years and was renewable or could also be revoked for specific reasons. [00:30:31] Speaker 06: But then the legislature changed it to this sort of articulated scheme with multiple different ways. [00:30:35] Speaker 06: 18 hours that ammunition purchase was authorized, 30 day, you know, all the different mechanisms. [00:30:43] Speaker 06: Why did that happen and how did California justify why the voter approved $50 permit that lasted for four years was not sufficient for its stated goal of keeping ammunition out of the hands of prohibited possessors? [00:30:55] Speaker 05: So it was Proposition 63 that was put before the voters, and some 63 percent of the California voters enacted it. [00:31:02] Speaker 05: In that ballot proposition itself was reflected the notion that the California legislature planned to pre-amend the proposition. [00:31:10] Speaker 05: So voters were aware that the licensing scheme would become a point-of-sale background check scheme. [00:31:18] Speaker 05: And for many of the reasons that in my earlier colloquy about the differences and whether there's a meaningful or material difference between licensing schemes and point of sale background checks, I don't think that it's constitutionally significant. [00:31:33] Speaker 05: Both the licensing scheme and the point of sale background check are designed to confirm that an individual purchasing ammunition is authorized to do so. [00:31:42] Speaker 05: And the fact that technologically, it's more feasible that there are immediate mechanisms for confirming eligibility at the point of sale shouldn't make that regime more constitutionally suspect. [00:31:56] Speaker 05: Thank you. [00:31:57] Speaker 05: Thank you, Your Honor. [00:32:15] Speaker 00: Good afternoon, Your Honors, and may it please the Court, Erin Murphy, on behalf of the plaintiffs. [00:32:20] Speaker 00: California is one of only two states in the nation that requires individuals to obtain the government's permission every time they want to purchase the ammunition necessary to render their firearms operable. [00:32:33] Speaker 00: That novel onerous and error-ridden regime cannot be reconciled with the Second Amendment. [00:32:38] Speaker 00: Now, I'm happy to talk about why we think it implicates the Second Amendment, wholly apart from any of these other [00:32:43] Speaker 00: You know, this court's meaningful constraints test and all of the issues that were discussed at some length yesterday, but perhaps it would be helpful if I start by talking about footnote nine and why I don't think it's the right place to look here and why I don't think it does anything to immunize this particular regime from constitutional scrutiny. [00:33:00] Speaker 00: First, footnote nine was about a particular thing, a license to carry a firearm. [00:33:07] Speaker 00: The court wasn't addressing background checks in the abstract and saying you can have them anytime, anywhere, in any way you want. [00:33:13] Speaker 00: It was dealing with the particular question in a case about permits to carry a concealed weapon. [00:33:20] Speaker 09: But if you claim that the ammunition is coextensively protected with the arms for purposes of the Second Amendment, [00:33:29] Speaker 09: then I don't see how you don't have to equally concede that for purposes of footnote nine, background checks for one or the other would be permissible, and then the question would be whether it's abusive and what are the criteria for abuse. [00:33:45] Speaker 00: So I definitely want to get to abusive, but I would like to make the point first that the problem with this regime vis-a-vis footnote nine is not just that it's about ammunition, it's not a licensing regime. [00:33:55] Speaker 00: This isn't a licensing regime. [00:33:57] Speaker 00: You're not getting a license to engage in the activity of purchasing ammunition. [00:34:01] Speaker 00: To the extent you are, it's a license that lasts 18 hours, which looks nothing like any kind of licensing regime anywhere in history or even today. [00:34:15] Speaker 09: point of sale for a firearm purchase background check? [00:34:19] Speaker 00: I think it's highly relevant to that question, but it didn't directly address it. [00:34:22] Speaker 00: That's not what Footnote 9 was about. [00:34:24] Speaker 00: The court was not dealing with point of sale requirements. [00:34:27] Speaker 00: It was dealing with licensing regimes. [00:34:30] Speaker 00: And that is different. [00:34:31] Speaker 00: So I think you'd have to do the work to explain how Footnote 9 gets you from a licensing regime to a point of sale requirement. [00:34:40] Speaker 00: So that's the first problem the state has here. [00:34:42] Speaker 00: But even setting that aside, this law, the reason this law is put to abuse... Can I ask you? [00:34:49] Speaker 01: I read the language in Heller, that's 2008. [00:34:51] Speaker 01: In 2010, Justice Alito, joined by Chief Justice Roberts, Justice Scalia, and Justice Kennedy basically repeated those assurances that laws imposing conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of firearms [00:35:06] Speaker 01: were presumptively lawful. [00:35:09] Speaker 01: So this footnote nine is actually coming along a history for 14 years of, and we can go through the list of who signed on to footnote nine. [00:35:19] Speaker 01: That was authored by Justice Thomas, joined by Justice Kavanaugh, Chief Justice Roberts, Justice Alito, Justice Gorsuch, Justice Barrett. [00:35:28] Speaker 01: So you have so many Supreme Court justices saying we think that laws imposing conditions of qualifications on the commercial sale of firearms are presumptively lawful for 14 years. [00:35:39] Speaker 00: Actually that's not what that's not quite what Heller said and not quite what any decision census said. [00:35:44] Speaker 01: I'm quoting the language. [00:35:44] Speaker 00: it says long standing it starts with long standing long standing before any of the items in the list and that's important because with that word long standing this isn't some inexplicable language that nobody could understand why in the world the court just you know picked out three things and said they're okay with long standing that dicta inhaler that's carried forward [00:36:06] Speaker 00: actually maps on to the historical analysis that is happening in Heller and it maps onto the Bruin test, the court is saying, when it comes to certain long-standing laws... But these background checks are trying to prohibit the possession of firearms by felons and mentally ill. [00:36:23] Speaker 01: Sure, but... And that is explicitly in all of these cases. [00:36:27] Speaker 01: McDonald, they're all saying this explicit language and isn't that what a background check effectively does? [00:36:35] Speaker 00: The court has never said you can do anything and everything you want to do so long as it's in service of keeping people who shouldn't own firearms from owning firearms. [00:36:43] Speaker 00: Rahimi basically said the opposite when Rahimi said it, reiterated. [00:36:47] Speaker 00: that part of historical tradition