Current:Home > ContactMassachusetts strikes down a 67-year-old switchblade ban, cites landmark Supreme Court gun decision -MacroWatch
Massachusetts strikes down a 67-year-old switchblade ban, cites landmark Supreme Court gun decision
Charles Langston View
Date:2025-04-09 01:30:12
Residents of Massachusetts are now free to arm themselves with switchblades after a 67-year-old restriction was struck down following the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2022 landmark decision on gun rights and the Second Amendment.
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court decision on Tuesday applied new guidance from the Bruen decision, which declared that citizens have a right to carry firearms in public for self-defense. The Supreme Judicial Court concluded that switchblades aren’t deserving of special restrictions under the Second Amendment.
“Nothing about the physical qualities of switchblades suggests they are uniquely dangerous,” Justice Serge Georges Jr. wrote.
It leaves only a handful of states with switchblade bans on the books.
The case stemmed from a 2020 domestic disturbance in which police seized an orange firearm-shaped knife with a spring-assisted blade. The defendant was charged with carrying a dangerous weapon.
His appeal claimed the blade was protected by the Second Amendment.
In its decision, the Supreme Judicial Court reviewed this history of knives and pocket knives from colonial times in following U.S. Supreme Court guidance to focus on whether weapon restrictions are consistent with this nation’s “historical tradition” of arms regulation.
Georges concluded that the broad category including spring-loaded knifes are “arms” under the Second Amendment. “Therefore, the carrying of switchblades is presumptively protected by the plain text of the Second Amendment,” he wrote.
Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell criticized the ruling.
“This case demonstrates the difficult position that the Supreme Court has put our state courts in with the Bruen decision, and I’m disappointed in today’s result,” Campbell said in a statement. “The fact is that switchblade knives are dangerous weapons and the Legislature made a commonsense decision to pass a law prohibiting people from carrying them.
The Bruen decision upended gun and weapons laws nationwide. In Hawaii, a federal court ruling applied Bruen to the state’s ban on butterfly knives and found it unconstitutional. That case is still being litigated.
In California, a federal judge struck down a state law banning possession of club-like weapons, reversing his previous ruling from three years ago that upheld a prohibition on billy clubs and similar blunt objects. The judge ruled that the prohibition “unconstitutionally infringes the Second Amendment rights of American citizens.”
The Massachusetts high court also cited a 2008 U.S. Supreme Court opinion that Americans have a right to own guns for self-defense in their homes as part of its decision.
veryGood! (624)
Related
- Sam Taylor
- Olympians Noah Lyles and Junelle Bromfield Are Engaged
- Talking about sex is hard, no matter how old you are | The Excerpt
- Ariel Winter Reveals Where She Stands With Her Modern Family Costars
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Washington state’s landmark climate law hangs in the balance in November
- Bolivia Has National Rights of Nature Laws. Why Haven’t They Been Enforced?
- Cardi B Reveals What Her Old Stripper Name Used to Be
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Ruth Chepngetich smashes woman's world record at Chicago Marathon
Ranking
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Talking about sex is hard, no matter how old you are | The Excerpt
- 'NCIS' Season 22: Premiere date, time, cast, where to watch and stream new episodes
- SpaceX launches its mega Starship rocket. This time, mechanical arms will try to catch it at landing
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Blue Jackets, mourning death of Johnny Gaudreau, will pay tribute at home opener
- Kansas tops AP Top 25 preseason men’s basketball poll ahead of Alabama, defending champion UConn
- Bath & Body Works candle removed from stores when some say it looks like KKK hood
Recommendation
Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
Sabrina Ionescu shows everyone can use a mentor. WNBA stars help girls to dream big
SpaceX launches Starship the 5th time; successfully catches booster in huge mechanic arm
Florida power outage map: More than 400,000 still in the dark in Hurricane Milton aftermath
Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
Will we get another Subway Series? Not if Dodgers have anything to say about it
Indigenous Peoples Day celebrated with an eye on the election
Suspect in deadly Michigan home invasion arrested in Louisiana, authorities say