A pre-2009 Washington state 
law<http://law.justia.com/codes/washington/2005/title9/9.41.170.html>, under 
which Yasin Ibrahim was convicted, required aliens to get a license . (A new 
statute<http://apps.leg.wa.gov/rcw/default.aspx?cite=9.41.173> sets up a 
different licensing scheme for alien gun owners, but that statute wasn't 
involved in this case.) Ibrahim was prosecuted under the old law, for having an 
unlicensed gun. Today's State v. Ibrahim (Wash. Ct. 
App.)<http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/287564.opn.doc.pdf> holds that the 
old law violated the Equal Protection Clause by unconstitutionally 
discriminating against noncitizens. And in the process the court says that the 
law did this "by denying [legal aliens'] Second Amendment right to keep and 
bear arms."

This independent focus on the Second Amendment is important because the Supreme 
Court has read the Equal Protection Clause as barring most (but not all) state 
discrimination against noncitizens; the federal government remains generally 
free to discriminate against noncitizens. But if the Washington Court of 
Appeals is right that legal aliens are protected by the Second Amendment, that 
means that even the federal government may not ban them from owning guns.

Current federal law lets immigrant aliens possess guns, but bars gun possession 
by legal aliens who don't have immigrant status. (See 18 U.S.C. ยง 
922(g)(5)(B)<http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/18/922.html>.) This category of 
people generally barred from possessing guns (with some exceptions for hunting 
and sporting purposes) includes not just tourists but also long-term residents, 
such as students or people working here on nonimmigrant visas. So if federal 
courts follow the Washington Court of Appeals' view of the matter, that 
prohibition might be vulnerable on Second Amendment grounds.

Two notes: (1) As it happens, the state Department of Licensing refused to 
issue alien gun licenses under the pre-2009 
law<http://volokh.com/posts/1226080495.shtml>, but that wasn't expressly 
discussed in the opinion. (2) The opinion talked about the pre-2009 law as 
requiring "registration" of a gun, but as I read it the law actually required a 
license.

Eugene
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