analysis is asking whether in service of a permissible end, a permissible why, you've burdened the right to a greater degree than is consistent with historical tradition. [00:37:00] Speaker 00: So sure, the court has established that laws that are aimed at keeping firearms out of the hands of people who shouldn't have them are attempting to accomplish something that's permissible and consistent with historical tradition. [00:37:11] Speaker 09: There can't be. [00:37:12] Speaker 09: a historical tradition of background checks because until fingerprints in computerized systems, and I recognize this isn't a fingerprint-based system in this case, but at least until you have computerized systems, you can't really do effective background checks. [00:37:27] Speaker 09: They couldn't do them in the 17 days and look up all the court records. [00:37:31] Speaker 09: So there can't be a historical, there can't be the analysis that we do to evaluate a background check. [00:37:36] Speaker 00: I disagree, because I actually think the question that you would ask is, okay, background checks, they do reflect a change in technology. [00:37:44] Speaker 00: So, of course, you couldn't have literally had the kind of background checks you have today back in, you know, whether you think it's 1789, 1868, whatever it is. [00:37:52] Speaker 00: But you ask, are the kinds of background checks that are happening today consistent with things that were done historically, consistent with the technology that existed then? [00:38:01] Speaker 00: And what I think that you would look to, [00:38:03] Speaker 00: and try and support the tradition. [00:38:05] Speaker 00: I mean, background checks have been around for firearms for well over 100 years. [00:38:08] Speaker 00: It's just nobody until California a few years ago ever thought about extending them to ammunition. [00:38:13] Speaker 00: But so as soon as that technology came online, it did start to become something that was utilized. [00:38:18] Speaker 00: And it's consistent. [00:38:19] Speaker 00: I think the argument, I think there's a very fair argument to make that it's consistent with historical licensing regimes. [00:38:25] Speaker 00: Licensing regimes are an effort to impose that kind of prophylactic upfront restriction to say, [00:38:31] Speaker 00: we're going to make sure you should be able to do something before we let you do it. [00:38:35] Speaker 00: And so you take from that tradition and say, you know, now there's new technology that allows us to do that better than people were able to do it 150 years ago. [00:38:43] Speaker 00: The fact that that's different technology doesn't mean that you can't have any historical basis for it. [00:38:48] Speaker 00: That's what I take Rahimi to be talking about when the court's saying we can look for a tradition and then apply the tradition thinking about new ways, new technology that have allowed that tradition to be implemented differently than perhaps it was. [00:39:01] Speaker 11: Is the question here whether this licensing scheme is similar to licensing schemes in history for arms or do we have to look for a licensing scheme for ammunition? [00:39:09] Speaker 00: So I think you'd have, because it's the ammunition, you'd have to ask the question, does that make a difference? [00:39:15] Speaker 00: Is there a historical basis that supports extending to what was done well? [00:39:20] Speaker 11: This all is up on Judge Collins' question, that if you think that ammunition is covered by the reference to arms in the Second Amendment, then it seems like it ought to be the same principle that apply either to the purchase of arms, a point of sale, [00:39:33] Speaker 11: restrictions on purchases of arms and purchases of ammunition. [00:39:36] Speaker 00: I am given the fact that it's conceded here that no one had ever done this until 2019. [00:39:42] Speaker 00: I think you have to take a little bit of time to look at the historical tradition and ask, yeah, they were arms, but did society tolerate the greater burden on the right of essentially requiring you to re-up every single time you needed ammunition? [00:39:56] Speaker 00: Is there a historical tradition in this country of imposing restrictions on ammunition independent from [00:40:02] Speaker 00: the firearm, saying even though you can have the firearm, even though you have a license to carry it, you can't carry it loaded until you come get another license, or you come get another background check, and there's no historical tradition of that. [00:40:13] Speaker 11: So that would be a restriction on carrying, and that's a whole different... Keeping as well. [00:40:16] Speaker 00: You can't keep a firearm loaded in your house if you can't get ammunition. [00:40:20] Speaker 00: So it all comes back to the same point. [00:40:23] Speaker 00: Basically, it was, well, when you buy a firearm, that doesn't mean you can have any ammunition. [00:40:27] Speaker 00: All we meant is you can have a firearm in your house. [00:40:29] Speaker 00: If you want ammunition, that's a whole other story. [00:40:31] Speaker 00: That's the tradition that they would need to prove to extend all of this to the realm of ammunition. [00:40:37] Speaker 00: And there's just no support for that whatsoever. [00:40:39] Speaker 00: So we do think the better answer is that, as the panel here concluded, that you just can't have these kind of ammunition check regimes. [00:40:46] Speaker 00: But I do want to take a few moments to talk about why, even if you thought you could have them, [00:40:50] Speaker 00: This particular regime falls within the abusive ends aspect of footnote nine. [00:40:55] Speaker 00: And that's because this regime on its face instructs, requires, requires the state to deprive people of their constitutional right simply because they are not in a database that the state admits is not a comprehensive database of who can or cannot possess ammunition. [00:41:13] Speaker 00: So on its face, subsection B of 370, the law says, if you are not in the AFS system, the state shall deny your transaction. [00:41:24] Speaker 00: It shall deprive you of your constitutional right, even though everyone knows and the state will admit that the fact that you're in that database says absolutely nothing about whether you are prohibited from possessing ammunition. [00:41:37] Speaker 11: And that's a problem that carries over not just... How is that not a problem that would be [00:41:41] Speaker 11: that would be true of any licensing scheme as well for firearms. [00:41:44] Speaker 00: Oh, the state, this is what's quite different about this regime from the state's firearm regime. [00:41:48] Speaker 00: The state has a regime for firearm background checks that says you have to do an actual check and you cannot deprive the person of the firearm unless they fail the background check. [00:41:58] Speaker 11: And even under California law, even if in 30 days- Right, but if you fail the background check, then the state has deprived you of your Second Amendment rights. [00:42:06] Speaker 11: If you're not in the