Maryland Shall Issue, Incorporated v. Woodrow Jones, III

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit

Maryland Shall Issue, Incorporated v. Woodrow Jones, III

Opinion

USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 1 of 41

PUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

No. 21-2017

MARYLAND SHALL ISSUE, INC., for itself and its members; ATLANTIC GUNS, INC.; DEBORAH KAY MILLER; SUSAN BRANCATO VIZAS,

Plaintiffs - Appellants,

and

ANA SLIVEIRA; CHRISTINE BUNCH,

Plaintiffs,

v.

WES MOORE, in his capacity as Governor of Maryland; WOODROW W. JONES, III, Colonel,

Defendants - Appellees.

------------------------------

FIREARMS POLICY COALITION, INC.; FPC ACTION FOUNDATION; INDEPENDENCE INSTITUTE,

Amici Supporting Appellant.

No. 21-2053

MARYLAND SHALL ISSUE, INC.; ATLANTIC GUNS, INC.; DEBORAH KAY MILLER; SUSAN BRANCATO VIZAS,

Plaintiffs - Appellees, USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 2 of 41

and

ANA SLIVEIRA; CHRISTINE BUNCH,

Plaintiffs,

v.

WES MOORE, in his capacity as Governor of Maryland; WOODROW W. JONES, III, Colonel,

Defendants - Appellants.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore. Ellen Lipton Hollander, Senior District Judge. (1:16-cv-03311-ELH)

Argued: March 10, 2023 Decided: November 21, 2023

Before AGEE and RICHARDSON, Circuit Judges, and KEENAN, Senior Circuit Judge.

Reversed by published opinion. Judge Richardson wrote the opinion, in which Judge Agee joined. Senior Judge Keenan wrote a dissenting opinion.

ARGUED: Marc Alexander Nardone, BRADLEY ARANT BOULT CUMMINGS LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellants/Cross-Appellees. Ryan Robert Dietrich, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF MARYLAND, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellees/Cross-Appellants. ON BRIEF: Cary J. Hansel, III, Baltimore, Maryland; Mark W. Pennak, MARYLAND SHALL ISSUE, INC., Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellants/Cross-Appellees. John Parker Sweeney, James W. Porter, III, Connor M. Blair, BRADLEY ARANT BOULT CUMMINGS LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellant/Cross- Appellee Atlantic Guns, Inc. Brian E. Frosh, Attorney General, Robert A. Scott, Assistant Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF MARYLAND, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellees/Cross-Appellants. David B. Kopel, INDEPENDENCE INSTITUTE, Denver, Colorado; Joseph G.S. Greenlee, FPC ACTION FOUNDATION, Las Vegas, Nevada, for Amici Curiae.

2 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 3 of 41

RICHARDSON, Circuit Judge:

If you live in Maryland and you want a handgun, you must follow a long and

winding path to get one. Like with any firearms transfer—whether a purchase from a

licensed dealer, gun show, or private person, or even a gift from a family member or

friend—you must comply with Maryland’s 77R registration process, which requires you

to fill out an application with certain identifying information and then wait seven days

while the state performs a background check. See Md. Code, Pub. Safety §§ 5-117, 118–

130. And if you want to carry your handgun, you need to get a separate carry permit too.

See §§ 5-301–314.

But—for handguns specifically—before you do any of that, there is an additional,

preliminary step: You must also obtain a “handgun qualification license.” See § 5-117.1.

Getting that license requires, among other things, submitting fingerprints to undergo a

background “investigation” and taking a four-hour-long “firearms safety training course”

in which you must fire at least one live round. Then, after submitting your application for

this extra license, you must wait up to thirty days for approval before you can start the rest

of the process.

Plaintiffs seek to enjoin the state from enforcing only this additional, preliminary

handgun-licensure requirement. And Plaintiffs’ challenge must succeed. The challenged

law restricts the ability of law-abiding adult citizens to possess handguns, and the state has

not presented a historical analogue that justifies its restriction; indeed, it has seemingly

admitted that it couldn’t find one. Under the Supreme Court’s new burden-shifting test for

3 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 4 of 41

these claims, Maryland’s law thus fails, and we must enjoin its enforcement. So we reverse

the district court’s contrary decision.

I. Background

Plaintiffs first brought their Second Amendment challenge to Maryland’s handgun-

licensure law in 2016. 1 [J.A. 1.] The district court originally dismissed that challenge for

lack of Article III standing, but we reversed and remanded for a decision on the merits.

Maryland Shall Issue, Inc. v. Hogan,

971 F.3d 199

, 210 (4th Cir. 2020). On remand, the

district court again rejected Plaintiffs’ claims, this time holding that Maryland’s handgun-

licensure law did not violate the Second Amendment. 2 So Plaintiffs appealed once more,

finally presenting us with the merits of their constitutional claims.

The law at issue—which the parties call the handgun-qualification-license

requirement—originated as one component of Maryland’s Firearm Safety Act of 2013 and

is now found at § 5-117.1 of the Maryland Public Safety Code. Section 117.1(b) says that

1 There are three groups of plaintiffs: Maryland Shall Issue, Inc., a nonprofit-gun- rights membership organization; two individual plaintiffs, Ana Sliveira and Christine Bunch, each of whom claims that she would like to own a handgun but has been deterred from doing so by Maryland’s law; and Atlantic Guns, Inc., a gun store alleging that its customers have been similarly deterred and that it thus has been unable to sell as many guns. The suit also originally included two other individual plaintiffs, Deborah Kay Miller and Susan Brancato Vizas, who are not parties to this appeal. We will refer to the remaining individual plaintiffs collectively as “Plaintiffs.” 2 Through all these decisions, the Governor of Maryland—one of the parties whom Plaintiffs sought to enjoin from enforcing the challenged law—was Lawrence (“Larry”) Hogan. Now, Maryland’s governor is Wes Moore. Plaintiffs also sued to enjoin the Secretary and Superintendent of the Maryland State Police, who was then William M. Pallozzi, but is now Woodrow W. Jones, III. For simplicity, we refer to defendants as “the state” or “Maryland.” 4 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 5 of 41

no one may “sell, rent, or transfer a handgun” unless the recipient “presents . . . a valid

handgun qualification license.” And § 117.1(c) likewise says that “[a] person may

purchase, rent, or receive a handgun only if the person . . . possesses a valid handgun

qualification license.” So, in simple terms, the challenged law imposes criminal liability

on both parties to a handgun transaction (sale, rental, or gift), unless the recipient has the

required license. See § 5-117.1(b), (c); see also § 5-144(a)(1) (criminalizing knowing

participation in the receipt of a regulated firearm in violation of § 5-117.1).

The law then defines how someone gets such a handgun-qualification license. There

are four requirements: The applicant must be “at least 21 years old,” he must be “a resident

of the State,” he must complete a “firearms safety training course,” 3 and he must undergo

an “investigation”—i.e., a background check—to show that he “is not prohibited by federal

3 The course must be taught by a “qualified handgun instructor” and be at least four hours long. § 5-117.1(d)(3)(i). It must involve “classroom instruction” on firearms laws and firearm safety, § 5-117.1(d)(3)(ii), and “a firearms orientation component that demonstrates the person’s safe operation and handling of a firearm,” § 5-117.1(d)(3)(iii). Regulations further require the orientation to include “a practice component in which the applicant safely fires at least one round of live ammunition.”

Md. Code Regs. 29

.03.01.29(C)(4). The applicant bears the cost of the firearms safety training course as well as any range fees for the live-fire requirement. Notably, these costs are not established by statute or regulation but by the private entities that administer the firearms safety training and, according to the record, can range “anywhere from $50 to in the several hundred dollars.” J.A. 973; see also J.A. 961–62. Certain people, including former members of the military and armored-car company employees, are exempt from the training-course requirement. § 5-117.1(e). And current and retired law enforcement officers are exempt from the entire statute. § 5- 117.1(a)(2).

5 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 6 of 41

or State law from purchasing or possessing a handgun.” 4 § 5-117.1(d). If an applicant

meets these four requirements, properly fills out an application, and pays the required $50

fee, then the Secretary of State Police “shall issue” him a handgun-qualification license

within thirty days. § 5-117.1(d), (g), (h).

Plaintiffs argue that this scheme violates the Second Amendment. The district court

disagreed, holding that it passed intermediate scrutiny. But, after the district court’s

decision, the Supreme Court decided New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen,

142 S. Ct. 2111

(2022).

Bruen effected a sea change in Second Amendment law. Before Bruen, the Courts

of Appeals—including our own—used a two-step interest-balancing framework in

analyzing firearm regulations. See Bruen, 142 S. Ct. at 2125–26; United States v. Chester,

628 F.3d 673

, 680–83 (4th Cir. 2010). We first asked whether a challenged regulation

burdened conduct protected by the Second Amendment. Bruen,

142 S. Ct. at 2126

;

Chester,

628 F.3d at 680

. If it did, then we would assess the regulation’s constitutionality

using means-end scrutiny. Bruen,

142 S. Ct. at 2126

; Chester,

628 F.3d at 680

.

