For those who may be interested, a new article about the DC Circuit's 
decision in the Parker case can be downloaded at
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1021356

The abstract is set out below.

Nelson Lund
George Mason Law School

ABSTRACT

The District of Columbia forbids almost all civilians to possess 
handguns in their own homes. Rifles and shotguns are permitted, but they 
must be kept unloaded and either disassembled or secured with a trigger 
lock, making them useless for self defense. The D.C. Circuit recently 
held that this statute violates the Second Amendment.

One way to attack the D.C. Circuit decision is to argue that the Second 
Amendment protects the private possession of weapons only to the extent 
necessary to preserve in civilian hands a stock of weapons suitable for 
use while serving in the militia. Rifles and shotguns would be the most 
obviously useful weapons for militiamen to bring with them from home, 
and the D.C. statute permits civilians to possess rifles and shotguns, 
along with the ammunition these weapons require. Why does this not 
satisfy the Second Amendment?

This superficially plausible defense of the District’s statute was not 
adequately refuted in Judge Silberman’s opinion for the D.C. Circuit. 
This article demonstrates, largely but not exclusively on the basis of a 
careful linguistic analysis of the Second Amendment, that such a defense 
of the District’s statute is untenable.


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