appropriate database or you haven't filled out your information correctly, [00:42:10] Speaker 00: They don't do that for firearms. [00:42:11] Speaker 00: For firearms, they cannot deprive you of the right to purchase the firearm unless you actually fail and you are a prohibited person. [00:42:18] Speaker 00: They have to prove that you're a prohibited person. [00:42:20] Speaker 00: And if they can't prove that in 30 days, under California law, if they can't prove that in 30 days, they have to give you the firearm. [00:42:26] Speaker 00: Under federal law, it's under three days. [00:42:27] Speaker 00: So they cannot say you can't have the firearm just because we don't know if you're prohibited. [00:42:32] Speaker 00: They can only say you can't have it if you are prohibited. [00:42:35] Speaker 00: This regime on its face says no. [00:42:37] Speaker 00: we can prohibit you from purchasing the ammunition even though we have no idea if you're prohibited from doing so. [00:42:43] Speaker 09: Can I ask a technical question about how the two systems work? [00:42:48] Speaker 09: In the standard system, as I understand it, it looks to see if you're on the AFOs and not being on that is alone enough to get out, but then also [00:42:59] Speaker 09: It cross-references the prohibited armed persons file, and I take it if you're in that, you're also out. [00:43:05] Speaker 09: But how does the prohibited armed persons file that's consulted for the standard check differ from the four databases that are checked for the basic check? [00:43:15] Speaker 00: Sure, so what's happening in the prohibited person system is essentially the state is four people that it knows or has been knows based on records has reason to think only fire in California. [00:43:28] Speaker 00: It takes that information it gets from those four it runs their information against those four databases routinely and will update them and put them on that armed prohibited persons list if they [00:43:40] Speaker 00: if they're prohibited by virtue of one of those four databases. [00:43:44] Speaker 00: But the state doesn't do that for everyone. [00:43:46] Speaker 00: It only does that if you're on the AFS database list, which you're only on if you happen to have recorded a firearm transaction with California. [00:43:55] Speaker 00: So the state knows that the fact that you're not on AFS doesn't mean that you're prohibited from possessing a firearm. [00:44:00] Speaker 00: It just means you're not in California's database. [00:44:03] Speaker 09: Are there people who are on one of the four databases as prohibited person for purposes of basic who were not on the prohibited armed persons file used for the standard? [00:44:15] Speaker 00: Sure, there could be, yes. [00:44:16] Speaker 00: If you are prohibited but have never purchased a firearm in California and had that transaction recorded in AFS, you're not going to be on the armed prohibited persons list because they're only adding people to that list if those people are already on the AFS list. [00:44:32] Speaker 00: So it's running the same process but not creating a comprehensive. [00:44:37] Speaker 09: is a subset of the AFS list. [00:44:40] Speaker 09: Yes. [00:44:41] Speaker 09: Exclusively. [00:44:42] Speaker 09: There's no one on that list who's not on AFS. [00:44:44] Speaker 09: And that's the difference between the four. [00:44:46] Speaker 09: Okay. [00:44:46] Speaker 00: And the critical thing, if you look at subsection B of 370, which is dealing with the standard check, it says two different things. [00:44:53] Speaker 00: It says, if the purchase, you know, if they fail the, you know, if they're prohibited, we all agree, if they're prohibited, they can't purchase. [00:45:00] Speaker 00: But before that, it says, if their information does not match an AFS entry, the transaction shall be denied. [00:45:06] Speaker 00: So the law says you can't exercise the right simply because you're not a match in this system. [00:45:12] Speaker 00: It doesn't say if you're not in the system, the state must go on to check another database. [00:45:16] Speaker 09: It doesn't tell you anything about whether you're a prohibited person. [00:45:18] Speaker 00: It tells you nothing, and the law doesn't say, you know. [00:45:21] Speaker 00: If you couldn't make a determination in the standard check, move on to the basic check. [00:45:26] Speaker 00: If you can't make a determination there, you have to give them the firearm. [00:45:29] Speaker 00: It says deny it. [00:45:32] Speaker 00: And if the citizen wants to try again, they can try again. [00:45:35] Speaker 00: Who knows if they're going to be able to get through if they haven't managed to fix the missing hyphen or whatever it is in their AFS record. [00:45:42] Speaker 00: They get deprived of their right all over again. [00:45:45] Speaker 12: And this actually- And you want us to say that because that's a possibility that could happen to some people or maybe [00:45:50] Speaker 12: 11% of people that the law is unconstitutional on its face? [00:45:53] Speaker 00: I think that's a facial problem with the law that renders the law facially abusive. [00:45:57] Speaker 00: The possibility that in some cases... The fact that the law specifically permits the state to deprive people of a constitutional right for a completely arbitrary reason. [00:46:09] Speaker 12: Any law that in some applications will deprive people of their rights is a law. [00:46:15] Speaker 12: that can be applied. [00:46:16] Speaker 00: I don't think that's quite true. [00:46:19] Speaker 00: It's a different thing entirely when you have a law that says the reasons you can be deprived of your constitutional right include the fact that we don't have a very good database. [00:46:30] Speaker 00: I mean, if that's not what the court meant by abusive, I don't know what is. [00:46:35] Speaker 01: How is that a facial challenge? [00:46:37] Speaker 01: How is that a facial challenge? [00:46:38] Speaker 01: You're relying on facts that are outside the room. [00:46:41] Speaker 01: I'm looking through the complaint. [00:46:42] Speaker 01: I don't even see, and this complaint was filed before the background check went into effect, about a year before. [00:46:47] Speaker 01: 2018 background check went into effect July 1 of 2019. [00:46:51] Speaker 01: So you have no plaintiffs here who've actually been denied [00:46:53] Speaker 01: access to any ammunition, and I don't see in this complaint any allegation that the databases are flawed. [00:47:00] Speaker 01: So you're saying it's a facial challenge, but you're actually relying on things outside the text. [00:47:06] Speaker 01: And in Nwinvibanta, we said for a facial challenge, you consider only the text of the statute, but you're relying on external text material to find [00:47:16] Speaker 00: I'm actually not. [00:47:17] Speaker 00: It's right there in the statute. [00:47:19] Speaker 00: Nobody disputes that the AFSN system doesn't... Where does it say that databases are flawed? [00:47:25] Speaker 00: It doesn't say they're flawed. [00:47:27] Speaker 