On January 23, 2023, the State of Tennessee, under the leadership of Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti, entered into an
agreed order
which concluded that laws enacted by the Tennessee Legislature, under a
Republican super-majority, constitute an unconstitutional “scheme” that
had the effect of denying 18-20 year olds the opportunity to get a
handgun permit or carry under the 2021 permitless carry law.
According
to the Agreed Order “The Challenged Scheme regulating the possession
and carrying of handguns that restricts individuals aged 18 years old to
20 years old from carrying handguns or obtaining permits to carry
handguns on the basis of age alone violates the Second and Fourteenth
Amendments to the United States Constitution.”
Even worse, the
Agreed Order concludes that the legislation, supported by a Republican
governor and carried by Republican legislative leadership constituted a
federal civil rights violation. One consequence is that the state agreed to pay the legal fees of the plaintiffs for violating their civil rights.
But,
there is another perhaps more systemic and critical problem. Federal
law is clear that it is a federal crime when a person who is acting
under “under color of any law” violates another person’s civil rights
“willfully” See, 18 U.S.C. § 242. Keep in mind that Tennessee Firearms
Association members have been telling these same legislators for many
years that the laws that they were passing and failed to repeal were
violations of the 2nd Amendment. There is now a question of whether
the “color of law” actions of some legislators and governors were
willful violations of the civil rights of people in Tennessee.
Another lesson to be learned from these events is that even if the
Tennessee Legislature and its Governor continue to ignore the Second
Amendment and play games with “incrementalism” excuses, it is clear that
Tennesseans have and perhaps must increasingly turn to the courts to
challenge the unconstitutional laws that the Legislature has either
enacted in the last decade or refused to remove. But that is another
topic for another day.
Tennessee House members are presently
required to have all of their proposed legislation for 2023 filed by
January 30. That means that we should have some indication in just a
few days indicating how seriously the Tennessee legislators are going to
take the Second Amendment and its mandate. Now, this is not as if the
constitutional provision has suddenly changed. In fact, it has not
changed at all since 1791. Further, it is not as if it is complicated –
it is only 1 sentence.
There is no debate that a number of
Tennessee legislators who have been loyal to the Second Amendment have
been offering legislation to adopt real constitutional carry, to allow
18-20 year olds to exercise their constitutional rights, to allow
Tennesseans to have choices for self-defense that include “firearms”
and not just handguns and that seek to eliminate unconstitutional gun
free zones. We applaud those legislators.
But, at the same
time, there are not enough legislators who either understand or truly
embrace the mandate from the Second Amendment prohibiting government
infringements. That fact is evidenced because when efforts were made by
some legislators to enact true 2nd Amendment legislation in the past,
the leadership did not get behind it and the majority of other
legislators clearly did not support it. Instead, you would
often hear Republican legislators talking about “incrementalism” and “moving the ball down the field”. You would hear, for example, House Leader William Lamberth
admitting
in committee hearings that the permitless carry legislation in 2021
falls short of the Second Amendment but asserting that it is the
“biggest bite of freedom we can get at one time”. Why? Which
legislators were limiting the size of freedom? Which legislators were
knowingly disregarding the Second Amendment?
The legislative
archives provide some answers. Those archives contain videos of members
and bill sponsors speaking in subcommittees, committees and on the
floor. Those videos are damning proof that some of them knew that the
legislation that they are sponsoring and/or voting for falls short of
what the Second Amendment requires but yet that is the furthest limit
that they were willing to “allow” Tennesseans to exercise with respect
to their constitutionally protected rights.
These legislators knowingly
infringed and continue to infringe your rights by using terms like
“reasonable” and “public safety”. But it is not just legislators, the
civil rights violations include actions and testimony from
representatives from Bill Lee’s administration, perhaps including the
spokespersons from TBI and the Department of Safety. The civil rights
violations might also arise from the positions taken by uniformed law
enforcement officials – including some sheriffs and chiefs of police –
who almost always testify against any legislation to repeal the
infringements by state or local government laws or regulations on the
rights protected by the Second Amendment.
Over the next few
months, you will likely see new legislation and efforts made by some
legislators to remove these unconstitutional infringements so that we do
not have to get more courts to do so by court mandate. But, you will
see the same old tired and unconstitutional excuses. Those opposing
your constitutionally protected rights and bowing to the “gods” in the
various law enforcement and agencies under Governor Lee’s control will
likely continue to tell us that they are taking the Second Amendment
“seriously”, that they are working with leadership and/or the Governor
to address the issues, that they are being diligent. As you hear those
excuses, be aware how similar they sound to the excuses that Karine
Jean-Pierre constantly throws out to defend the unconstitutional and
sometimes criminal actions of Joe Biden and his administration.
Tennesseans
need to pay close attention to those legislators who have been and who
continue to step up and zealously fight to remove all infringements on
your rights as protected by the Second Amendment.
Tennesseans
also need to take careful note of those governors, legislators,
administration officials and law enforcement officials who are using the
terms “reasonable”, “incremental”, “moving the ball down the field”,
“biggest bite of freedom”, etc., when they speak about legislation that
has the clear result of failing to remove the unconstitutional
infringements on the rights that the Second Amendment prohibits from
infringement – period.
Watch for those Tennessee legislators
and others acting under “color of law” who borrow Karine Jean-Pierre’s
book of excuses rather than Justice Thomas’ clarity of the 2nd
Amendment’s mandate because it is those individuals who need to be
reformed, replaced and potentially investigated as soon as possible.
Additional video on TFA Website