Yet the Supreme Court held in Bruen that this approach was “one step too many.”

142 S. Ct. at 2127

. In its place, the Court supplied an analysis centered on the Second

Amendment’s text and history.

Id.

at 2126–30. The Court explained that “when the Second

4 To complete the background check, the state police submit to the Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services “a complete set of the applicant’s legible fingerprints.” § 5-117.1(f)(3)(i). The state police require applicants to submit their fingerprints with their application.

Md. Code Regs. 29

.03.01.28(B)(3). As with the firearms-safety-training course, the applicant bears the cost and burden of obtaining the fingerprints, which, according to the record, can cost $50 or more. See J.A. 967–70. 6 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 7 of 41

Amendment’s plain text covers an individual’s conduct, the Constitution presumptively

protects that conduct.” Id. at 2126. At that point, the challenged regulation is

unconstitutional unless the government can show that “the regulation is consistent with this

Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.” Id. Only then “may a court conclude

that the individual’s conduct falls outside the Second Amendment’s ‘unqualified

command.’” Id. (quoting Konigsberg v. State Bar of Cal.,

366 U.S. 36

, 50 n.10 (1961)).

Bruen applied this framework to invalidate New York’s “may issue” licensing

scheme for the concealed carry of handguns. Id. at 2122, 2134–56. It concluded that the

proposed conduct at issue there, carrying handguns in public for self-defense, was

presumptively protected by the Second Amendment because the petitioners were “law-

abiding, adult citizens” and handguns are “weapons ‘in common use’ today for self-

defense.” Id. at 2134 (quoting District of Columbia v. Heller,

554 U.S. 570, 627

(2008)).

The Court then examined the historical record assembled by the government and concluded

that it had not met its burden to establish a historical tradition “of broadly prohibiting the

public carry of commonly used firearms for self-defense.” Id. at 2138.

Thus, Plaintiffs’ suit requires us to answer: Does Maryland’s law satisfy Bruen’s

two-part test?

II. Discussion

Maryland’s law fails the new Bruen test. As we will explain, Plaintiffs have shown

that Maryland’s handgun-licensure law regulates a course of conduct protected by the

7 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 8 of 41

Second Amendment, and Maryland has not established that the law is consistent with our

Nation’s historical tradition.

A. Maryland’s law restricts Second Amendment conduct

The first question Bruen asks is whether Plaintiffs’ proposed course of conduct is

protected by the Second Amendment’s plain text. See

142 S. Ct. at 2126

. The text’s

“operative clause,” see Heller, 554 U.S. at 577–95, provides that “the right of the people

to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.” U.S. Const. amend. II. To meet their

burden at this stage, Plaintiffs must prove two things: (1) that “they are among ‘the people’

entitled to the right,” and (2) that their proposed “course of conduct” is covered by the

Second Amendment’s plain text, namely “keeping and bearing arms.” Bruen,

142 S. Ct. at 2134

.

At first blush, the answer to this initial question seems obvious. Here, Plaintiffs

alleged that they are adult citizens who are legally eligible to own firearms. See J.A. 22–

24 (noting that the plaintiffs “could lawfully purchase and own a handgun” absent the

challenged law). So they fall within the Amendment’s definition of “the people.” See

Bruen,

142 S. Ct. at 2134

(noting that “‘the people’ whom the Second Amendment

protects” includes, at a minimum, “ordinary, law-abiding, adult citizens”). 5 And Plaintiffs

here say that they seek to own firearms for “lawful purposes,” J.A. 22–24, a point that

5 This is not necessarily to say that “the people” is limited to “ordinary, law-abiding, adult citizens.” Post-Bruen, several courts have held that “the people” refers to all Americans, and is not limited to ordinary, law-abiding adult citizens. See, e.g., United States v. Silvers, No. 5:18-cr-50-BJB,

2023 WL 3232605

, at *5–6 (W.D. Ky. May 3, 2023). We need not decide the precise scope of “the people” to resolve this case, for Maryland does not dispute that Plaintiffs are part of “the people.” 8 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 9 of 41

Maryland does not contest. Indeed, though the Amendment’s plain text “extends, prima

facie, to all instruments that constitute bearable arms,” Caetano v. Massachusetts,

577 U.S. 411, 411

(2016), the Supreme Court has held that the specific weapons here—

handguns—are protected “arms.” See Heller,

554 U.S. at 629

. So there appears to be little

room for debate on this score.

Yet there are a few wrinkles to iron out. To start, you might note that the

Amendment’s text protects only the right to “keep and bear” arms. U.S. Const. amend. II.

But, on its face, the challenged law says nothing about whether Plaintiffs may “keep” or

“bear” handguns. It only restricts Plaintiffs’ ability to “purchase, rent, or receive” them.

§ 5-117.1(c). How, then, does the law regulate the right to keep and bear arms?

The answer is not complicated. If you do not already own a handgun, then the only

way to “keep” or “bear” one is to get one, either through sale, rental, or gift. And the

challenged law cuts off all three avenues—at least, for those who do not comply with its

terms.

That brings us to the next wrinkle: The challenged law does not permanently

prohibit Plaintiffs from acquiring or carrying handguns. Contra Heller, 554 U.S. at 573–

75; Bruen, 142 S. Ct. at 2122–24. Instead, it imposes certain requirements that they must

meet before they can obtain a handgun. And those requirements rely on “objective”

criteria, see Bruen,

142 S. Ct. at 2138

n.9, which Plaintiffs admit that they can satisfy.

9 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 10 of 41

Once they do so, the law commands that the state “shall issue” them handgun-qualification

licenses. § 5-117.1(d). 6

But even though Maryland’s law does not prohibit Plaintiffs from owning handguns

at some time in the future, it still prohibits them from owning handguns now. In order to

get a handgun, Plaintiffs still have to follow all of the law’s steps. And, although they will

be able to complete each one, it is impossible to do so right away. Plaintiffs can’t receive

a license to legally acquire a handgun until the state reviews their applications, which can

take up to thirty days. 7 See § 117.1(g), (h)(1). So, no matter what Plaintiffs do, there will

be a period of up to thirty days where their ability to get a handgun is completely out of

their control. In other words, though it does not permanently bar Plaintiffs from owning

handguns, the challenged law deprives them of that ability until their application is

approved, no matter what they do.

6 As a shall-issue law, Maryland’s handgun-qualification license is unlike the “may issue” licensure regime in Bruen, which afforded government officials substantial “discretion to deny licenses” if the applicant had not shown a “special need” for them. 142 S. Ct. at 2122–24. Maryland did impose a may-issue regime for its handgun-carry license. See § 5-306(a)(6)(ii). But this type of law is precisely what Bruen rejected. See

142 S. Ct. at 2124

n.2. So, after Bruen, Maryland courts have declined to enforce the carry-licensure law’s discretionary component as unconstitutional. See In re Rounds,

279 A.3d 1048

, 1052 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 2022). 7 That thirty days doesn’t count the time needed to obtain and complete the application, to complete the instructional course and live-fire requirement, and to obtain the approved set of fingerprints that the handgun-qualification-license law requires. Nor does it count the time that it would take to comply with Maryland’s separate 77R registration process, which is required before every firearms transfer. See § 5-117. That separate registration process demands that Plaintiffs submit certain identifying information to the state and then wait up to an additional seven days while the state conducts a background check before they can finally purchase a handgun. See §§ 5-118–130. 10 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 11 of 41

Our question at Bruen’s first step is simply whether Plaintiffs have made a prima

facie case that the challenged law violates the Second Amendment. So they just need to

show that the law regulates a course of conduct that falls within the Amendment’s plain

text, i.e., their ability “to possess and carry weapons in case of confrontation.” Heller,

554 U.S. at 592

. Nothing in the Amendment’s text or Bruen says that it protects only against

laws that permanently deprive people of the ability to keep and bear arms. 8 Cf. Bruen, 142

8 The dissent thinks differently. According to the dissent, “a regulation is covered” by the Second Amendment “only if an individual can show that the regulation has ‘infringed’” his “Second Amendment right to keep or right to bear arms.” Diss. Op. at 30. And that right is only infringed, on the dissent’s view, if the government wholly or effectively bans that individual from possessing or carrying firearms. See Diss. Op. at 30, 36 n.9. So at Bruen’s first step, the dissent would have us (or, more particularly, the district court) engage in a “fact-intensive” inquiry to determine whether a regulation sufficiently burdens Plaintiffs’ right to keep and bear arms. Diss. Op. at 34-38. If it does not, then the government need not justify its regulation based on history and tradition. But this stilted construction of the word “infringed” lacks grounding in original meaning, history, and Bruen itself. The dissent cherry-picks dictionary definitions, yet those same dictionaries define “infringe” to contemplate burdens that fall short of total deprivations. Compare Samuel Johnson, 1 Dictionary of the English Language 1101 (4th ed. 1773) (“Johnson”) (defining “infringe” as “[t]o destroy; to hinder” (emphasis added)), and Noah Webster, American Dictionary of the English Language (1828) (“Webster”) (defining “infringe” as “[t]o destroy or hinder” (emphasis added)), with Johnson at 1007 (defining “to hinder” as “to cause impediment”), and Webster (defining “hinder” as “to obstruct for a time” and “[t]o interpose obstacles or impediments”). So too do other sources that the Supreme Court has used to interpret the right. See 1 St. George Tucker, Blackstone’s Commentaries 143 n.40 (1803) (“The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed . . . and this without any qualification as to their condition or degree . . . .” (emphasis added)); Nunn v. State,

1 Ga. 243, 251

(1846) (“The right of the whole people . . . to keep and bear arms . . . shall not be infringed, curtailed, or broken in upon, in the smallest degree.” (third emphasis added)); see also Heller, 554 U.S. at 594– 95, 612 (relying on Tucker and Nunn to interpret the Second Amendment). Moreover, nineteenth century state courts traditionally entertained Second Amendment challenges even to laws that merely regulated, rather than completely destroyed, the right. See, e.g., State v. Reid,

1 Ala. 612, 616

(1840) (upholding a law prohibiting bodies of men from parading with firearms because it was a reasonable regulation and analogous to laws (Continued) 11 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 12 of 41

S. Ct. at 2134 (“Nothing in the Second Amendment’s text draws a home/public distinction

with respect to the right to keep and bear arms.”). Yet, under the challenged scheme, an

applicant without a firearm cannot possess or carry one until they are approved—a process

that can take thirty days. And the law’s waiting period could well be the critical time in

which the applicant expects to face danger. So the temporary deprivation that Plaintiffs

allege is a facially plausible Second Amendment violation. 9

prohibiting the carrying of concealed weapons); see also William Baude & Robert Leider, The General Law Right to Bear Arms, 99 Notre Dame L. Rev. (forthcoming 2024) (manuscript at 18) (explaining that state courts considered challenges to laws regulating the right, even when those laws did not totally abridge the right). Finally, Bruen itself contemplated suits over laws that impose burdens that fall short of total bans.

142 S. Ct. at 2133

(explaining how courts should approach challenges to designated sensitive places). None of this means that we require no nexus between a law and a proposed course of conduct. Bruen seems to require that a law is a “regulation” of protected conduct, which entails some burden on or hindrance to its exercise. See

142 S. Ct. at 2126

. We need not and do not now decide where to draw this line. All we need to decide today is that Second Amendment scrutiny is not exclusively reserved for laws that wholly or effectively prohibit firearm possession. If a law regulates an individual’s conduct, and his conduct falls within the scope of the Second Amendment, then that law must be justified by resort to history and tradition. And in this case, Maryland’s law clearly regulates Plaintiffs’ right to keep and bear arms. 9 Maryland and the dissent make much of Bruen’s Footnote Nine. But that footnote does not bless Maryland’s law. While the footnote preemptively threw cold water on any “shall issue” regimes “put towards abusive ends” such as those that result in “lengthy wait times” or “exorbitant fees,” it did not say those were the only types of unconstitutional “shall issue” regimes. In other words, the Court suggested that the Second Amendment barred—at a minimum—certain “shall issue” schemes; but it did not say whether that floor was also a ceiling. Plaintiffs now ask us to answer that open question. In doing so, it would be poor judicial practice to “read a footnote” in a Supreme Court case to “establish the general rule” for that case. United States ex rel. Schutte v. SuperValu Inc.,

143 S. Ct. 1391

, 1403 n.6 (2023). Bruen was not shy about telling lower courts how to handle Second Amendment challenges: We turn to the Amendment’s “text,” “informed by history,” and by “the historical tradition that delimits the outer bounds of the right.” Bruen,

142 S. Ct. at 2127

. (Continued) 12 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 13 of 41

Accordingly, Maryland’s law regulates conduct that falls within the Second

Amendment’s plain text. Plaintiffs’ challenge thus satisfies the first step of Bruen’s test,

and we must proceed to the second step: Has Maryland shown that its law is justified by

history and tradition?

So if we have to choose between the outcome dictated by text, history, and tradition and the outcome hinted at in dicta, it is no contest: Text, history, and tradition wins every time. And even if we were to piece together a directive, it would have little bearing on the regulation before us. As an initial matter, the dissent mistakenly reads this footnote as pertaining to Bruen’s first, rather than its second, step. See Diss. Op. at 34–38. This is not the case. Footnote Nine is appended to a sentence explaining that there is no historical support for preventing law-abiding citizens from publicly carrying weapons simply because they cannot show a special need—a step two inquiry. Bruen,

142 S. Ct. at 2138

. The footnote then explains that shall-issue regimes are different because, unlike may-issue regimes, they do not “necessarily prevent” law-abiding citizens from exercising Second Amendment rights.

Id.

at 2138 n.9. So the Court here was comparing the burdens may- and shall-issue regimes impose for purposes of identifying historical analogues to justify them, not to explain when the Second Amendment is triggered in the first place. See

id. at 2133

(“[W]hether modern and historical regulations impose a comparable burden on the right of armed self-defense and whether that burden is comparably justified are ‘central’ considerations when engaging in an analogical inquiry.” (emphasis in original) (quoting McDonald v. City of Chicago,

561 U.S. 742, 767

(2010))). In other words, the Court was simply clarifying that the mere fact that may-issue regimes fail the history test does not mean that most shall-issue regimes automatically fail that test too. This is but an invitation for courts to examine these laws against the historical record at step two, which is precisely what we do here. And even if we stretch the Court’s language to actually bless most shall-issue public carry regimes, this says little about shall-issue regimes that limit handgun possession altogether. A restriction on whether someone can even possess a firearm in or out of the home is more burdensome than one that only limits his right to carry that firearm publicly. See Heller,

554 U.S. at 628

(“the home” is “where the need for defense of self, family, and property is most acute”). Bruen tells us that the relative burden a law imposes is “central” to step two’s analogical reasoning. See

142 S. Ct. at 2133

(quoting McDonald,

561 U.S. at 767

). So even if Bruen green-lighted similar but less burdensome restrictions, like some shall-issue carry regimes, we are still obligated to independently compare more burdensome restrictions, like shall-issue possession regimes, against the historical record. 13 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 14 of 41

B. Maryland has not shown that “history and tradition” justify such a restriction

Maryland has not met its burden. At Bruen’s second step, Maryland must provide

historical evidence that justifies its law. To do this, it may identify a “historical analogue”

demonstrating that its law falls within a historically recognized exception to the right to

keep and bear arms. See Bruen, 142 S. Ct. at 2132–33. But the two historical examples

that Maryland cites are not “relevantly similar” to the challenged law. Id. at 2132. And it

has offered no other historical evidence to justify its law. Indeed, Maryland admitted at

oral argument that it had not presented a proper historical analogue for the challenged law,

noting that it had identified no Founding-era laws that “required advance permission”

before a citizen could purchase a firearm. Oral Arg. at 23:05 – 23:29; see also Oral Arg.

at 31:22 – 31:35.

1. A historical tradition of prohibiting “dangerous” people from owning firearms does not justify Maryland’s law

Maryland’s historical evidence is scant at best. It first asserts that its law is justified

by the “historical limitations” on the ability of “dangerous” people to own firearms. See

Appellee’s Br. at 32–33. But Maryland points to no historical laws for support. Instead, it

cites various provisions of the modern U.S. Code that prohibit certain categories of

people—including felons, see

18 U.S.C. § 922

(g)(1), those addicted to a controlled

substance, see § 922(g)(3), and those convicted of a domestic violence misdemeanor, see

§ 922(g)(9)—from owning firearms. See Appellee’s Br. at 32–33. Maryland simply

assumes that those federal prohibitions are justified by a historical “dangerousness”

exception; and because, Maryland says, the challenged law is ostensibly designed to

14 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 15 of 41

prevent those same groups of people from acquiring handguns, it also falls within the same

“dangerousness” exception.

Though Maryland has not mustered independent historical support for a

“dangerousness” exception, other judges have thoroughly canvassed the historical record.

See, e.g., Kanter v. Barr,

919 F.3d 437

, 453–64 (7th Cir. 2019) (Barrett, J., dissenting);

Folajtar v. Att’y Gen.,

980 F.3d 897

, 913–20 (3d Cir. 2020) (Bibas, J., dissenting). And

they tend to agree that history and tradition support an exception affording legislatures “the

power to prohibit dangerous people from possessing guns.” Kanter,

919 F.3d at 451

(Barrett, J., dissenting); see also Foljatar,

980 F.3d at 912

(Bibas, J., dissenting). But even

if the modern federal prohibitions that Maryland cites are all constitutional—because they

fit within a historical tradition allowing states to prohibit “dangerous” people from owning

firearms 10—that says nothing about Maryland’s law. That is because its law is not

“relevantly similar” to the laws allegedly comprising that tradition.

Bruen is clear that a historical analogue only justifies a modern law if the two are

“relevantly similar.”

142 S. Ct. at 2132

. The “metrics” that we use to decide whether two

laws are “relevantly similar” are (1) “how” and (2) “why the regulations burden a law-

abiding citizen’s right.”

Id. at 2133

. In other words, we ask (1) “whether modern and

10 Even among judges who accept a historically grounded “dangerousness” exception, there is less agreement that these modern U.S. Code provisions fit within it. Compare, e.g., Range v. Att’y Gen.,

69 F.4th 96, 106

(3d Cir. 2023) (en banc) (holding that § 922(g)(1) violates the Second Amendment, as applied to a particular nonviolent felon), with United States v. Jackson,

69 F.4th 495, 502

(8th Cir. 2023) (concluding “that there is no need for felony-by-felony litigation regarding the constitutionality of § 922(g)(1)” under the Second Amendment). 15 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 16 of 41

historical regulations impose a comparable burden on the right,” and (2) “whether that

burden is comparably justified.” Id.

Here, Maryland suggests that the justification may well be the same: prevent

dangerous people from getting weapons. But the burden is markedly different. The

historical “dangerousness” laws targeted people already deemed dangerous by the state and

subjected them to penalties if they possessed firearms. See Folajtar,

980 F.3d at 914

(Bibas, J., dissenting). Maryland’s law operates through an entirely different mechanism.

It does not merely identify a dangerous group of people and prohibit them from acquiring

handguns; other statutes already occupy that field. See, e.g., Md. Code, Pub. Safety § 5-

133. Instead, it prohibits all people from acquiring handguns until they can prove that they

are not dangerous. So Maryland’s law burdens all people—even if only temporarily—

rather than just a class of people whom the state has already deemed presumptively

dangerous.

The point is that different mechanisms often impose different burdens. And courts

must consider the mechanism that the challenged law chooses to carry out its goal when

evaluating whether it is “relevantly similar” to a historical law. Cf. United States v. Silvers,

No. 5:18-cr-50-BJB,

2023 WL 3232605

, at *14 (W.D. Ky. May 3, 2023) (noting that the

asserted historical analogues “acted through similar mechanisms” as the challenged law);

Bruen,

142 S. Ct. at 2131

(“[W]hen a challenged regulation addresses a general societal

problem that has persisted since the 18th century. . . [and] earlier generations addressed the

societal problem . . . through materially different means, that [ ] could be evidence that a

modern regulation is unconstitutional.”).

16 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 17 of 41

The modern federal laws that Maryland has cited, and the historical laws allegedly

supporting a tradition of prohibiting dangerous people from owning firearms, all acted

through one mechanism: punishing certain classes of supposedly “dangerous” people if

they don’t give up their arms or prove they are not dangerous. See Silvers,

2023 WL 3232605

, at *11–12 (discussing historical laws). But that is a different mechanism than

making every person seek the government’s permission before they can even acquire arms.

Preemptively disarming every person until they can each prove that they are not dangerous

burdens a far broader swath of people.

It is not our place, as a court, to judge a law’s wisdom or weigh competing policy

values. After all, “[t]he Second Amendment is the very product of an interest balancing

by the people.” Bruen,

142 S. Ct. at 2131

(cleaned up). If they disapprove, then the people

can draw a different balance using Article V’s amendment process. But, under the Second

Amendment’s current balance, Maryland’s law cannot survive. Even assuming a historical

tradition of prohibiting “dangerous” people from owning firearms, Maryland chose a

different mechanism, and thus imposed different burdens, from the historical analogues

that it asserts.

2. A historical tradition of requiring militia training does not justify Maryland’s law

Maryland’s second argument is that its law is justified by a historical tradition of

laws requiring training for members of the militia. For support, Maryland cites Founding-

era state and federal militia laws. See Appellee’s Br. at 34–37. But its argument is without

merit, as these Founding-era laws placed no restrictions on acquiring or owning firearms.

17 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 18 of 41

Militia-training laws did not burden a Second Amendment right at all, and so they cannot

be “relevantly similar” to Maryland’s law.

Many colonies and early states required—with some exceptions—that all able-

bodied men of a certain age participate in the militia. See Hirschfeld v. ATF,

5 F.4th 407

,

428–30 (4th Cir. 2021) (discussing these militia laws), vacated as moot by

14 F.4th 322

(4th Cir. 2021). And they generally required members of the militia to provide their own

weapons and show up for regular training. See Hirschfeld, 5 F.4th at 428–29 n.28. But

these militia laws never conditioned keeping or bearing arms on participation in militia

training.

Accordingly, these militia-training laws imposed no burden on the right of keeping

and bearing arms. Instead, the service burden that these laws imposed was divorced from

gun ownership. You could not get out of training just by ditching your weapon. (Indeed,

that would open you up to even more sanctions.) And just because you owned a weapon

did not mean that you had to train. If you were a woman or older man who owned arms,

for instance, there was no need to appear on the parade grounds. You only had to train if

you were in the militia. In other words: These laws imposed a service obligation on

militiamen, not gun owners. That obligation applied regardless of whether you owned a

weapon. So none of these militia laws placed any restriction on gun ownership.

Consider, for example, New Jersey, which in 1778 passed a law requiring members

of the militia to “assemble, properly armed and accoutred, twice in the Year, at such Times

and Place or Places as the Field-Officers, or a Majority of them, shall direct for the Purpose

of Training and Exercise.” 1778 N.J. Sess. Laws 42, 46 § 15. And “in case of Absence”

18 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 19 of 41

from the training, the law imposed a monetary penalty based on rank. Id. New Jersey’s

law likewise imposed a monetary penalty on militia members who failed to acquire the

proper arms and ammunition. See id. at 45 §§ 11 & 12.

Another example is Delaware, which passed a similar militia-training law in 1782.

That law provided that the militia “shall be duly exercised and instructed once in every

Month,” 1782 Del. Sess. Laws 1, 3 § 5, and required its members to bring their own

firearms. Id. § 6. Like New Jersey, Delaware imposed monetary penalties on any

militiaman failing to keep his arms “by him at all Times, ready and fit for Service,” id., and

who “shall neglect or refuse to appear on the Parade . . . not having reasonable excuse.”

Id. at 4 § 7. In summary, these laws sanctioned militia members both for failing to show

up for training and for failing to bring their own arms. You could not evade those sanctions

if you didn’t have a weapon. And just because you had one didn’t necessarily subject you

to them.

Thus, these militia-training laws are not a valid historical analogue justifying

Maryland’s law. Militia-training laws imposed no burden on the right to keep and bear

arms. They did not condition possessing and carrying arms on attending militia training.

Nor did they limit in any way an individual’s ability to acquire a firearm. These laws

placed service burdens on being in the militia, not on being a gun owner. And, because

they imposed a different burden, the militia-training laws are not “relevantly similar” to

Maryland’s law. See Bruen,

142 S. Ct. at 2133

.

Maryland has identified no other traditions that could serve as a historical analogue,

nor has it presented any other evidence that the challenged law “is consistent with this

19 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 20 of 41

Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.” Bruen,

142 S. Ct. at 2126

. So it has

not met its burden under Bruen, and its law cannot survive Plaintiffs’ Second Amendment

challenge. 11

* * *

In Maryland, if you are a law-abiding person who wants a handgun, you must wait

up to thirty days for the state to give you its blessing. Until then, there is nothing you can

do; the issue is out of your control. Maryland has not shown that this regime is consistent

with our Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation. There might well be a tradition

of prohibiting dangerous people from owning firearms. But, under the Second

Amendment, mechanism matters. And Maryland has not pointed to any historical laws

that operated by preemptively depriving all citizens of firearms to keep them out of

11 The dissent chastises us for declining to remand this case to the district court to reconsider its decision in light of Bruen. But there is no reason to do so here. To start, Maryland did not ask for a remand, and did not even address the possibility until specifically asked about it at oral argument. See Oral Arg. at 17:49 – 18:42. While remand often makes sense when additional facts are needed, cf. Humphrey v. Humphrey,

434 F.3d 243, 248

(4th Cir. 2006) (noting that remand is appropriate when the record permits more than one resolution of a factual issue), those kinds of factual questions are not at issue here. See Oral Arg. at 19:06 – 19:30 & 37:30 – 38:23. Similarly, though a remand might be appropriate to determine whether a statute were severable, Maryland disavowed a severability argument. See Oral Arg. at 25:13 – 25:27 & 26:52–27:00. The dissent claims that Maryland only did so because it thought the law was completely constitutional, but this is just another way of saying that the state put all its eggs in one basket—and lost. Whether by disavowal or failure to argue, the government abandons an argument by failing to raise it on appeal. And we will not give the state yet another chance to identify more historical analogues, especially when it has explicitly declined to ask us for it. “Courts are [ ] entitled to decide a case based on the historical record compiled by the parties.” Bruen,

142 S. Ct. at 2130

n.6. The parties fully briefed the issue of historical analogues. We will not return the parties to the district court just to push more paper around. Cf.

id.

at 2135 n.8. 20 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 21 of 41

dangerous hands. Plaintiffs’ challenge thus must succeed, and the district court’s contrary

decision must be

REVERSED.

21 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 22 of 41

BARBARA MILANO KEENAN, Senior Circuit Judge, dissenting:

In this facial constitutional challenge to a non-discretionary handgun permitting law,

the majority fundamentally misapplies Bruen. 1 The majority bases its holding on the

premise that if a law affects a prospective handgun purchaser’s ability to obtain a handgun

“now,” the law is presumptively unconstitutional. This sweeping rule flies directly in the

face of Bruen’s discussion of non-discretionary “shall-issue” laws and is not supported by

any Supreme Court precedent. Simply stated, the majority’s hyperaggressive view of the

Second Amendment would render presumptively unconstitutional most non-discretionary

laws in this country requiring a permit to purchase a handgun (permitting laws).

In defending this result, the majority attempts to pound a square peg into a round

hole by treating the non-discretionary “shall-issue” law before us no differently than a

discretionary “may-issue” law. This pounding maneuver fails to account for the material

differences between “may-issue” and “shall-issue” laws, distinctions that the Supreme

Court warned in Bruen would require additional consideration in determining the

constitutionality of shall-issue regimes. By failing to incorporate into the Bruen framework

these analytical distinctions, my colleagues reach the very result the Supreme Court

cautioned against in Bruen, namely, casting aside a shall-issue permitting law because the

statute results in some delay to a prospective buyer who wishes to purchase a handgun.

In reaching its conclusion, the majority also rushes to final judgment, bypassing the

district court’s fundamental role of weighing the evidence in this mixed question of law

1 N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Ass’n, Inc. v. Bruen,

142 S. Ct. 2111

(2022). USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 23 of 41

and fact. And, doubling down on this lack of judicial restraint, the majority strikes down

an entire statute without even a passing reference to the presumption of severability

afforded to the statute under Maryland law. I respectfully dissent.

I.

There are at least two reasons to remand this case to the district court for application

of Bruen. First, Bruen was decided in 2022, almost one year after the district court’s

decision. Lacking the benefit of this decision, the district court used the then-applicable

analytical framework ultimately rejected in Bruen. Moreover, in Bruen, the Supreme Court

cautioned that shall-issue laws like the one before us fall within a category of laws

analytically and factually distinct from the may-issue New York law reviewed there.

142 S. Ct. at 2138

n.9. As a result, the district court should be required to conduct a newly

tailored evidentiary inquiry and an analysis extending well beyond the bare-bones

framework used by the majority.

Second, Maryland law instructs that the statute requiring the handgun qualification

license (the HQL requirement) enjoys a presumption of severability, so any

unconstitutional provision in one part of that statute would not necessarily affect the

validity of its remaining portions. Md. Code, Gen. Prov. § 1-210. The district court is

better situated than this Court to undertake the severability analysis in the first instance.

A.

At issue here is the facial constitutionality of a Maryland law, duly enacted by the

Maryland General Assembly, that allows any law-abiding, responsible person to obtain the

23 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 24 of 41

handgun qualification license required by the state. Md. Code, Pub. Safety § 5-117.1. 2 In

the district court, the plaintiffs argued that the HQL requirement violates the Second

Amendment. 3 Faithfully applying our then-binding precedent in Kolbe v. Hogan,

849 F.3d 114

(4th Cir. 2017) (en banc), the district court (1) considered whether the HQL

requirement imposed a burden on conduct falling within the scope of the Second

Amendment and, after concluding that it did, (2) analyzed whether the government had

shown that the HQL requirement was “reasonably adapted to a substantial governmental

interest,” as required to satisfy the intermediate scrutiny standard of review. See Kolbe,

849 F.3d at 133

(citation omitted). In a thorough and well-reasoned opinion in August

2021 applying this standard to the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, the

district court held that the HQL requirement was constitutional.

In June 2022, however, the Supreme Court in Bruen articulated a new analytical

framework for consideration of Second Amendment challenges. There, the Court

addressed a Second Amendment challenge to a century-old New York state statute known

as the “Sullivan Law.”

142 S. Ct. at 2122

. Under that “public carry” law, any law-abiding,

responsible person who sought a license to carry a firearm outside of his home or place of

business for self-defense had to prove first that “proper cause exist[ed]” to issue the license.

2 This provision was not affected by the Maryland General Assembly’s recent amendments to other firearms laws. See 2023 Md. Laws Ch. 651 (H.B. No. 824) (effective Oct. 1, 2023). 3 The Second Amendment is made applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment. See McDonald v. Chicago,

561 U.S. 742, 791

(2010). For consistency with the district court opinion and the majority opinion, I refer only to the Second Amendment in this dissenting opinion. 24 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 25 of 41

Id.

at 2122–23. Although “proper cause” was not defined by the statute, New York courts

had interpreted the phrase as requiring “a special need for self-protection distinguishable

from that of the general community.”

Id.

at 2123 (quoting In re Klenosky,

75 A.D.2d 793, 793

(N.Y. App. Div. 1980)). The Supreme Court referred to this New York law, and laws

in other states with similar proper-cause standards, as “may-issue” laws.

Id.

at 2123–24.

In assessing whether New York’s may-issue public carry law violated the Second

Amendment, the Court rejected the two-step, means-based framework that we had applied

in Kolbe. Although the Supreme Court acknowledged that Courts of Appeals “had

coalesced” around this means-based framework, the Court instead developed a new

framework based on its interpretation of Heller.

Id.

at 2125–26. Under this new

framework, a law is unconstitutional under the Second Amendment only if: (1) the plaintiff

shows that the plain text of the Second Amendment protects an individual’s course of

conduct (step one), and (2) the government fails to show that the challenged regulation is

“consistent with this Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation” (step two).

Id.

at

2129–30.

Although the plaintiffs in the present case broadly had asked the district court to

consider the Second Amendment’s “text, history, and tradition,” the plaintiffs did not

present to the court the information required under the nuanced framework outlined in

Bruen, or the evidence that would have been necessary to apply Bruen to a shall-issue law.

Typically, when a district court applies an analytical framework that later has been

abrogated by the Supreme Court, our practice is to remand the case for the district court to

consider the newly articulated framework in the first instance. See, e.g., Firewalker-Fields

25 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 26 of 41

v. Lee,

58 F.4th 104, 111

, 121–23 (4th Cir. 2023) (remanding Establishment Clause

challenge “to allow the district court to grapple with the history-and-tradition test in the

first instance” under the Supreme Court’s new framework); see also Carlton & Harris

Chiropractic, Inc. v. PDR Network, LLC,

982 F.3d 258, 264

(4th Cir. 2020) (“As we have

said many times before, we are a court of review, not of first view.” (quoting PDR Network,

LLC v. Carlton & Harris Chiropractic, Inc.,

139 S. Ct. 2051, 2056

(2019))).

Here, however, my colleagues have decided not to allow this process to run its

natural course. Instead, the majority applies the new Bruen framework in the first instance,

short-circuiting a process designed to prevent the exact type of rushed decision-making

implemented here. The majority characterizes its refusal to allow the district court to

consider these issues in the first instance as an exercise in judicial efficiency. Maj. Op., at

20 n.11 (“We will not return the parties to the district court just to push more paper

around.”). But it is dangerous, not efficient, to establish precedent based on a record

lacking the information necessary to answer the many questions that a district court must

address under the Supreme Court’s new framework.

B.

Critically, the majority fails to grapple substantively with the implications of the

Supreme Court’s discussion in Bruen of shall-issue regimes. In Bruen, the Court first

compared New York’s may-issue public carry law to the public carry laws in other states,

noting that only six other jurisdictions had may-issue regimes similar to New York’s,

“under which authorities have discretion to deny concealed-carry licenses even when the

applicant satisfies the statutory criteria, usually because the applicant has not demonstrated

26 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 27 of 41

cause or suitability for the relevant license.” 142 S. Ct. at 2123–24. The Court then

elaborated on the distinct character of shall-issue regimes, explaining that “the vast

majority of states,” forty-three, are “shall[-]issue” jurisdictions in which “authorities must

issue concealed-carry licenses whenever applicants satisfy certain threshold requirements,

without granting licensing officials discretion to deny licenses based on a perceived lack

of need or suitability.”

Id. at 2123

. The Court continued:

To be clear, nothing in our analysis should be interpreted to suggest the unconstitutionality of the 43 States’ “shall-issue” licensing regimes, under which “a general desire for self-defense is sufficient to obtain a [permit].” Because these licensing regimes do not require applicants to show an atypical need for armed self-defense, they do not necessarily prevent “law-abiding, responsible citizens” from exercising their Second Amendment right to public carry. Rather, it appears that these shall-issue regimes, which often require applicants to undergo a background check or pass a firearms safety course, are designed to ensure only that those bearing arms in the jurisdiction are, in fact, “law-abiding, responsible citizens.” And they likewise appear to contain only “narrow, objective, and definite standards” guiding licensing officials, rather than requiring the “appraisal of facts, the exercise of judgment, and the formation of an opinion”—features that typify proper-cause standards like New York’s. That said, because any permitting scheme can be put toward abusive ends, we do not rule out constitutional challenges to shall-issue regimes where, for example, lengthy wait times in processing license applications or exorbitant fees deny ordinary citizens their right to public carry.

Id.

at 2138 n.9 (citations omitted). For ease, I refer to this passage as the “shall-issue

discussion.”

In the shall-issue discussion, the Court made explicit what any reader already would

have discerned, namely, that the plaintiffs in Bruen had not challenged the constitutionality

of a shall-issue law and, accordingly, that such laws would not necessarily be invalidated

by the Court’s holdings regarding New York state’s may-issue public carry law. Moreover,

27 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 28 of 41

the Court provided explicit cautionary language, warning that the Court’s opinion about

may-issue regimes should not be interpreted as “suggest[ing] the unconstitutionality of

. . . ‘shall-issue’ licensing regimes,” and adding that such regimes do not “necessarily

prevent ‘law-abiding, responsible citizens’” from exercising their Second Amendment

rights. 4

Id.

at 2138 n.9.

Like the shall-issue regimes contemplated by the Supreme Court in Bruen, the HQL

requirement allows any law-abiding, responsible person who seeks to obtain a handgun

qualification license to do so by completing the objective criteria outlined in the statute.

The state does not retain any governmental discretion or ability to exercise judgment with

regard to an individual’s application for a handgun qualification license, and the state may

not deny an individual a license once the statutory requirements have been satisfied.

Naturally, because of the time required to complete this application process,

individuals who decide today that they want to purchase their first handgun likely will not

be able to leave the store with one in hand. Those applicants must first pay a fee, submit a

set of their fingerprints, and complete certain firearm safety training requirements. Md.

4 In discussing the purpose and character of the shall-issue laws that predominate the public carry landscape in the United States, the majority in Bruen identified as typical components background checks and firearms safety courses.

Id.

In his concurring opinion, Justice Kavanaugh, joined by Chief Justice Roberts, provided additional examples of other components of generally “constitutionally permissible” shall-issue laws, including fingerprinting, mental health records checks, and training in laws regarding the use of force.

Id. at 2162

(Kavanaugh, J., concurring). After he underscored the distinction drawn by the majority between shall-issue and may-issue laws, Justice Kavanaugh unequivocally stated that “the 43 States that employ objective shall-issue licensing regimes for carrying handguns for self-defense may continue to do so.”

Id.

28 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 29 of 41

Code, Pub. Safety, § 5-117.1. But as the shall-issue discussion makes clear, these

objective, non-discretionary components of a standard regulatory scheme generally are

constitutionally permissible.

Indeed, in Bruen the Supreme Court observed that shall-issue laws “often” require

that applicants complete a background check or a firearms safety course.

142 S. Ct. at 2138

n.9. And even though compliance with these objective, non-discretionary conditions

necessarily results in some delay, the Court stated that it was not “suggest[ing] the

unconstitutionality of” such requirements.

Id.

Offering a contrasting example, the Court cautioned that it did not “rule out

constitutional challenges to shall-issue regimes” for which “lengthy wait times . . . or

exorbitant fees deny ordinary citizens their right to public carry.”

Id.

(emphasis added).

The difference between a facially permissible shall-issue regime and a facially

impermissible shall-issue regime thus is not whether any burden is imposed or any delay

results from the regulatory measures, but whether any requirements imposed by the regime

are so onerous that they operate to “deny” law-abiding, responsible individuals their

Second Amendment rights.

Here, the question whether the burden imposed by the HQL requirement “infringes”

the rights of law-abiding, responsible individuals requires a distinct analysis as part of

Bruen’s step-one “plain text” inquiry. The Second Amendment provides:

A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

29 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 30 of 41

U.S. Const. amend. II (emphasis added). Consistent with the Supreme Court’s guidance

on the scope of the Second Amendment as it applies to shall-issue schemes, under the plain

text of the Second Amendment a regulation is covered only if an individual can show that

the regulation has “infringed” the individual’s exercise of his Second Amendment right to

keep or right to bear arms.

What does the word “infringed” mean in the context of the Second Amendment?

The Supreme Court has not directly answered this question because the Court has never

been required to do so. In the Court’s seminal Second Amendment decisions, the Court

has considered only laws that banned or effectively banned individuals from possessing or

carrying firearms. In District of Columbia v. Heller, the Court addressed the

constitutionality of a District of Columbia statutory scheme that banned handgun

possession in the home.

554 U.S. 570, 628

(2008) (“The handgun ban amounts to a

prohibition of an entire class of ‘arms’” and “extends . . . to the home.”). In McDonald v.

Chicago, the Court addressed the constitutionality of Chicago laws that “effectively

bann[ed] handgun possession by almost all private citizens who reside in the City.”

561 U.S. 742, 750

(2010). And in Bruen, the Court addressed a New York law under which

the state had denied the petitioners’ applications for unrestricted public carry licenses, thus

prohibiting the petitioners from carrying handguns in public for self-defense because they

had failed to persuade a governmental official that they had a special need to do so.

142 S. Ct. at 2156

. The bans in Heller, McDonald, and Bruen thus did not compel a separate

30 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 31 of 41

inquiry regarding whether a law “infringes” a law-abiding, responsible person’s right to

keep and bear arms. 5

The majority acknowledges that, under the “operative clause” of the Second

Amendment, the right to keep and the right to bear arms “shall not be infringed.” Maj.

Op., at 8. But the majority wholly avoids the type of textual analysis previously used by

the Supreme Court to determine the meaning of terms and phrases appearing in the Second

Amendment. See, e.g., Heller,

554 U.S. at 579, 581, 595, 597

.

In its truncated step-one inquiry, the majority fails to define the term “infringe” or

otherwise to address its scope. Instead, the majority merely asks whether the law

“regulates” an individual’s course of conduct. Maj. Op., at 11. Unsurprisingly, the answer

to this question will almost always be “yes.” But the majority has not identified any basis

for employing the term “regulates,” which notably does not appear in the Supreme Court’s

Bruen framework, in place of the Second Amendment’s term “infringe.” Nevertheless, the

majority invokes this substitute terminology, summarily concluding that the government

must justify the “temporary deprivation” occasioned by the HQL requirement under step

two of the Bruen inquiry because the law prevents the plaintiff “from owning handguns

now.” Maj. Op. at 10 (emphasis in original) & 12.

Put differently, under the majority’s step-one view, the plaintiffs allege a “facially

plausible Second Amendment violation” simply because compliance with the law’s

5 Nor did the Supreme Court’s decision in Caetano v. Massachusetts, require an evaluation of this separate issue.

577 U.S. 411

, 411 (2016) (assessing the constitutionality of a Massachusetts law prohibiting the possession of stun guns). 31 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 32 of 41

requirements renders it “impossible” for the plaintiffs to own a handgun “right away.” Maj.

Op., at 10. Accordingly, the majority has created a constitutional test that would render

presumptively unconstitutional most, if not all, shall-issue permitting laws. 6

In addition to its failure to analyze the plain text of the Second Amendment, the

majority seeks to minimize the effect of the Supreme Court’s shall-issue discussion. First,

the majority relies on a footnote in a different Supreme Court case to argue that “it would

be poor judicial practice to ‘read a footnote’ in a Supreme Court case to ‘establish the

general rule’ for that case.” Maj. Op., at 12 n.9 (quoting United States ex rel. Schutte v.

SuperValu Inc.,

143 S. Ct. 1391

, 1403 n.6 (2023)). But the Court’s inclusion of text in a

6 I observe that many of the shall-issue public carry laws cited by the Supreme Court in Bruen set forth permissible processing periods either comparable to or longer than the 30-day processing period provided in the HQL requirement. See Ala. Code § 13A–11–75 (Cum. Supp. 2021) (30 days);

Alaska Stat. § 18.65.700

(2020) (30 days); Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 13–3112 (Cum. Supp. 2021) (75 days); Colo. Rev. Stat. § 18–12–206 (2021) (90 days);

Fla. Stat. § 790.06

(2021) (90 days); Idaho Code Ann. § 18–3302K (Cum. Supp. 2021) (90 days); Ill. Comp. Stat., ch. 430, § 66/10 (West Cum. Supp. 2021) (90 days);

Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 237.110

(Cum. Supp. 2021) (60 days for paper application, 15 days for electronic application); Me. Rev. Stat. Ann., tit. 25, § 2003 (Cum. Supp. 2022) (30 days for resident of five years or more, 60 days for other residents and nonresidents);

Mich. Comp. Laws § 28

.425b (2020) (45 days); Miss. Code Ann. § 45–9–101 (2022) (45 days);

Mo. Rev. Stat. § 571.101

(2016) (45 days); Mont. Code Ann. § 45–8–321 (2021) (60 days); Neb. Rev. Stat. § 69–2430 (2019) (45 days);

N.D. Cent. Code Ann. § 62

.1–04–03 (Supp. 2021) (60 days);

Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2923.125

(2020) (45 days); Okla. Stat., tit. 21, § 1290.12 (2021) (60 days, if background check does not reveal any relevant records);

18 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 6109

(Cum. Supp. 2016) (45 days); S.C. Code Ann. § 23–31–215(A) (Cum. Supp. 2021) (90 days);

Tex. Govt. Code Ann. § 411.177

(West Cum. Supp. 2021) (60 days); Utah Code § 53–5–704.5 (2022) (60 days);

Va. Code Ann. § 18

.2–308.04 (2021) (45 days);

Wash. Rev. Code § 9.41.070

(2021) (30 days); W. Va. Code Ann. § 61–7–4 (2021) (45 days if background checks are completed); Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 6–8–104 (2021) (60 days); see also JA 125 ¶ 13 (declaration of Maryland State Police Captain Andy Johnson) (stating that, “[t]hrough the first quarter of calendar year 2018, there were no completed HQL applications pending disposition for longer than 15 days”).

32 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 33 of 41

footnote makes it no less a part of the Court’s opinion. And even without adopting the

precise text of the Court’s shall-issue discussion as a “general rule,” it is sound practice for

us to examine and refer to the Court’s discussion of shall-issue regimes when analyzing

the Bruen framework in the context of the HQL requirement, because the Supreme Court

has provided this substantive guidance for consideration of future challenges to shall-issue

statutes. 7

The majority, however, passes over the text of the shall-issue discussion, offering

another view that elevates form over substance. According to the majority, the shall-issue

discussion relates only to Bruen’s step-two historical inquiry, because the Supreme Court

inserted the footnote containing the shall-issue discussion after explaining why the New

York law failed the second step of the Bruen framework. Maj. Op., at 13 n.9. The entire

substance of the shall-issue discussion, however, corresponds directly with a step-one

“infringement” analysis, and the Court did not refer in that discussion to any of the

hallmarks of a step-two inquiry, such as the history of shall-issue laws or the question

whether such laws are “relevantly similar” to historical regulations. See Bruen, 142 S. Ct.

at 2132–33. Thus, it is not surprising that the Court, in the course of explaining its

7 The majority acknowledges that the HQL requirement is a shall-issue law. See Maj. Op., at 10 n.6. To the extent that the majority seeks to dispense with the Supreme Court’s shall-issue discussion as dicta, I observe that “we routinely afford substantial, if not controlling deference to dicta from the Supreme Court.” Manning v. Caldwell for City of Roanoke,

930 F.3d 264

, 281–82 (4th Cir. 2019) (en banc) (“[L]ower courts grappling with complex legal questions of first impression must give due weight to guidance from the Supreme Court, so as to ensure the consistent and uniform development and application of the law.”). Such consideration is especially warranted when, as here, the substantive dictum addresses the very issue before us. 33 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 34 of 41

conclusion why the may-issue New York law was unconstitutional, added this footnote to

emphasize the limits of its holding.

Next, the majority attempts to frame the Supreme Court’s shall-issue discussion as

irrelevant because the New York law at issue in Bruen was a restriction on “public carry,”

while Maryland’s law “limit[s] handgun possession altogether.” Maj. Op., at 13 n.9

(emphasis omitted). But this distinction turns on a false premise, namely, that there is a

difference between the Second Amendment right to keep arms and the Second Amendment

right to bear arms. Neither the text of the Second Amendment nor the Supreme Court’s

precedent supports such a reading. 8 Thus, the majority cannot discard the language in the

Court’s shall-issue discussion on the basis that the Court was addressing only shall-issue

public carry laws.

The majority nevertheless declines to address the detailed substance of the

shall-issue discussion, perhaps because that discussion generally counsels a measured,

fact-intensive approach to the consideration of constitutional challenges to shall-issue

8 A permitting or public carry law may have a more direct effect on either the right to keep or the right to bear arms. The Supreme Court, however, has discussed the importance of these rights in tandem, drawing no distinction between them in establishing the applicable Second Amendment framework or the relative strength of each as a constitutional right. Under the new Bruen framework, a court very well may conclude under step two that the historical tradition of laws relating to the right to possess firearms differs from the historical tradition of laws relating to the right to carry those firearms in public. But this step requires the court to conduct a detailed inquiry by which the court first must identify, at a minimum, the burden a particular regulation imposes and the justification for that regulation. Only then may the court compare this burden and justification to the historical analogues identified by the parties, determining whether the burden imposed by, and the justification provided for, the modern regulation is “relevantly similar” to the historical analogues. Bruen,

142 S. Ct. at 2132

.

34 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 35 of 41

regimes. The shall-issue discussion plainly signals the Supreme Court’s thinking that,

going forward, successful constitutional challenges to shall-issue statutes ordinarily will be

limited to challenges involving uniquely burdensome requirements such as “lengthy wait

times in processing license applications” or “exorbitant fees.” See Bruen,

142 S. Ct. at 2138

n.9. The majority’s contrary conclusion here, invalidating an entire shall-issue statute

as facially unconstitutional without any discussion whether the statute’s requirements

infringe every permit applicant’s constitutional rights, thus runs directly against Bruen’s

clear guidance on shall-issue regimes. Id.; see also Wash. State Grange v. Wash. State

Republican Party,

552 U.S. 442, 449

(2008) (explaining that “a plaintiff can only succeed

in a facial challenge” by establishing “that the law is unconstitutional in all of its

applications”).

Shall-issue laws allow individuals with “a general desire for self-defense” to obtain

a permit to possess or carry a firearm. Bruen,

142 S. Ct. at 2138

n.9. Although such laws

may impose conditions that result in some delay in acquiring or bearing a firearm, they do

not require a discretionary governmental determination regarding firearm possession or

carry, and they generally do not prevent law-abiding, responsible individuals from

exercising their Second Amendment rights.

Id.

The district court is best suited to conduct a Bruen step-one “plain text” inquiry in

the first instance to determine whether any requirements imposed by a shall-issue regime

“infringe” an individual’s Second Amendment rights. The Supreme Court’s shall-issue

discussion has provided clear guidance that an “infringement” of an individual’s Second

Amendment rights would require a greater impediment than a simple processing delay,

35 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 36 of 41

firearms training, or the imposition of an administrative fee. 9 But like most judges, I am

not a historian or a linguist capable of considering the full reach of this Second Amendment

term in its historical context. Moreover, the parties have not cited the testimony of any

expert who purports to have these qualifications. On remand, the parties should be allowed

to compile, and the district court should have the opportunity to consider, the interpretive

tools that the Supreme Court has relied on in other cases to determine the meaning of

constitutional terms in the new framework set forth by Bruen, while bearing in mind the

Supreme Court’s warning that material differences exist between may-issue and shall-issue

regimes. See Heller,

554 U.S. at 579, 581, 595, 597

(referring to Founding-era dictionaries,

the context in which the language was used, a comparison of other uses of similar language

in the Constitution, the 18th-century meanings as compared to the modern meanings, and

the use of such language in other written documents from the Founding era); Cawthorn v.