00: They're not comprehensive. [00:47:29] Speaker 00: That's why that line is there, to say, we know that there are some people who just won't be a match in the system, just because the system doesn't have everyone in it. [00:47:39] Speaker 03: So, counsel, somebody who... [00:47:42] Speaker 03: Knows that their information does match an AFS entry can still bring a facial challenge Sure, because they have standing because I mean all of our clients have to pay a lot more money now because of this system that they believe Violates their second amendment rights they clearly have article 3 standing a shall challenge to the provision that says for example if the purchasers or transfer is information does not match an AFS entry and [00:48:09] Speaker 03: the transaction shall be denied, they can bring a facial challenge even though they know, for example, that their information does match an AFS entry. [00:48:19] Speaker 00: So we have two different arguments here and we have plaintiffs who have standing to assert both of them. [00:48:24] Speaker 00: So we certainly have a, you know, a first cut strong form argument that you can't have this kind of regime at all. [00:48:29] Speaker 00: and all of our plaintiffs have standing to raise a facial challenge on the ground that the historical tradition forecloses ammunition background check regimes. [00:48:38] Speaker 00: We also have evidence and we have an associational client who represents numerous members who put in declarations about how they were precluded from getting ammunition because of this problem. [00:48:50] Speaker 00: because they couldn't get their records fixed. [00:48:53] Speaker 00: It took them months on end to try. [00:48:55] Speaker 00: We have a declaration from one member who never got them fixed and just gave up because he couldn't figure out what the heck to do even after consulting a lawyer. [00:49:03] Speaker 11: So you're telling us that your second argument is an as-applied challenge? [00:49:06] Speaker 00: It's not an as-applied challenge because it's based on a problem that's inherent in the regime. [00:49:11] Speaker 00: And this is the thing that makes this really a facial issue. [00:49:13] Speaker 11: Right, but if we don't, but I thought you were relying on members who said that they were precluded. [00:49:18] Speaker 00: for purposes of a standing argument, but our argument is not as applied because the relief we're ultimately seeking is facial relief. [00:49:25] Speaker 00: We don't think that you can have a regime that bakes into it. [00:49:28] Speaker 09: What are the substantive criteria for determining abusiveness? [00:49:32] Speaker 09: Because that may affect whether it's facial or not. [00:49:34] Speaker 00: I think that one of the substantive criteria for determining abusiveness ought to be if the regime, by design, deprives people of their rights for reasons having nothing to do with eligibility to exercise them. [00:49:45] Speaker 11: That seems to me to be even more important than asking whether a regime... Counsel, did California design its regime with that purpose in mind, or is that a byproduct, is that a possibility? [00:49:56] Speaker 00: It is a result of the rejection of Proposition 63. [00:50:00] Speaker 00: This would not have happened under Proposition 63. [00:50:03] Speaker 11: Prop 63 is not before us. [00:50:04] Speaker 11: We've got this law, and now I'm trying to figure out whether you've got anybody who has actually been, whether on its face the system is designed to reject people for reasons that are not relevant. [00:50:18] Speaker 00: It plainly is. [00:50:19] Speaker 00: The words of it say that. [00:50:20] Speaker 00: The words of it say deny somebody their right solely because they're not in the database. [00:50:25] Speaker 00: That reason has nothing to do with eligibility to exercise Second Amendment rights. [00:50:30] Speaker 00: On the face of it, it says you can deny it. [00:50:32] Speaker 00: You shall deny, shall deny the transaction just because you're not in the database. [00:50:38] Speaker 04: Counsel, is there any way they could have a database that would not create a constitutional [00:50:44] Speaker 00: So I think that, I mean, obviously we have a stronger form argument that we think these types of regimes are completely unconstitutional, but I think this would be a much harder case for purposes of this, like, abusive ends analysis if the state had stuck with something like Proposition 63. [00:51:02] Speaker 00: Because what Proposition 63 said is that the state had to create [00:51:06] Speaker 00: a database of all the people who were eligible to purchase ammunition. [00:51:11] Speaker 00: And then you could get that four-year card that says, I'm in that database. [00:51:16] Speaker 00: And if you did that, if the state created a comprehensive database, at least you wouldn't have this problem. [00:51:21] Speaker 09: But what the... Suppose they just, they had the standard check, but they got rid of the AFS feature and they just had the feature that the sale of the ammunition is disallowed if you're on the prohibited persons list. [00:51:35] Speaker 09: Would that be unconstitutional? [00:51:37] Speaker 00: I mean, the problem is it doesn't work because the state will come up here and tell you that wouldn't capture all the people who are prohibited. [00:51:45] Speaker 00: No, I understand. [00:51:46] Speaker 00: It could be under-inclusive. [00:51:48] Speaker 00: Under our abusive ends argument, that regime would probably be fine. [00:51:52] Speaker 00: Now we might still have an argument about, you know, we obviously do have an argument about whether we think the state can make people re-up over and over and over again every time they get ammunition. [00:52:00] Speaker 00: But I don't think you'd have the same abusive problem if you just said, look, we've got a database of prohibited persons. [00:52:06] Speaker 00: We're going to run and check whether you're on it. [00:52:08] Speaker 00: If you are, you can't possess ammunition. [00:52:10] Speaker 00: But if you're not, we're not going to say, we don't really know if you can possess it, so we're just going to deny you anyway. [00:52:16] Speaker 00: That's the problem. [00:52:17] Speaker 00: And again, I mean, even California's own licensing regimes, there's no other licensing regimes that say, [00:52:22] Speaker 00: that you can deny the right even if you haven't made a determination that the person's a prohibited person. [00:52:28] Speaker 00: They say the opposite. [00:52:29] Speaker 00: They all say you have X amount of time to make the determination. [00:52:33] Speaker 00: And if you can't make the determination by then, you have to let the person exercise the right. [00:52:39] Speaker 00: You can continue to investigate them. [00:52:41] Speaker 00: If you find out they're prohibited, you could come confiscate their arms. [00:52:44] Speaker 00: But at a certain point, if the tie doesn't go to the state's background check regime, it goes to the citizen. [00:52:50] Speaker 00: Yet this regime imposes no limit ever on