
A federal appeals court panel ruled Friday 2-1 that Illinois’ “assault weapons”/semiautomatic weapons ban is constitutional, meaning the case is likely now headed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
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Friday’s ruling came as a bit of a surprise given the conservative makeup of the Seventh Circuit’s three-judge panel.
“Notably, the majority was composed of conservative judge Frank Easterbook and liberal judge Diane P. Wood. Conservative judge Michael P. Brennan dissented,” according to legal scholar Jonathan Turley.
In his dissent, Brennan wrote that the state and local governments that had enacted the bans “failed to meet their burden to show that their bans are part of the history and tradition of firearms regulation.”
According to WLS, he also “ripped his colleagues’ ‘remarkable’ conclusion that personal ownership of assault-style weapons and high-powered magazines is not protected by the Second Amendment.”
“The AR-15 is a civilian, not military, weapon. No army in the world uses a service rifle that is only semiautomatic. Even so, the majority opinion uses a civilian firearm’s military counterpart to determine whether it is an ‘Arm,'” he reportedly wrote.
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Turley: Federal appeals court upholding Illinois AR-15 ban ‘could set up major test for gun rights’
A federal appeals court panel ruled Friday 2-1 that Illinois’ “assault weapons”/semiautomatic weapons ban is constitutional, meaning the case is likely now headed to the U.S. Supreme […]

This case will be appealed to SCOTUS. Hopefully they take it up and reverse the idiotic reasoning employed by the 7th circuit.
More analysis:

The Seventh Circuit Rules for Illinois AR-15 Assault Ban
Yesterday, a three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit voted 2-1 to overturn an injunction against Illinois’ “assault weapons” ban. The panel declared that AR…

7th circuit ruling: