The U.S. Supreme Court on April 21 declined to hear an appeal from the state of Minnesota asking the high court to resurrect its law barring adults younger than 21 from obtaining a permit to carry a firearm in public.
The federal appeals court in St. Louis noted that the Second Amendment sets no age limit and generally allows for law-abiding, ordinary young adults to have and bear firearms.
“If the regulation is consistent with the Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation, it does not infringe the right of the people,” the ruling stated. “If not, then the regulation improperly infringes the individual right to keep and bear arms.”
In the Bruen case, formally known as New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen, the Supreme Court ruled against New York state and declared that its concealed carry law, which mandated that an individual have a special need for self-protection in order to get a concealed carry license, was unconstitutional. The state’s requirement was not consistent with the traditions of U.S. firearms laws, the high court found.
In the current case, Minnesota also failed to support claims “that 18 to 20-year-olds present a danger to the public ... with enough evidence,” the appeals court wrote, adding that based on recent crime data statistics, it “would be a stretch to say that an 18-year-old ‘poses a clear threat of physical violence to another.’”
The case, Worth v. Jacobson, “presents the perfect vehicle for the Supreme Court to take up this incredibly important issue and hold that all peaceable adults have the right to keep and bear arms,” the group’s president, Brandon Combs, said in a March statement.
On April 21, the Supreme Court also turned away a separate challenge that involved the University of Michigan’s ban on having guns on campus, leaving intact the restrictions.
Other cases involving laws that restrict guns for adults under the age of 21 have seen mixed results in recent months. An appeals court in New Orleans struck down a federal law requiring young adults to be 21 to purchase handguns, while a judge in February declined to block Hawaii’s ban on gun possession for 18- to 20-year-olds.
The Supreme Court on April 7 turned away a challenge to gun restrictions that New York adopted after the Bruen ruling. In another gun-related case, the high court on March 26 upheld a federal regulation targeting “ghost guns,” though that ruling did not center on Second Amendment issues.