The Justice Department has filed over a dozen lawsuits challenging firearm restrictions nationwide, targeting assault weapons ...
Less than a week after the Supreme Court struck down a Hawaii law that barred gun owners with concealed-carry licenses from ...
By John Kruzel WASHINGTON, June 26 (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court in a pair of new rulings has further expanded the ...
The Supreme Court on Thursday struck down a Hawaii law that banned gun owners from carrying their weapons on privately owned property that is open to the public unless they had the owner’s consent.
A Supreme Court that has expanded gun rights will consider whether bans on semiautomatic rifles, often called assault weapons ...
The government cannot force private property owners to allow guns on their land. But the Supreme Court rightly ruled today that it also cannot impose a presumption of exclusion.
The Supreme Court has ruled that the government can’t automatically take away someone’s right to own a gun just because they use cannabis, with advocates for cannabis reform calling this a big win.
Gun control groups were more muted, with Everytown saying that it still recognizes that “drugs and guns can make for a dangerous mix.” ...
The Supreme Court ruled on Thursday in Wolford v. Lopez, and the question it answered sounds almost whimsical: must a licensed gun owner get express permission before carrying a legally permitted ...
All nine justices agreed that marijuana users are not categorically too dangerous to have a Second Amendment right to a gun.
The Supreme Court has unanimously upheld the constitutional rights of cannabis consumers to legally possess firearms.
Pro-Second Amendment organizations have filed lawsuits to invalidate gun laws across the country for decades, but Hughes v.