9 Notably, some definitions from the Founding era of the term “infringe” support the construction that the Supreme Court appeared to endorse in its discussion of shall-issue regimes, namely, that a particular provision will “infringe” an individual’s rights under the plain text of the Second Amendment only if the statutory condition is so burdensome that it ultimately prevents law-abiding, responsible individuals from possessing or bearing a handgun. Samuel Johnson, 1 Dictionary of the English Language 1101 (4th ed. 1773) (hereinafter Johnson) (defining “infringe” as “[t]o violate; to break laws or contracts” or “[t]o destroy; to hinder”); N. Webster, American Dictionary of the English Language (1828) (hereinafter Webster) (same); Heller,

554 U.S. at 581

, 584 (citing Johnson and Webster to determine the meaning of “arms” and “bear”). Particularly when compared to our modern understanding of “infringe” as a “gradual but clearly identifiable” violation of a right, these Founding era definitions seem to require a greater intrusion. On ‘Infringe,’ ‘Encroach,’ and ‘Impinge’, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/words- at-play/infringe-encroach-impinge-usage-difference [https://perma.cc/LE8U-PAA7]; Infringe, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/infringe [https://perma.cc/234C-JT3N] (defining “infringe” as “to encroach upon in a way that violates . . . the rights of another,” while noting that a secondary, “obsolete” definition is to “defeat” or “frustrate”). 36 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 37 of 41

Amalfi,

35 F.4th 245

, 256 (4th Cir. 2022) (“‘[C]onstitutional interpretation’—like statutory

construction—involves ‘familiar principles’ (such as ‘careful examination of the textual,

structural, and historical evidence put forward by the parties’) that are the bread-and-butter

of judicial work.” (citation omitted)).

After resolving this textual inquiry, the district court next should be required to

address whether any of the components of the HQL requirement rise to the level of

“infringement,” a fact-specific inquiry that again distinguishes this case from Bruen. A

determination whether the shall-issue permitting law at issue here “infringes” the Second

Amendment rights of law-abiding, responsible individuals likely will require consideration

of several material factors, such as the extent of any delay imposed and the amount of costs

incurred from compliance with the law. See United States v. Salerno,

481 U.S. 739, 745

(1987) (“A facial challenge to a legislative Act is, of course, the most difficult challenge to

mount successfully, since the challenger must establish that no set of circumstances exists

under which the Act would be valid.”). Applying Bruen in this new context, the step-one

inquiry is not a purely legal question but is a mixed question of law and fact requiring

factual development before the district court.

For these reasons, I would remand this case to the district court for a step-one

analysis under Bruen of the plain text of the Second Amendment in the context of shall-

issue regimes, and for consideration whether any components of the HQL requirement rise

37 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 38 of 41

to the level of “infringement” of the plaintiffs’ Second Amendment rights. 10 Depending

on the district court’s analysis and resolution of these issues, the district court also may be

required to conduct a step-two analysis under Bruen.

C.

Finally, my colleagues’ analytical error under step one is compounded by their

refusal to remand this case for consideration of the severability of any unconstitutional

component in the HQL requirement, which consideration mandates a fact-specific,

intent-driven analysis under state law. See Leavitt v. Jane L.,

518 U.S. 137, 139

(1996).

Under Maryland law, “the provisions of all statutes enacted after July 1, 1973, are

severable,” and “[t]he finding by a court that part of a statute is unconstitutional or void

does not affect the validity of the remaining portions of the statute, unless the court finds

that the remaining valid provisions alone are incomplete and incapable of being executed

in accordance with the legislative intent.” Md. Code, Gen. Prov. § 1-210. Maryland law

thus affords many state statutes, including the HQL requirement, a presumption of

severability.

In addition, courts are required to discern whether “the legislative body would have

enacted the statute or ordinance if it knew that part of the enactment was invalid.” Cnty.

Council of Prince George’s Cnty. v. Chaney Enterprises Ltd. P’ship,

165 A.3d 379, 394

(Md. 2017) (citation omitted). Accordingly, even when a legislature expressly provides

10 Under this view of the case, I do not reach step two of the Bruen framework, which would need to be addressed by the district court only if it found that the plaintiffs’ proposed course of conduct is “infringed” by any component of the HQL requirement.

38 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 39 of 41

that a state statute is severable, disputes may arise regarding whether the other portions will

remain valid. See, e.g., Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood of N. New England,

546 U.S. 320, 331

(2006).

Here, the district court rejected the plaintiffs’ facial constitutional challenge to the

HQL requirement, applying the two-step framework we established in Kolbe,

849 F.3d at 132

, to determine that each component of the HQL requirement was constitutionally

permissible. Because the district court upheld the constitutionality of the entire statute, the

court did not need to address whether any individual component of the HQL requirement

was severable.

Unsurprisingly, at oral argument before us, the government argued that it had not

addressed severability in its brief because, in the government’s view, the entire statute

passed constitutional muster. Oral Arg., at 25:12–25:22. Thus, the record on appeal lacks

any discussion by the district court or any argument from the parties regarding severability.

The Supreme Court has cautioned that “federal courts are not ideally positioned to

address such a sensitive issue of state constitutional law” as severability, counseling that

we “may therefore be well advised to consider certifying such a question to the State’s

highest court.” Carney v. Adams,

141 S. Ct. 493

, 503–04 (2020) (Sotomayor, J.,

concurring). And in other instances, the Supreme Court has remanded such questions “for

the lower courts to determine legislative intent in the first instance.” E.g., Ayotte,

546 U.S. at 331

.

These principles are even more compelling in the context of facial constitutional

challenges like the one brought by the plaintiffs in this case. Such challenges “run contrary

39 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 40 of 41

to the fundamental principle of judicial restraint that courts should neither anticipate a

question of constitutional law in advance of the necessity of deciding it nor formulate a

rule of constitutional law that is broader than is required by the precise facts to which it is

to be applied.” United States v. Miselis,

972 F.3d 518, 530

(4th Cir. 2020) (quoting Wash.

State Grange, 552 U.S. at 450–51). Moreover, these challenges “threaten to short circuit

the democratic process by preventing laws embodying the will of the people from being

implemented in a manner consistent with the Constitution.”

Id.

(citation omitted). Since

Bruen, the state and federal trial courts have not had “occasion to construe the [HQL

requirement] in the context of actual disputes,” nor to “accord the law a limiting

construction to avoid constitutional questions.” Wash. State Grange,

552 U.S. at 450

. I

thus part with my colleagues’ decision to avoid the issue of severability, 11 and would

remand this question for consideration by the district court upon its application of Bruen.

11 The majority acknowledges that “remand might be appropriate to determine whether a statute were severable,” but declines to further address the issue because, in the majority’s view, the government “disavowed a severability argument.” Maj. Op., at 20 n.11 (citing Oral Arg., at 25:13 – 25:27 & 26:52–27:00). The majority mischaracterizes the government’s position. At oral argument, Judge Richardson asked government counsel, “But [the HQL requirement] rises or falls together?” Oral Arg., at 25:22–25:24. Government counsel responded, “I, I think that’s, I think that’s . . . .” Oral Arg., at 25:25–25:27. Government counsel did not finish this sentence, and later admitted that the government was “not necessarily prepared to address severability” as “it was not something [the government had] argued.” Oral Arg., at 26:52–27:00. Contrary to the majority’s interpretation, the government’s decision not to address severability in its brief is not a “disavow[al]” of the severability argument. Maj. Op., at 20 n.11. Rather, this decision reflects the government’s position, consistent with the district court’s holdings, that the entire HQL requirement was constitutional. It is imprudent to use the government’s silence on this issue to ignore the “normal rule that partial, rather than facial, invalidation is the required course.” Brockett v. Spokane Arcades, Inc., 472 (Continued) 40 USCA4 Appeal: 21-2053 Doc: 52 Filed: 11/21/2023 Pg: 41 of 41

II.

The district court in this case has not had the opportunity to apply the new,

fact-intensive Bruen framework or to consider severability principles under Maryland law,

and there is no legitimate reason to short-circuit the judicial process and to prevent the

development of the record in the district court. Moreover, remand is especially appropriate

here, when the plaintiffs bring a facial constitutional challenge to a statute that falls into a

class of laws already identified by the Supreme Court as meaningfully distinct from the

firearms bans addressed in the Court’s prior cases.

In sum, my colleagues turn their back on the shall-issue discussion in Bruen. As a

result, unable to pound a “shall-issue” law into a framework designed for a “may-issue”

regime, the majority fails to produce a legally defensible and workable template for the

analysis of “shall-issue” laws. And we are left with the lingering question why the majority

ignores the Court’s clear guidance on the very issue before us.

U.S. 491, 504 (1985); see Legal Servs. Corp. v. Velazquez,

531 U.S. 533, 559

(2001) (Scalia, J., dissenting) (“Although no party briefed severability in Denver Area Ed. Telecomms. Consortium, Inc. v. FCC,

518 U.S. 727

(1996), the Justices finding partial unconstitutionality considered it necessary to address the issue.”). 41

Reference

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