Posted on 12/03/2010 6:50:08 AM PST by marktwain
MISSOULA, MONT. --(Ammoland.com)- Plaintiffs in litigation to validate the principles of the Montana Firearms Freedom Act (MFFA) have appealed an expected but adverse federal district court decision to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
The plaintiffs in MSSA v. Holder include the Montana Shooting Sports Association (MSSA), the Second Amendment Foundation (SAF), and MSSA President Gary Marbut of Missoula.
The MFFA is designed to test the power of Congress to regulate everything without limits under the narrow power given to Congress in the Constitution to regulate commerce among the states.
The MFFA declares that any firearms, ammunition and firearm accessories made and retained in Montana are not subject to any federal authority under the Commerce Clause. Congress must find some authority among the Constitutions enumerated powers for every action it takes.
Plaintiffs filed the lawsuit MSSA v. Holder on the day the MFFA became effective in Montana, October 1, 2009. Since the MFFA enactment in Montana, the MFFA has been cloned and enacted in seven other states, and FFA bills have been introduced in the legislatures of 20 more states.
In a judgment entered on October 19, 2010, the district court granted the U.S. Motion to Dismiss. It is this judgment that is now appealed to the Ninth Circuit.
MSSA President and plaintiff Gary Marbut commented, Weve known all along that the district court will not provide what we seek, the reversal of a half-century of bad Commerce Clause precedent. We need to get to the U.S. Supreme Court for that. This notice of appeal puts us at the 50-yard line in our quest to get to the Supreme Court it is a big step in the direction we need to go.
Not only has the FFA concept attracted the interest and support of many other states frustrated with an overbearing federal government, but the MSSA v. Holder lawsuit has attracted an unusual, perhaps record, number of amici (amicus curiae, friends of the court). Some qualified observers say theyve never seen a case that has attracted as much amici support at the district court level as this case has. Amici include the State of Utah (also representing several other states), Gun Owners Foundation (Gun Owners of America), the Goldwater Institute of Arizona, the Paragon Foundation of New Mexico, the Weapons Collectors Society of Montana, an amicus group of Montana legislators who supported the MFFA, and another amicus group of non-Montana legislators who sponsored or co-sponsored FFA bills in other states. The State of Montana has also intervened in support of the MFFA. Other amici are expected to enter in support of the MFFA when the lawsuit is argued before Ninth Circuit.
It is totally obvious from the positions of federal participants, both lawyers and judges for the U.S., Marbut commented, that the federal establishment definitely, almost desperately, wishes to prevent this issue from having a trial on merit.
The likely options for the Ninth Circuit are to uphold the judgment of the district court or to overrule the district court and remand the case back to the district court for trial. Regardless of what action is taken by the Ninth Circuit, MSSA v. Holder is certain to be appealed to the Supreme Court. If the Supreme Court only reviews the district court dismissal on appeal to it, the Supreme Court can still rule on the merits of the case since part of the grounds for dismissal is based on merit.
That must be it. I recall being disappointed.
Did you actually write that sentence?
We know about that. Even that isn't adequate deference by them to us.
But SCOTUS has a built-in conflict, so any state that feels bound by an adverse SCOTUS decision (when the decision empowers the feds) probably needs their collective head examined.
The only way the feds will be reigned in on this is by force of violence.
Unfortunate but probably true.
It would be interesting to see the BATFE enforce federal gun laws not only without the help of state, county and local law enforcement, but with said law enforcement directly impeding all federal investigations.
True, in practice. But it's an abomination of legal logic, to take a law that does NOT penalize something, and assert that the decision upholds a law that does penalize something.
And under threat of imprisonment in a state prison! Wyoming's FFA has such a provision, as does New Hampshire's (though the NH one hasn't been enacted yet).
The law did penalize something. He was fined for feeding it to his chickens on the premise that had he not grown enough wheat to do that, he would have had to buy it on the open market, which affects interstate commerce.
