SCOTUS Sets Date for Crucial Second Amendment Case

by
posted on August 20, 2021
** When you buy products through the links on our site, we may earn a commission that supports NRA's mission to protect, preserve and defend the Second Amendment. **
4583080594_016e24eb8a_k.jpg (1)
Tim Sackton courtesy Flickr

The U.S. Supreme Court recently announced that it will hear a case challenging New York’s onerous carry restrictions on Nov. 3.

The case, New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v Bruen, is the first Second Amendment case regarding firearms that the High Court will hear in more than a decade.

It challenges New York’s requirement that residents applying for permits to exercise their Second Amendment rights demonstrate a “proper cause” to do so. This ambiguous, and ever-changing, barrier is often used by local licensing officials to deny applicants their constitutional rights, as licensed concealed carry is the only legal way for New Yorkers to carry firearms outside the home for self-defense.

The NRA has filed an amicus brief in support of NYSRPA’s challenge. In it, the NRA wrote:

New York’s regime is irreconcilable with the text, history, and tradition of the Second Amendment. The textual inquiry is not a close question, as the text guarantees a right to “bear” arms as well as “keep” them, and a right to bear arms only within the confines of a home offends both common sense and original public meaning. The historical inquiry is no closer, and has already been answered in Heller. Founding-era cases, commentaries, and laws on both sides of the Atlantic, most of which were surveyed in Heller, confirm that the founding generation understood the Second Amendment and its English predecessor to guarantee a right to carry arms for self-defense.

As New York is one of just eight “may-issue” states in the nation, meaning that our right to keep and bear arms may be denied on discretionary grounds, NRA-ILA explained that, “[f]or too long, New York has rationed the right to keep and bear arms to a select, chosen few within favored classes. But the Second Amendment guarantees the ‘right of the people to keep and bear arms,’ not the right of a privileged few.”

“The Court rarely takes Second Amendment cases. Now it’s decided to hear one of the most critical Second Amendment issues. We’re confident that the Court will tell New York and the other states that our Second Amendment right to defend ourselves is fundamental, and doesn’t vanish when we leave our homes,” said Jason Ouimet, executive director of NRA-ILA. 

This nation’s highest court has not heard a Second Amendment case involving firearms since McDonald v. Chicago (2010), when it affirmed the Second Amendment is a fundamental right that also restricts state and local governments from infringing on this protection. Two years earlier, the Court held in District of Columbia v. Heller that the Second Amendment does, in fact, protect an individual right.

A1F.com will continue to keep you informed with up-to-date coverage, analysis and more as the date for this case to be heard draws nearer.

Latest

scales of justice
scales of justice

The “L” in NRA-ILA Refers to Legislation, But Litigation is also Critically Important

Latest legislative news from inside the NRA Institute for Legislative Action

Video Interview: Buck Sexton Calls Gun Control a “Manufactured Delusion”

Buck Sexton, the radio host and author, has a new book out titled Manufacturing Delusion—How the Left Uses Brainwashing, Indoctrination, And Propaganda Against You. As Sexton is an ardent Second Amendment advocate and an NRA-certified firearms instructor, we decided to ask him if gun control is a manufactured delusion.

President’s Column | NRA 2.0 Transformations

As reported on Oct. 31, 2025, the NRA announced a major internal reorganization to modernize and increase efficiencies. This reorganization marked the first step in our effort to modernize and improve operations.

Standing Guard | The NRA Stands And Fights For Freedom

Every company, great or small, needs a realignment now and then. But, when a company has been around for nearly 155 glorious years, straightening the course can take a full reformation.

DOJ Civil Rights Division’s New Second Amendment Section Hits the Ground Running

Just over a year ago, a hostile federal executive branch had gun owners under siege on all fronts.

Ryan Petty Explains How to Stop Possible School Shooters

After Ryan Petty lost his 14-year-old daughter, Alaina, to a 19-year-old mass murderer in Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in 2018 in Parkland, Fla., he wanted to know what happened. Most of all, he wanted to find the holes in the system to, as best we can, stop such horrors long before they occur.

Interests



Get the best of America's 1st Freedom delivered to your inbox.