Knife Rights: FAIL! MD AG Defends “Assault Weapon” Ban, Cites 1800s Bowie Ban

Critter

Platinum Member
Joined
Mar 23, 2003
Messages
1,765
[Post in General approved by Spark]

Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh has acknowledged in a brief to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit that knives are “arms” covered by the Second Amendment. Unfortunately for him, he tried to use a ban on Bowie knives from the 1800s as an argument that Maryland’s ban on “assault weapons” is legal. It’s an argument that just doesn’t make the cut.

As background, when the U.S. Supreme Court recently issued its Bruen opinion upholding the right to carry firearms and setting strict scrutiny as the test, it sent back to the Appeals Courts a number of cases that were appeals in a variety of gun ban cases. The courts were instructed to review the various prohibitions’ constitutionality in light of the Justices’ decision. One such case was Dominic Bianchi v. Brian Frosh in Maryland opposing the state’s “assault weapons” ban.

The Fourth Circuit asked the parties to brief the case in light of Bruen. The basic argument from Second Amendment supporters in their briefs was that Bianchi could not survive strict scrutiny. There are millions of so-called assault weapons as defined by Maryland’s ban in common use by law-abiding citizens for self-defense, and thus they cannot be considered “dangerous and unusual weapons” that are “not in common use.”

One argument that Bruen allows to accept a ban on modern “arms” is if there were analogous bans at the time the Second Amendment was passed, or which have been historically enacted in the 18th or 19th centuries and which survive to this day. Frost’s argument that historical bans on Bowie Knives are analogous and thus justify modern bans on assault weapons fails to meet Bruen’s test.

1850s.-IXL-Clip-Point-Bowie1200w-BB-300x172.jpg

1850s Bowie (courtesy KNIFE Magazine)


Second Amendment scholar David Kopel, author with Clayton Cramer and Joe Olson of the legal review article Knives and the Second Amendment, just posted his analysis of “The legal history of bans on firearms and Bowie knives before 1900” which can be read in full on The Volokh Conspiracy. By reviewing this history, it is possible to determine if the Bowie knife’s legal history should have any impact on Second Amendment cases after Bruen. A companion to that article is, “Bowie knife statutes 1837-1899,” which describes and analyzes nineteenth century state statutes on Bowie knives.

Kopel notes, “Whatever 19th century handgun laws teach about permissible limits on the right to arms, the Bowie knife laws go no further. Because Bowie knives are so often in pari materia (of the same matter) with 19th-century handgun regulations that they add little if anything to the very thin base of historical precedents for prohibitions on common arms.

The legal history of Bowie knives reinforces the U.S. Supreme Court’s history-based holdings about permissible handgun regulation. Bowie knives were not some extraordinary category for which regulation was more severe than handgun control was typical for handgun control.”

Thus, the Maryland AG’s argument citing a Bowie Knife ban fails to cut it, big time, but we appreciate his acknowledgment that knives are “arms” under the Second Amendment. And, our sincere thanks to Kopel for his scholarship.

Knife Rights is America’s grassroots knife owners’ organization; leading the fight to Rewrite Knife Law in America™ and forging a Sharper Future for all Americans™. Knife Rights efforts have resulted in 40 bills enacted repealing knife bans in 26 states and over 150 cities and towns since 2010.
 
"These dangerous and criminal-favored weapons included Bowie knives, slungshots, metallic knuckles, canes with swords or spears sheathed in them, and the like. Bowie knives, for example, provide a representative comparison. The 1830s were racked with a “panic over the Bowie knife." Bowie knives were considered especially dangerous (and thus warranting restriction) because of the uniquely harmful damage they caused in fights. Id. at 187. These predecessors are relevantly analogous because they reflect a comparable burden that is comparably justified. Just as novel weapons in the 1830s triggered novel regulation, the advent of mass shootings with assault rifles in the late-twentieth century created a need for regulation to address those heightened dangers. And just as, in an earlier era, new weapons were regulated because of their damaging potential in offensive use (while having limited self-defense function), assault weapons used in mass shootings inflict carnage on the human body much worse than bullets from non-assault weapons can. See Addendum D (cataloging empirical evidence of the unique brutality of gunshot wounds from assault weapons). And just as Bowie knives were closely associated with criminality, so too are assault weapons disproportionately used in gang crime, mass shootings, and other crimes

(...)finding that the Bowie knife was “efficient only in the hands of the robber and the assassin” and used by “desperadoes” and “ruffians”);

Ugh, reminds me of the Satanic Panic
 
Last edited:
"...snip...And just as Bowie knives were closely associated with criminality, so too are assault weapons disproportionately used in gang crime, mass shootings, and other crimes...


Ugh, reminds me of the Satanic Panic

[Sarcasm]And we thought all the statistics show that only a tiny percentage of gun related crimes are committed with rifles, but I guess we were wrong. Who are we to argue with the AG? [/Sarcasm]
 
Back
Top