the state's ability to keep running this check. [00:52:56] Speaker 00: And in fact, the regulations say that if at the end of the basic check the state can't figure out whether you're eligible, it must deny. [00:53:04] Speaker 00: It denies. [00:53:05] Speaker 00: So the tie here goes to the state. [00:53:07] Speaker 00: That is all incompatible with the way licensing regimes have operated and background check regimes have operated in this country. [00:53:13] Speaker 00: for a century. [00:53:14] Speaker 00: So this really is a truly outlier regime, not just in the fact that it's coming at ammunition, but in the way it was structured and the way that the state decided that it was going to essentially create a regime without creating the comprehensive database necessary to run the background checks. [00:53:34] Speaker 04: First of all, do you believe that our BNL decision is consistent with the Second Amendment and Supreme Court precedent? [00:53:42] Speaker 04: And secondly, do we have to reach that in order to rule in your favor? [00:53:46] Speaker 00: Setting aside the bottom line holding of BNL, I think the reasoning of BNL in terms of the meaningful constraints test is incorrect. [00:53:54] Speaker 00: I think the right way to analyze under is to follow what the Supreme Court said in Rahimi. [00:53:59] Speaker 00: The court said in no uncertain terms that if a law regulates arms bearing conduct, the state bears the burden of proving that it's constitutional. [00:54:08] Speaker 00: It didn't say prohibits, nearly prohibits, imposes a law of substantial burden, a meaningful burden, none of that. [00:54:14] Speaker 00: The court said, [00:54:15] Speaker 00: More than once, if it regulates arms bearing conduct, you go to historical tradition. [00:54:20] Speaker 00: I think that is the right test. [00:54:22] Speaker 00: I don't think it's any different as to conditions and qualifications. [00:54:25] Speaker 00: There too, all the questions about whether it's a permissible burden, whether it's a permissible how, why should happen under historical tradition. [00:54:33] Speaker 00: Now, I don't think for purposes of this case, I think you can resolve this case in our favor on a couple of paths without overruling that. [00:54:41] Speaker 00: For one, this court has never said in it, I don't think, I don't read any of this court's opinions to say that an across the board restriction on the ability to access arms isn't a meaningful constraint. [00:54:53] Speaker 00: Obviously, Yucataki, you're reconsidering, but the panel in Yucataki drew exactly that line, and the panel in Wynn drew exactly that line. [00:55:00] Speaker 00: And that's consistent with the line that Rahimi drew, because Rahimi said there's a difference between laws that impose restrictions on particular people and laws that impose front-end restrictions on everybody's ability to exercise the right. [00:55:13] Speaker 11: Council, just following up on the BNL question just a little bit. [00:55:16] Speaker 11: There are a series of circuits, second, fourth, fifth, sixth, tenth, [00:55:21] Speaker 11: that have addressed either BNL or something like BNL. [00:55:25] Speaker 11: And it looks to me that most of those circuits, although they've varied slightly in their language and their approach, are pretty sympathetic to BNL. [00:55:31] Speaker 11: do you have any of the circuit that's gone the other way? [00:55:33] Speaker 00: Well, so I'd take issue with a couple of the ones on your list because while McCrory sounded more like B&L, the Fifth Circuit said pretty different things. [00:55:40] Speaker 00: There's ways of distinguishing McCrory and I think the Tenth Circuit, Ortega, Rocky Mountain sounded like a little more like B&L and Ortega sure didn't sound like B&L since it applied historical tradition to [00:55:53] Speaker 00: But I think I read the Sixth Circuit as embracing our position. [00:55:57] Speaker 00: In which case? [00:55:58] Speaker 00: The Nip case. [00:56:00] Speaker 00: That's the Judge Larson opinion that dealt with acquisition by a felon. [00:56:04] Speaker 00: And what she said is, just because this is all in like, none of this gets a presumption of constitutionality, you have to do it exactly under traditional analysis under Bruin. [00:56:13] Speaker 00: And she just said that particular law ended up satisfying historical tradition. [00:56:19] Speaker 00: So I think that's where the Sixth Circuit is. [00:56:23] Speaker 00: I think it's closer to where the 10th and 5th Circuits are. [00:56:25] Speaker 00: Certainly it's the position that was adopted by several judges, but not the majority in the 4th Circuit in the Maryland Shal issue case. [00:56:32] Speaker 00: So there's certainly plenty of support and plenty of jurists throughout the country who have read, you know, Beller, Bruin, Rahimi, all of them, the way that we think are the better way to read that language. [00:56:42] Speaker 01: The 2nd Circuit has followed [00:56:44] Speaker 01: meaningful constraint test in a number of cases and one of them cert was actually denied by the Supreme Court. [00:56:50] Speaker 01: So if the Supreme Court had so much objection to this meaningful constraint test they could have easily granted cert and reversed in that case right because their number. [00:56:59] Speaker 00: I think the Supreme Court denied cert in about at least a dozen petitions many of them filed by me asking the court to consider the two-step pre-brew and test but ultimately it nevertheless took up that issue and said every single circuit had it wrong. [00:57:12] Speaker 00: So I would be very reluctant here to read too much into the Supreme Court's decisions about which cases to grant or deny, particularly on questions that are in many respects still percolating among many of the courts. [00:57:24] Speaker 11: So the answer to my question is you think that Judge Larson has got probably the most analogous opinion? [00:57:29] Speaker 00: I think the judge is in the majority. [00:57:32] Speaker 11: And then what about in Maryland? [00:57:33] Speaker 11: Do you have a favorite? [00:57:35] Speaker 00: I mean, I think Judge Richardson got the historical analysis correct more than I necessarily am sure I agree with everything Judge Rushing said, but I think they're both right. [00:57:44] Speaker 00: They reached the same conclusion as did Judge Niemeyer on the question of whether there should be a presumption of constitutionality. [00:57:50] Speaker 00: All of them rejected the majority's approach of saying that laws that are covered by footnote nine or the heller dicta don't go through the traditional Bruin analysis. [00:57:59] Speaker 00: I agree with all of them on their approach to that question of what the threshold inquiry [00:58:04] Speaker 00: under Bruin and Tails. [00:58:06] Speaker 00: Thank you. [00:58:23] Speaker 07: Good afternoon, Your Honors, and may it please the Court. [00:58:25] Speaker 07: Gregory Dolan for the United States. [00:58:27] Speaker 07: We're here to emphasize two points. [00:58:30] Speaker 07: First, when a law regulates on its