Pot or Precedent? Supreme Court to Decide Whether Marijuana Users Can Own Guns
7 Articles
7 Articles
Trump DOJ Asks Supreme Court For Delayed Schedule In Case On Marijuana Users' Gun Rights
The Justice Department is asking the U.S. Supreme Court for more time to submit briefs in a case justices recently agreed to hear that concerns the constitutionality of a federal ban on gun ownership by people who use marijuana and other drugs. In a motion from the Trump administration that was sent to the court on Thursday, DOJ said there was mutual agreement between its attorneys and those representing the respondent in the case that the curre…
Letters to the Editor: If drug users lose their gun rights, shouldn’t it apply to alcohol drinkers too?
"If these 'narrow circumstances' calling for limiting gun rights for marijuana and drug users are applied because those people might 'pose a grave risk of armed, hostile encounters' ... then they must apply it to people who habitually consume alcohol," writes an L.A. Times reader.
Pot or precedent? Supreme Court to decide whether marijuana users can own guns
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) — The Supreme Court of the United States will soon take up a case that asks one of the most polarizing questions in American law: Can people who use marijuana be banned from owning a gun, or does that go too far? The ruling could have major implications for states like Tennessee, where gun ownership is part of daily life and marijuana remains illegal under both state and federal law. 📧 Have breaking news come to you: Su…
The U.S. Supreme Court will review whether frequent marijuana users may possess weapons, in a case that could redefine the Second Amendment and affect numerous federal cases annually.
Supreme court to meet on Marijuana Users owning Firearms
Source: Thanasis / Getty The Supreme Court is set to review whether marijuana users can legally own guns. The Supreme Court said on Monday that it will consider whether people who regularly smoke marijuana can legally own guns, the latest firearm case to come before the court since its 2022 decision expanding gun rights. President Donald Trump’s administration asked the justices to revive a case against a Texas man charged with a felony because …
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