IOW, the federal government can control the tomato plant that you planted and that you eat, because that bite out of that tomato would have otherwise been a bite out of a tomato bought on the open market, affecting interstate commerce. Even if you would have bought the tomato from a local farm, that farm produced tomatoes sold on the open market. Even if that farm didn’t sell outside the state, any farm in the state producing that tomato meant one tomato that didn’t have to be imported from out of state, thus affecting interstate commerce.
This is a legal absurdity. A person must be insane, stupid, devious or all of the above to think that the Founders though the federal government could control individual actions with such granularity.
Do you have a link for that? When I read the statute, and its history, I saw that Montana had initially stated it would defend a Montana citizen in federal court, if the feds attempted to enforce federal law over the Montana law. That provision (just to use the Montana AG to defend its own law) was removed before the Montana law was enacted.
Yeah, but not feeding unthreshed grain to on-premises livestock.
From Wickard v. Filburn, 317 US 111 (1942)
Thus the penalty was contingent upon an act which appellee committed not before but after the enactment of the statute, and had he chosen to cut his excess and cure it or feed it as hay, or to reap and feed it with the head and straw together, no penalty would have been demanded. Such manner of consumption is not uncommon. Only when he threshed and thereby made it a part of the bulk of wheat overhanging the market did he become subject to penalty.
Threshed, unthreshed, irrelevant to the concept. He grew it, he fed it to his chickens. They considered the very act of threshing to put it on the market, ignoring the basic fact that it was not actually put on the market.
Yes. Extending the argument even more ad absurdum, I'm surprised the Feds don't just use the "Interstate Commerce" clause to regulate every atom in existence -- right down to the air we breathe. After all, the atmosphere crosses state lines constantly, and I'm sure that a few molecules of O2 in my lungs right now must have come from, say, New Jersey.
Wyoming gov. signs bill on federal gun regulation 3/11/10 The WFFA differs from the original Montana model in that it establishes potential state penalties for anyone arresting a Wyoming person making or selling firearms, ammunition or accessories done in compliance with the WFFA.
From the text of the bill:
6-8-405(b) Any official, agent or employee of the United States government who enforces or attempts to enforce any act, order, law, statute, rule or regulation of the United States government upon a personal firearm, a firearm accessory or ammunition that is manufactured commercially or privately in Wyoming and that remains exclusively within the borders of Wyoming shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction, shall be subject to imprisonment for not more than one (1) year, a fine of not more than two thousand dollars ($2,000.00), or both.
As far as state helping with federal defense:
6-8-405(c) The attorney general may defend a citizen of Wyoming who is prosecuted by the United States government for violation of a federal law relating to the manufacture, sale, transfer or possession of a firearm, a firearm accessory or ammunition manufactured and retained exclusively within the borders of Wyoming.
Which sounds redundant insofar as it may conflict with (b). If you arrested the fed while he was trying to infringe on your citizen's rights, how did that guy's case ever make it to court? Belt AND suspenders I guess.
Heh, heh. He said "granularity"! (Other than that, I agree completely)
I agree, but I think it is interesting that the Wickard case collapses on itself. All the rhetoric about "home consumption affects interstate commerce" is moot, in light of the law being upheld allowed home consumption.
Thanks for that. I was unaware of the details of the Wyoming FFA; and for some reason mistook your initial remark as a reference to Montana, even though you said Wyoming. My bubu.
As far as FFA's in general go, I can't understand a state passing one without this provision, unless that was the only way to get anything passed. "If you violate federal gun laws, you're in no hot water with the state (course you never were in the first place), but if the feds arrest and prosecute you in spite of this law, you're on your own" sounds like empty posturing.
>>It’s WAY more than two, bro. In addition to federal firearm regulations like the AWB, it will also take down the DEA, the EPA, the Department of Education, OSHA, and a litany of other federal agencies and legistlation like the “hate crimes” laws.<<
This is why I don’t think we will see the solution come from our Courts. Think of the economic effect that closing all those agencies will have upon individual states and the entire country if it was all done simultaneously. That is simply too many people to lay off at one time because I doubt if three percent of them are self reliant.
The Socialist minded judges and legislators will never release control from that large of a crowd on their own freewill.
That's always been my concern. These are exactly the kind of people you don't want around running loose on the street with time on their hands.
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