face, the right to keep and bear arms, it must be analyzed and brewing stuff too. [00:58:38] Speaker 07: So I'm just going to pick up where Ms. [00:58:40] Speaker 07: Murphy left off. [00:58:42] Speaker 08: Why do you say that? [00:58:45] Speaker 08: If you look at the plain text, at the time of the Revolutionary War, [00:58:51] Speaker 08: If someone wanted to fire an arm, you had to have flint, you had to have powder, you had to have some kind of stuffing and some time. [00:59:04] Speaker 08: How far does it go? [00:59:05] Speaker 08: You go to the forest, you go to a manufacturing facility. [00:59:09] Speaker 08: I'm just not sure you can say that automatically the plain text gets you where you want. [00:59:17] Speaker 08: You seem to be saying automatically we're at the second step. [00:59:21] Speaker 08: How do you get there? [00:59:23] Speaker 07: Two-part answer. [00:59:25] Speaker 07: First, the Supreme Court was very clear in Heller and McDonald that what's covered under the Second Amendment are not merely the type of arms and the type of ammunition and the type of technology that was available at Revolutionary War. [00:59:36] Speaker 07: It's what's in common use today. [00:59:39] Speaker 07: And so the fact that it was – took more time to load your gun and – So it's what today [00:59:45] Speaker 08: not historically and yet you want us to go back to the historical analysis. [00:59:50] Speaker 07: I think you're I think you're mixing and matching brewing step one and step two. [00:59:54] Speaker 07: So at step one, the question is whether the Second Amendment covers the conduct that petitioner or the plaintiff wishes to engage in. [01:00:02] Speaker 07: And that conduct includes [01:00:04] Speaker 07: keeping and bearing firearms that can be accessible for immediate use for purposes of self-defense or other lawful purposes. [01:00:13] Speaker 07: Now, once the statute in question does read on that conduct, that at brew in step two, you look at whether or not the restriction meets with historical analogs. [01:00:23] Speaker 08: I guess what I'm struggling with is you, if I'm understanding you correctly, you're just basically saying, skip step one, you automatically get to step two, [01:00:32] Speaker 08: I'm not sure how you get there so quickly. [01:00:35] Speaker 07: No, not not at all. [01:00:35] Speaker 07: I think that to to be within brewing step one, the statute in question must directly regulate the conduct that is protected by the Second Amendment, which is the right to keep and bear far. [01:00:49] Speaker 07: keeping their firearms, which the Supreme Court has interpreted in Heller and McDonald, to include operable firearms and operable for immediate purposes of self-defense or other lawful uses. [01:00:59] Speaker 07: So if the statute regulates that conduct, and of course without bullets, a gun is not operable for self-defense or any other use. [01:01:07] Speaker 07: It's just a piece of metal that I suppose you can bump somebody over the head with it, but it cannot be used as a firearm. [01:01:12] Speaker 08: Like the Hessians did, right? [01:01:14] Speaker 07: I suppose, right. [01:01:15] Speaker 07: But like you cannot do it as a, you cannot use it as a firearm. [01:01:19] Speaker 07: So the only way, it's an operable firearm. [01:01:22] Speaker 07: is wood bullets. [01:01:23] Speaker 07: And that was actually, in some sense, an issue in Heller itself as well. [01:01:27] Speaker 07: There, one of the restrictions that DC imposed was that you could keep, or at least some people could keep a firearm at home, but it had to be disassembled and a trigger locked and all of those things. [01:01:36] Speaker 07: And the Supreme Court said, no, no, no. [01:01:38] Speaker 07: It has to be accessible for immediate use for self-defense or other lawful purposes. [01:01:43] Speaker 12: Mr. Dolan, there are a great many restrictions on firearms and ammunition that might sort of have an ancillary effect on the Second Amendment. [01:01:52] Speaker 12: on the court's Second Amendment right throughout Title 18 and other provisions of the United States Code, and your brief mentions basically none of them, so do you care how much of that we might invalidate if we adopt your position and plaintiff's position? [01:02:07] Speaker 07: I don't think if this court were to adopt the United States position, you would call any of the federal laws into question, because again, any challenge to federal law would have to satisfy [01:02:16] Speaker 07: would have any chance to the federal law would have to go through brewing step one and then step two. [01:02:21] Speaker 07: And some of those challenges would fail under brewing step one, because the conduct regulated is not exactly, it was not directly regulating second amendment. [01:02:27] Speaker 07: So imagine a general sales tax. [01:02:30] Speaker 07: Yes, it makes some firearms more expensive, but it doesn't actually regulate directly the ability to keep and bear arms. [01:02:37] Speaker 07: And some of those challenges will fail under step two, because for example, federal restriction on felons owning firearms or people with mental illness, [01:02:45] Speaker 07: have longstanding historical analogs. [01:02:47] Speaker 12: And so sort of relatedly, your brief does not discuss the fact that this is a facial challenge, but you're supporting plaintiffs. [01:02:56] Speaker 12: So do you want us to adopt their view of how facial challenges work and then apply that view when next we have a facial challenge to an act of Congress or an executive order? [01:03:06] Speaker 07: We have taken no direct position on that, Your Honor, but I think Ms. [01:03:10] Speaker 07: Murphy is correct that this statute on its face says that if you're in this incomplete database, [01:03:16] Speaker 07: that the state doesn't need to prove that you're a prohibited person, right? [01:03:19] Speaker 07: The state merely says like, look, you haven't, you're not in our database. [01:03:23] Speaker 07: And that might affect, for example, someone who can come in for, let's say, [01:03:27] Speaker 07: you know, a birthday celebration where somebody goes to a range in California to shoot, but the person who comes in, comes in from Nevada, they're not in California database. [01:03:36] Speaker 07: And if they want to purchase ammunition. [01:03:37] Speaker 09: What's the government's view as to what are the substantive criteria we use in determining whether something is abusive for purposes of footnote nine and where do we get those from? [01:03:49] Speaker 07: So there are several ways of looking at it. [01:03:51] Speaker 07: So for example, when it comes to fees, so fees and Third Circuit recently spoke on this. [01:03:56] Speaker 07: So fees that are significantly in excess of what it costs the government to operate the system might be abusive. [01:04:02] Speaker 07: Extraordinary delays might be abusive. [01:04:05] Speaker 07: But our position is not, we disagree with a state that merely because it's a shell issue regime or merely because they're talking about commercial