This is legal stonewalling by a judge who purposefully flips what SCOTUS ruled in Heller, Caetano and Bruen in what she hopes will take years of legal wrangling in the off chance that either or both Justices Alito and Thomas pass on and a demoncrap administration can appoint anti-gun Justices and get all these case law restorals of the 2nd amendment protections on RKBA undone…because the unwashed masses really shouldn’t have the means to tell goobermint where to go, and make it stick.
Federal Court Ruling Upholding Oregon Gun Law Will be Appealed
U.S.A. — A federal district judge’s ruling upholding the constitutionality of Oregon’s restrictive gun control Measure 114 will definitely be appealed, the head of the Second Amendment Foundation assured via email with a terse one-word statement.
SAF founder and Executive Vice President Alan Gottlieb, responding to an email inquiry asking, “Certainly, there will be an appeal, right?” responded bluntly: “Right.”
The ruling was immediately blasted by the Oregon Firearms Federation (OFF), one of several plaintiffs challenging the law in a consolidation of four federal lawsuits, two of which involve SAF and several partners. In a scathing reaction, OFF declared Judge Immergut’s ruling “absurd” and further said her decision was “against gun owners, the Second Amendment and a basic understanding of the English language.”
Immergut’s ruling does appear oblivious to facts involving firearms and self-defense when, on Page 120, she states, “The Supreme Court has held that Second Amendment protects an individual right to self-defense inside and outside of the home. LCMs are not commonly used for self-defense, and are therefore not protected by the Second Amendment.”
This seems to ignore the prevalence of modern semi-automatic pistols, which are commonly used for personal protection, and which come from the factory with magazines holding more than 10 cartridges.
According to The Hill, Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum praised the ruling while acknowledging the law still cannot be enforced because it is still being challenged in state court. A judge in Harney County has scheduled a trial in September. By that time, Judge Immergut’s decision will likely have been appealed to the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco.
Rosenblum, a Democrat, was quoted by The Hill, stating, “Our team looks forward to ultimately prevailing in the state courts as well.”
The state lawsuit involves Gun Owners of America, the Gun Owners Foundation and various private citizens, as noted by the Central Oregon Daily. That lawsuit challenges the measure under the Oregon State Constitution.
Measure 114 is described by the media as one of the strictest gun control laws in the country. It requires proof of safety training to purchase a firearm, requires a permit to purchase from a law enforcement agency, and bans magazines holding more than 10 cartridges—which would include not only magazines for popular semiautomatic sporting rifles but also many, if not a majority, of popular semi-auto handguns, as noted above.
In its statement, OFF asserted, “We are sure there will be plenty of parsing of this absurd decision in the coming days, but it was clear from the very first day that Immergut was both painfully ignorant and in the pocket of Oregon’s far left “Department of Justice…No doubt it took this long for her to come up with a reason to reach this conclusion when none of the facts were on her side.”
In the aftermath of Measure 114’s narrow passage in November 2022 (50.6% in favor, 49.4% opposed), neighboring Washington state passed legislation earlier this year extending a 10-day waiting period to the purchase of all firearms, not just so-called “assault weapons,” which was part of Initiative 1639, passed by voters in 2018.
It is unclear when SAF or any of the other plaintiffs in the four federal challenges will file appeals. Because the ruling was issued Friday, attorneys for those plaintiffs—and there are lots of them—are no doubt studying Judge Immergut’s ruling. SAF is the only organization involved in two separate challenges of Measure 114. A week-long trial was held early last month in Portland.