transactions. [01:04:13] Speaker 09: You're just saying we just ask ourselves whether we think it's abusive. [01:04:18] Speaker 09: We just apply our own sense. [01:04:19] Speaker 09: Where do we get these criteria from? [01:04:21] Speaker 07: Well, abusive, obviously, in some sense, is a judgment call, but there are some sort of guidelines as to excessive fees and, again, what's excessive, of course, by definition, what's excessive is always a question in relation to what, right? [01:04:34] Speaker 07: So, for example, in relation to what it costs around the system. [01:04:37] Speaker 07: But the point I was trying to make is that you don't need to get to the abusive regime here because the big problem with this system is not so much that it is abusive, although it is that. [01:04:51] Speaker 07: The big problem with this system is that it has absolutely no historical analog. [01:04:55] Speaker 07: Up until 2019, no state in the history of the country has imposed any sort of checks on the purchase of ammunition. [01:05:03] Speaker 07: And so once you get to brewing step two, there's kind of these two subsidiary questions as to how. [01:05:08] Speaker 02: So is the government's position that, you know, you probably listened to yesterday's argument. [01:05:12] Speaker 02: I did. [01:05:13] Speaker 02: So the question is whether you [01:05:15] Speaker 02: Is footnote nine somehow just exempt from the historical analog analysis? [01:05:20] Speaker 02: It sounds like your position is you do historical analysis. [01:05:24] Speaker 07: You do historical analysis and the reason footnote nine works is obviously the court doesn't get into long exegesis on exactly that. [01:05:32] Speaker 07: they do know that in the footnote nine itself, it says that we do not cast doubt on 43 states doing this. [01:05:39] Speaker 07: So that 43 states actually is a hint to you that this is a long standing and widespread practice that would meet Bruin step two. [01:05:48] Speaker 07: So it's not a carte blanche to say, oh, once you label something as shell issue regime, anything goes. [01:05:54] Speaker 07: And you can check for firearms, you can check for ammunition, you can check every time before you shoot, no. [01:05:59] Speaker 02: It's that it still has to go through the traditional. [01:06:02] Speaker 02: You don't see footnote nine as some sort of safe harbor where, where the historical analysis does not apply. [01:06:07] Speaker 07: No, we do not. [01:06:08] Speaker 07: I, we think a footnote nine is simply telling the lower courts and litigants and firearm owners and legislatures that this regimes or these 43 regimes adopted by almost across the board plus the federal government. [01:06:26] Speaker 07: have a long history, and most likely, because of that long history, they, once you run it through the algorithm of Bruin, it would meet both, you know, the regulation would pass either under Bruin step one or step two. [01:06:41] Speaker 01: Do you want to comment on Justice Kavanaugh's concurrence, which was joined by the chief, said background checks, mental health record checks, those are all constitutionally permissible if they're going to be subject to a challenge as applied as the appropriate challenge to do. [01:06:56] Speaker 01: And it just seems like you're kind of wanting some hybrid system that is really more of an over-breath challenge, which in Salerno, the court said that only exists in the context of the First Amendment. [01:07:08] Speaker 01: You're trying to say, well, there are some conceivable circumstances. [01:07:11] Speaker 01: There might be some people who will be unjustifiably denied, even though the vast majority of people, they will get an accurate and non-erroneous record check. [01:07:19] Speaker 01: So why is that not inconsistent with a facial challenge? [01:07:24] Speaker 07: So I think I will go back to what the question Judge Van Dyke asked previously. [01:07:28] Speaker 07: It's right here. [01:07:31] Speaker 07: It's an 11% error rate. [01:07:32] Speaker 07: And so it's not going to just a one off. [01:07:34] Speaker 01: But that's not a facial challenge, right? [01:07:36] Speaker 01: That's an as applied challenge. [01:07:38] Speaker 01: If we're looking at the facts. [01:07:40] Speaker 01: of what is going out in the real world. [01:07:42] Speaker 01: That's an as-applied challenge. [01:07:44] Speaker 01: And as far as I see, none of your plaintiffs have been denied. [01:07:48] Speaker 01: Your complaint that's operative was filed even before the background checks went into effect. [01:07:53] Speaker 01: They went into effect a year before. [01:07:55] Speaker 01: So I'm not saying you may not have a successful as-applied challenge, but it just seems like it's premature right now. [01:08:02] Speaker 07: So I think I would refer back to what Ms. [01:08:03] Speaker 07: Murphy was saying when she was up here, and that is, [01:08:06] Speaker 07: that on its face the statute denies permits or ability to purchase ammunition to people who are not. [01:08:13] Speaker 01: But that doesn't at all say that they're erroneously denied, right? [01:08:16] Speaker 01: You would concede that the vast majority of people who are going to be denied are actually [01:08:21] Speaker 01: appropriately being denied because they don't qualify because of either domestic violence restraining order, mental illness, felony conviction, whatever. [01:08:29] Speaker 07: Well, I would certainly not concede that simply on the base of this record where the people who are being denied correctly, so the true positives are minuscule compared to false positives. [01:08:37] Speaker 07: But on its face, the statutes- But that's an as applied challenge, right? [01:08:40] Speaker 01: If we're even looking at the facts of exactly who's being denied, for what reason, [01:08:47] Speaker 01: That's not a facial challenge. [01:08:49] Speaker 07: I understand that, but Your Honor, you asked me whether or not I would concede that most people who get denied get denied correctly, and I think that's just not true as a matter of fact here. [01:08:57] Speaker 07: But as a matter of law, when the statute says people who are on this database that is known, again, on the face of the statute or regulations, that is not a comprehensive database, they shall be denied, that is a facial challenge. [01:09:14] Speaker 10: Thank you, Mr. Dolan. [01:09:15] Speaker 10: Thank you very much. [01:09:19] Speaker 10: This one. [01:09:21] Speaker 10: You didn't have any time. [01:09:22] Speaker 10: I'm going to give you three minutes, but I'm also going to ask you a question if you could please respond to Miss Murphy's argument that in response to Judge Coe's question regarding the point of sale requirements and licensing regimes and Miss Murphy, [01:09:43] Speaker 10: highlighted that the word long standing was the significant difference there and also if you could respond to this argument regarding the incomplete databases. [01:09:54] Speaker 05: Sure, Your Honor. [01:09:55] Speaker 05: So with respect to the qualifier long standing, as I understand it, the question is whether the class of regulations is long standing. [01:10:04] Speaker 05: And I think that Ms. [01:10:05] Speaker 05: Murphy's acknowledgement during the argument that background checks have been around for a few hundred years for firearms really functionally answers the question that's presented in this case about whether the ammunition background check regime is similar enough to shell issue licensing regimes or [01:10:22] Speaker 05: the types of conditions and qualifications on commercial sales that it would be presumptively lawful. [01:10:28] Speaker 04: That concession really does answer the questions that is presented in this case. [01:10:40] Speaker 04: Why shouldn't we treat ammunition differently? [01:10:43] Speaker 04: Or if we're looking at the historical analog, wouldn't we look at it and say, well, background checks may be required to buy the gun, but not to buy the ammunition? [01:10:55] Speaker 04: I don't understand why that wouldn't be analogous. [01:10:58] Speaker 05: Sure, if we're faithful to Bruin standard that requires us to take a tech centered approach, it would be quite odd to give arms less protection than ammunition in this context. [01:11:09] Speaker 05: But I think if you were just stepping back about the ammunition versus arms distinction here, what I understand my friend to suggest is that because there were no. [01:11:18] Speaker 05: background checks for ammunition. [01:11:20] Speaker 05: You can't have one that exists today. [01:11:23] Speaker 05: That really is the type of rigid analysis that Rahimi rejects. [01:11:27] Speaker 05: Rahimi said, and I think Justice Barrett put it really well, which is you don't need an updated model of a historical regulation. [01:11:34] Speaker 05: What you need is a principle that supports the state's law. [01:11:38] Speaker 05: And for the reasons we've discussed, I think the principles that inform background checks and what my friend has acknowledged have been around for a few hundred years or for a hundred years. [01:11:47] Speaker 05: is a principle that supports the ammunition background checks here. [01:11:51] Speaker 05: And, you know, it's not really surprising that the type of ammunition background check regime that we have today didn't exist at the founding, beyond the fact that commerce and arms didn't really take off until the late 19th century. [01:12:04] Speaker 09: Can I ask Claire? [01:12:05] Speaker 04: Well, I didn't want to derail. [01:12:06] Speaker 04: I think the chief had a second part of her question that I [01:12:10] Speaker 10: Then you can answer Judge Collins' question. [01:12:13] Speaker 05: Sure. [01:12:13] Speaker 05: And I think the question related to the databases and the right. [01:12:18] Speaker 05: So I guess I find it odd that it would be unreasonable for the state to rely on a database that records all handgun and long gun transactions dating back to 1998 and 2014. [01:12:35] Speaker 05: So anyone who has purchased an arm in the state of California [01:12:38] Speaker 05: ends up in the AFS system, the automated firearm system, if you've purchased a handgun after 1998 or purchased a long gun after 2014. [01:12:47] Speaker 05: And to rely on that system to determine whether an individual is, and that's one of the ways, right, to determine whether an individual has a second amendment plain text protected right to acquire ammunition, I just don't think that the mismatch exists there. [01:13:02] Speaker 05: And to the extent that certain individuals have found it difficult [01:13:05] Speaker 05: to update their AFS records, to get their entries in, or they've acquired a firearm in a different way. [01:13:12] Speaker 05: There are various mechanisms that the Department of Justice has publicized for individuals to either correct and update their records or to submit a firearms ownership report in order to get onto the AFS system so that a purchaser can take advantage of the immediate authorization that the standard background check [01:13:31] Speaker 05: allows at the point of sale. [01:13:33] Speaker 05: And of course, what's really important, too, is that for any individual who can't update their records or decides they don't want to be in AFS, they have the basic background check system available to them where they can undergo the sort of more rigorous background search of the four different databases to determine whether they're prohibited or not. [01:13:52] Speaker 09: So I just had a technical question about the interstate provision, which we haven't talked about, which says a resident of this state shall not bring or transport into this state any ammunition that he or she has purchased or otherwise obtained from outside this state unless he or she has that ammunition delivered, etc. [01:14:12] Speaker 09: But then one of the exceptions is a person who [01:14:15] Speaker 09: That doesn't apply to a person who acquired the ammunition from a spouse, registered domestic partner, or immediate family member. [01:14:22] Speaker 09: So if a couple goes to Nevada and the wife buys a thousand rounds of ammunition from a dealer there, she buys them herself. [01:14:33] Speaker 09: She then goes in the parking lot, gives them to the husband, and the husband brings them back to California. [01:14:39] Speaker 09: Is that exempted? [01:14:40] Speaker 09: It seems under the plain language it would be. [01:14:43] Speaker 09: I want to understand the scope of the prohibition. [01:14:45] Speaker 05: Right. [01:14:45] Speaker 05: I don't know if that would be lawful under, you know, the other jurisdictions straw purchasing laws. [01:14:52] Speaker 05: So I don't want to speak to that. [01:14:53] Speaker 05: But yes, 30314 only speaks to transfer sales or delivery. [01:14:59] Speaker 09: So that might be considered a straw purchase if they had prearranged it. [01:15:03] Speaker 05: Yeah. [01:15:04] Speaker 09: But if she if she buys it and then decides, you know, I'm going to give this to him, then then that would be OK. [01:15:10] Speaker 05: I don't know, Your Honor. [01:15:12] Speaker 05: I mean, what I will say is that exception also exists in 30312. [01:15:16] Speaker 05: So apart from sort of importing or transporting ammunition from out of state into the state, it is also lawful within the state for a spouse, a registered domestic partner, or an immediate family member to provide ammunition to a family member. [01:15:33] Speaker 10: Any concluding statement? [01:15:35] Speaker 05: Your Honor, I think [01:15:38] Speaker 05: No. [01:15:39] Speaker 05: We would just ask that the court reverse and add direct entry of judgment on behalf of the Attorney General. [01:15:44] Speaker 10: Thank you. [01:15:45] Speaker 10: Thank you. [01:15:45] Speaker 10: Ms. [01:15:46] Speaker 10: Hong, Mr. Murphy, Mr. Dolan, thank you very much for your oral argument presentations here today. [01:15:52] Speaker 10: The case of Kim Brody versus Rob Bonta and his official capacity as Attorney General of the State of California is now submitted and we are adjourned. [01:16:02] Speaker 10: Thank you.